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Encyclopedia > Macedonio Melloni

Macedonio Melloni (April 11, 1798August 11, 1854) was an Italian physicist, notable for demonstrating that radiant heat has similar physical properties to those of light.


Life

Born at Parma, in 1824 he was appointed professor at the University but was compelled to escape to France after taking part in the revolution of 1831. In 1839 he went to Naples and was soon appointed director of the Vesuvius Observatory, a post that he held until 1848.


He died at Portici, near Naples, of cholera.


Work

Melloni's reputation as a physicist rests principally on his discoveries in radiant heat, made with the aid of the thermomultiplier, a combination of thermopile and galvanometer. In 1831, soon after the discovery of thermoelectricity by Thomas Johann Seebeck, he and Leopoldo Nobili employed the instrument in experiments especially concerned with characteristics of (in modern language) black body radiation transmitted by various materials.


He used an optical bench fitted with thermopiles, shields and light and heat sources, such as Locatelli's lamp and Leslie's cube, in order to show that radiant heat could be reflected, refracted and polarised in the same way as light.


His most important book, La thermocrose au la coloration calorifique (Vol. I., Naples, 1850), was unfinished at his death.


He also studied the magnetism of rocks, electrostatic induction and photography.


Honours


  Results from FactBites:
 
Macedonio Melloni - LoveToKnow 1911 (245 words)
MACEDONIO MELLONI (1798-1854), Italian physicist, was born at Parma on the nth of April 1798.
Melloni received the Rumford medal of the Royal Society in 1834.
Melloni's reputation as a physicist rests especially on his discoveries in radiant heat, made with the aid of the thermomultiplier or combination of thermopile and galvanometer, which, soon after the discovery of thermoelectricity by T. Seebeck, was employed by him jointly with L. Nobili in 1831.
Macedonio Melloni at AllExperts (290 words)
Macedonio Melloni (April 11, 1798 â€" August 11, 1854) was an Italian physicist, notable for demonstrating that radiant heat has similar physical properties to those of light.
Melloni's reputation as a physicist rests principally on his discoveries in radiant heat, made with the aid of the thermomultiplier, a combination of thermopile and galvanometer.
In 1831, soon after the discovery of thermoelectricity by Thomas Johann Seebeck, he and Leopoldo Nobili employed the instrument in experiments especially concerned with characteristics of (in modern language) fl body radiation transmitted by various materials.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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