Franklin's first experiment was a person rubbing on the tube while standing on wax while another person on wax is drawing the fire by touching the tube. Both people standing on wax get electricised by the person standing on the floor. The result out of Franklin's first experiment made a spark. Franklin's second experiment was the person on wax touch one another during the rubbing on the tube and and the result of Franklin's second experiment was made no spark. Franklin's third experiment touching each other while rubbing the tube and getting a weak spark there will soon be a stronger spark between the people on wax than the person on the floor. Franklin's third experiment was mad a spark. Franklin's fourth experiment was drawn by such
Ben Franklin was a very curious and inventive thinker. He kept thinking about different ways to experiment with electricity so he came up with an experiment with only a few materials (wire,mobile kite, handkerchief,and two sticks).(”Benjamin Franklin and Electricity”) Franklin
“Benjamin Franklin flies a kite” by Eduardo Mata and “A Shocking and Stormy Night” by Prentice Newton are both about the electricity experiment that Benjamin Franklin did long ago. Mata’s article is an informational text because it is written in third person and uses informative vocabulary. The article is about the steps Franklin took in his investigation. In the article, it says “The electricity had been captured and transferred.” The words he uses provide detailed information on how the experiment had worked. Mata describes Benjamin Franklin’s test with details for the reader to understand in what means Franklin learned about electricity. He uses sequence of events to tell what Franklin did to do the experiment. On the other hand, Newton’s
But even though he was already well known, his standing in the scientific community most likely increased when he performed his kite-and-key experiment with lightning. The kite-and-key experiment demonstrated that lightning was electricity by holding a kite out to fly during a storm, which was tied to a key being held by a Leyden jar (a device that could store electricity before capacitors) during the storm. This experiment was considerably dangerous at the time, with another scientist, Georg Richmann, who died trying to replicate the experiment. There was a possible chance for lightning to hit the kite, possibly killing Franklin.
Benjamin Franklin was a great inventor, scientist, and political leader. He was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1709 as the fifteenth child in his family out of the vast number of seventeen! As he grew older, he started working in his family's business, which was a soap and candle making shop. Ben hated the work. He hated the awful smell of the melting wax, and he thought dipping candles was the most boring thing to do in the world. After his brother blew up at him for sending stories under a false name to his newspaper, Ben ran away from home. The year was 1723 when Ben reached Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He stayed there for the rest of his life. In 1730, he married his true love, Debora, then started
In the1740’s, one of Ben’s english correspondents gave the Library of Philadelphia an electrical machine for the whole city to use. Since they received this donation, Ben and a couple of his friends began to take interest in electricity because that machine gave such a great amount of curiosity to all philadelphians. Franklin wrote a book on his studies on electricity in 1751, this copy went through three different languages including english. One of his experiments on electricity was trying to identify the difference between thunderbolts and electricity. Ben flew a kite in a dangerous thunderstorm in france on June tenth, 1752.
Benjamin’s experiment with his kite and key helped him to understand lightning. “Mid-eighteenth century scientists and inventors considered electricity to be Franklin’s most remarkable area of investigation and discovery” (Mary Bellis). Franklin’s experiments helped him to create the lightning rod. The lightning rod was a rod that was attached to the highest point of a house or building. The rod would have a wire attached to it that would run all the way to the ground. Lightning would strike the rod and travel along the wire into the ground. The wire connected to the ground absorbed the lightning, preventing the lightning from hitting the house or building. The lightning rod would prevent fires and electrocution. One of Benjamin Franklin’s less known
Franklin described an iron rod about 8 or 10 feet long that was sharpened to a point at the end.” In the years around 1750, he got the idea of wanting to prove his point about lightning being an electric conductor. This saved buildings from being caught on fire. Another invention he created was bifocals. Bifocals are types of glasses for correcting both far and near-sighted vision.
The primary source that I have selected consists of two letters that were written by Benjamin Franklin to Peter Collinson. The goal of the first letter is to explain what the kite of the lightning-electricity experiment looks like and how it works; in the second letter, Franklin explained his hypothesis and described how the hypothesis develop. In this paper, I am going to describe the scientific principles, events and the historical influences on each of these two letters individually. In the field of science, most people recognize Franklin by his kite experiment, which could conduct electricity from the thunder-clouds. Almost everyone has heard the story that brave Franklin proved lightning is the same as electricity by using a kite in thunderstorms.
As one of the United States' greatest founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin holds an extremely significant role in American history. He was considered brilliant, virtuous, and represented what it meant to be an American "renaissance man." It comes as no surprise then, that Franklin was portrayed almost mythically shortly after his death. As the man that discovered electricity, among other accomplishments, Franklin could easily be portrayed as superhuman, maybe even held to the standard of mythical gods. In Benjamin West's painting, Benjamin Franklin Drawing Electricity from the Sky, Franklin is shown effortlessly commanding electricity from the sky. In this manner, Franklin is seen as a sort of "American Prometheus." In Greek mythology, Prometheus
this experiment lead to the lightning rod, which he later made into a light bulb that could be used in houses. another well known invention by benjamin was the franklin stove discovered in the 1740s. “with invention of the franklin stove which provided more heat with less fuel.”(Bio3) by using less fuel families could last longer on the fuel they could afford. This made it convenient for struggling families and was another reason benjamin was known. benjamins slowly changed the world's mind by showing them what was possible for a better lifestyle, while doing he continued writing to the people in the
Instead of using the building he used a kite made from a silk handkerchief and some sticks. Franklin’s plan was to fly the kite with a key attached to it during a thunderstorm. When the lightning struck the kite an electrical charge moved down the string and into the key. When Ben moved his hand over the key a sparked jumped from the key to his hand. It shocked him, thus proving that lightning is electrical.
Federal Writers' Project was a U.S federal government funded written works and supported writers during the Great Depression. Part of the Works Progress Administration was with the New Deal program. It was funded under Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935, but the Federal Writers' Project was established July 27, 1935 by President Roosevelt. The project is operated under journalist and theatrical producer Henry Alsberg, and later it was produced by John D. Newsome. They write about local histories, oral histories, children's books, and other works.
In E.M. Hull’s novel, The Sheik, main protagonist, Diana Mayo masquerades as a boy. Her very essence is alive with a surprising masculine veneer that evokes a tribute to the Victorian idea of The New Woman, which saw a shift in gender expectations. In the beginning chapters of the story, Diana dresses in male clothing and has the proclivities of a wealthy and vital bachelor, she admires attention but is not fond of assertions of love and dramatic emotion usually expected of a woman. In contrast to her brother, Aubrey Mayo, Diana is even given more lively description: “vigorous”, “erect”, “firm”. While Aubrey is described with words such as “lazy”, “pallor”, and “languor”.
In his autobiography, Benjamin Franklin discusses a plan he developed to achieve perfection in his own self-improvement. His goal was to live every day without committing any faults, a goal he thought he would have no problem achieving. However, life is not that easy. Through his experiment, Benjamin Franklin discovers “that there are many ways he can lapse from his high standardーthrough habit, carelessness, inclination, and bad example” (Arriving at Perfection).
In 1752 Franklin devised another experiment to test if lighting has an electrical charge. He flied a kite carrying a pointed wire in a thunderstorm and attempted to test his theory that atmospheric lightning is an electrical phenomenon similar to the spark produced by an electrical frictional machine (Bruno 406). To