Thundershocking discovery
Benjamin Franklin invents the lightning rod
Yesterday,
15th of June of 1752, Benjamin Franklin, scientist born in Boston in
1706, made a discovery, which helped him to invent the lighting rod,
after various years of investigation.
Yesterday
there was a storm in Philadelphia and Franklin went out to the field. The scientist saw the perfect opportunity to test his investigation. Across the floss all the electricity
was coming to the key. So it had clear that if the beam was going out
of the clouds and in its way to the land it was finding a metallic
conduit in the one that to get, was remaining there. Of this form it
managed to domesticate what it was calling the "electrical fire".
Benjamin Franklin dominates the "electrical fire" |
The
lightning rod consists of a metallic mast with a compress captator.
The compress has many forms depending on its first functioning: it
can be in top, multitops, semispherically or spherically and must
stand out over the highest parts of the building to prevent that a
great quantity of electrical load provoques damages to buildings, fires or even
the death of animals or people.
Franklin spent the summer of 1747 conducting a series of
groundbreaking experiments with electricity. He wrote down all of his results
and ideas for future experiments in letters to Peter Collinson, a fellow
scientist and friend in London who was interested in publishing his work. By
July, Ben used the terms positive and negative (plus and minus) to describe
electricity, instead of the previously used words "vitreous" and
"resinous." Franklin described the concept of an electrical battery
in a letter to Collinson in the spring of 1749, but he wasn't sure how it could
be useful. Later the same year, he explained what he believed were similarities
between electricity and lightning, such as the color of the light, its crooked
direction, crackling noise, and other things. There were other scientists who
believed that lightning was electricity, but Franklin was determined to find a
method of proving it.
By 1750, in addition to wanting to prove that lightning was
electricity, Franklin began to think about protecting people, buildings, and
other structures from lightning. This grew into his idea for the lightning rod.
Franklin described an iron rod about 8 or 10 feet long that was sharpened to a
point at the end. He wrote, "the electrical fire would, I think, be drawn
out of a cloud silently, before it could come near enough to strike..."
Two years later, Franklin decided to try his own lightning experiment.
Surprisingly, he never wrote letters about the legendary kite experiment;
someone else wrote the only account 15 years after it took place.
Two years before the kite and key experiment, Ben had observed that a sharp iron needle would conduct electricity away from a charged metal sphere. He first theorized that lightning might be preventable by using an elevated iron rod connected to earth to empty static from a cloud. Franklin articulated these thoughts as he pondered the usefulness of a lightning rod.
lightinig rod |
We think that this discovery made by Franklin will be very useful, because it will be able to save a lots of people´s lives and make them much safer.
Vale: Habéis iniciado bien el artículo con un encabezado y un titular; además añadís fotografías, enlaces en Inglés y vídeos. Hasta ahí todo bien.
ReplyDeleteSin embargo, lo encuentro muy escaso de información; más que una noticia parece un tweet. Quién es Franklin? Por qué investiga sobre la electricidad? Fue su primer intento para ese experimento?
Revisad periódicos por ahí y comprobaréis que las noticias han de ser más elaboradas.
Respecto al uso del Inglés, creo que el segundo párrafo carece de sentido, revisadlo!!
Última frase: a lot of people or lots of people.
Lo olvidaba: no habéis puesto etiquetas al artículo. Será difícil encontrarlo después.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteIt's a great Start and it's quiet helpful for the children as well. Celebrate the earth day with us
ReplyDelete