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Pioneers of electronic engineering
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Release Time : September 10, 2021

There are 10 masters in the electronics industry 

who have made great contributions to the development of the field. 

They are our eternal teachers!

 

 The 10  Important Figures in the Electronics Field

 

Michael Faraday.jpg

                             Michael Faraday

He first discovered the phenomenon of electromagnetic 

induction and made great contributions to electromagnetism. 

He is known as the "Father of Electricity." 

The unit of capacitance, the farad, is named in Faraday's honor.

 

Joseph Henry.jpg


                            Joseph Henry

He was a great physicist who is known for the unit of inductance, the henry.

 

Hans Khestyan Oster.jpg


                            Hans Kehestian Öster

He discovered the magnetic effect of electric current. He was the first to 

discover that the current in a current-carrying wire exerts a force on a 

magnetic needle, causing it to change direction.

 

maxwell.jpg


                            Maxwell

With Maxwell's equations, electromagnetic waves and our current wireless 

world have emerged. He founded classical electrodynamics, predicted the 

existence of electromagnetic waves, and proposed the electromagnetic theory of light.

 

Ampere.jpg


                            Ampere

The fundamental unit of electric current in the International System of Units (SI), 

abbreviated as ampere and symbolized by A, is named in honor of the French 

physicist Ampere, who proposed the famous Ampere's law in 1820.


Lenz.jpg

 

                            Lenz, 

After summarizing Ampere's electrodynamics and Faraday's electromagnetic induction, 

proposed the principle that induced electromotive force resists the motion of a magnet or 

coil generating electromagnetic induction. This law, later known as Lenz's law, is essentially 

the law of conservation of energy in electromagnetic phenomena.

 

Coulomb.jpg


                            Coulomb 

Coulomb is a unit of electric charge, abbreviated to coulomb and symbol C. 

It is named in honor of the French physicist Charles-Augustin Coulomb.

 

Georg Simon Ohm.jpg


                            Ohm

Ohm is a unit of resistance, abbreviated to ohm and symbol Ω. 

It is named in honor of the German physicist Georg Simon Ohm.

 

volt.jpg


                            Volt

Volt is the unit of electric voltage in the International System of Units, 

symbol V. It is named in honor of the Italian physicist Alessandro Giuseppe Antonio Anastasio Volta.

 

Hendrik Lorentz.jpg


                            Hendrik Lorentz 

Hendrik Lorentz made important contributions to the fields of electromagnetism, 

electron theory, and relativity. Lorentz's name is now used in academic terms such 

as the Lorentz formula, Lorentz force, Lorentz distribution, and Lorentz transformation.