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Max Planck Institute for the History of Science

 

 

Brownian Molecular Motion I, 2D/3D animation, Drawings: Laurent Taudin, Paris

In the year 1827, Robert Brown examined tiny pollen particles under the microscope. The pollen showed a steady irregular motion in liquid. Brown first attributed this jiggling motion to some sort of ‘vital force’, but in further experiments with dust and finely ground minerals he again detected agitation. This agitation is called Brownian motion, after the man who discovered it. The animation was produced for the exhibition ‘Albert Einstein: Engineer of the Universe’. 

 

  ArchiMeDes Movingscience/Projects/Physics/Brownian Molecular Motion I/01
 
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