(Q109718033)
Statements
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James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
1 reference
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
1 reference
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
1 reference
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
2 references
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
1897
St. Kilda, Manor Road, Wallington, Surrey, England (British English)
1 reference
1897
1 reference
James H. Gardiner was trained as a chemist and worked closely with the London chemist, physicist, photographic researcher, and editor William Crookes, whose pioneering research into electricity and expertise in photography brought him just short of discovering x-rays himself before his German rival Roentgen did. Gardiner was Crookes' lab assistant at the time when these x-rays were made. (English)
24 November 2021
James H. Gardiner
James H. Gardiner
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