anybody but me, i can't invent
The Russian inventor Vladimir Zworykin is credited as one of the key inventors of the television system. He is known for his work in developing the cathode-ray tube, which is a fundamental component of television technology.
The scientist credited with inventing the first electronic television system is Vladimir Zworykin.
Philo Taylor Farnsworth (August 19, 1906 - March 11, 1971) is credited with the invention of the all-electronic television. To be a bit pedantic, "discover" means these things were around previously and suddenly they were noticed for the first time. So television wasn't discovered ever.
William Harvey
The invention of television is attributed to various inventors over time, including Philo Farnsworth, Vladimir Zworykin, and John Logie Baird. Philo Farnsworth is often credited with the first fully functional television system using his patented technology of electronic scanning.
Vladimir Zworykin (1888-1982) was a Russian-American scientist and inventor. Along with Boris Rosing, he developed and patented a cathode-ray system for broadcast television in 1907. Moving to the US in 1918, Zworykin patented several TV devices including the "kinescope" TV receiver in 1929.
Philo T. Farnsworth is credited in the USA as having invented the TV. There were too many people involved in the development of various aspects of the system, for it to be credited to one person. Farnsworth developed the image detector and the electronic scanning system similar to what we use today. The person who actually first sent moving pictures over radio waves, to the public was Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird. Although he proved the principle and usefulness of televion, his system was largely mechanical and bares little relationship to what we watch today.
john Logie Beard
TV was invented in Hastings and London, England, by Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird. Proof of concept was established and actual live transmissions made , but the final system adopted was nothing like Baird's mechanical system. An electronic system was used and pioneered by EMI, from original work by American inventor Philo Farnsworth.
The scientist who is credited with discovering the SI (International System of Units) is Gabriel Mouton, a French clergyman and mathematician. He proposed the system in 1670. The SI system is now the most widely used system of measurement worldwide.
Philo Farnsworth is often credited as the inventor of the electronic television. He developed the first fully functional television system and made significant contributions to the technology, including the creation of the first image dissector, which was essential for capturing and transmitting television images. His pioneering work laid the foundation for the modern television industry. Farnsworth's innovations have had a lasting impact on how we consume visual media today.
The first cathode ray tube scanning device was invented by the German scientist Karl Ferdinand Braun in 1897. In 1907, the Russian scientist Boris Rosing (who worked with Vladimir Zworykin) used a CRT in the receiver of a television system that at the camera end made use of mirror-drum scanning.