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Robert Hooke - Wikipedia No authenticated portrait of Robert Hooke exists, a situation that has sometimes been attributed to the heated conflicts between Hooke and Isaac Newton, although Hooke's biographer Allan Chapman rejects as a myth claims Newton or his acolytes deliberately destroyed Hooke's portrait [177]
Robert Hooke | Biography, Discoveries, Facts | Britannica Robert Hooke (born July 18 [July 28, New Style], 1635, Freshwater, Isle of Wight, England—died March 3, 1703, London) was an English physicist who discovered the law of elasticity, known as Hooke’s law, and who did research in a remarkable variety of fields
Robert Hooke - World History Encyclopedia Robert Hooke (1635-1703) was an English scientist, architect, and natural philosopher who became a key figure in the Scientific Revolution
Robert Hooke - University of California Museum of Paleontology Hooke had discovered plant cells -- more precisely, what Hooke saw were the cell walls in cork tissue In fact, it was Hooke who coined the term "cells": the boxlike cells of cork reminded him of the cells of a monastery
The Birth of Science: How Robert Hooke Discovered Cells 🔬 TLDR: The Birth of Science – How Robert Hooke Discovered Cells 🔬 TLDR: The Birth of Science – How Robert Hooke Discovered Cells **💡 Key Takeaway:** In 1665, **Robert Hooke**, a British polymath, peered through his **microscope** at a thin slice of **cork** and observed tiny, empty compartments he called **”cells”**—a discovery that laid the foundation for **cell theory
Robert Hooke Society Robert Hooke, one of the most important scientists of the 17th century, was born on the Isle of Wight, a contemporary of Sir Isaac Newton, Samuel Pepys and Sir Christopher Wren, who was his lifelong friend
Hooke - About Robert Hooke - hookelabs. com Robert Hooke is best remembered today as the author of Micrographia (London, 1665), the first publication of observations and experiments made using a microscope, and for Hooke's Law of Elasticity