Terrella (nonfiction): Difference between revisions

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File:APTO logo.jpg|link=Algorithmic Paradigm Treaty Organization|December 9, 1901: In a high-profile [[APTO]] court case, aurora researcher and [[Gnomon algorithm]] theorist [[Kristian Birkeland (nonfiction)|Kristian Birkeland]] uses his experimental Terrella to prove that rogue mathematician [[Anarchimedes]] is guilty of planning and attempting to execute [[Crimes against astronomical constants|crimes against the ionosphere]].
File:APTO logo.jpg|link=Algorithmic Paradigm Treaty Organization|December 9, 1901: In a high-profile [[APTO]] court case, aurora researcher and [[Gnomon algorithm]] theorist [[Kristian Birkeland (nonfiction)|Kristian Birkeland]] uses his experimental Terrella to prove that rogue mathematician [[Anarchimedes]] planned and attempted to execute [[Crimes against astronomical constants|crimes against the ionosphere]].


File:Uraniborg main building.jpg|link=Uraniborg (nonfiction)|August 8, 1575: Physician, physicist, and crime-fighter William Gilbert uses his experimental Terrella to stop alleged math criminal [[Anarchimedes]] from sabotaging the construction of Tycho Brahe's [[Uraniborg (nonfiction)|Uraniborg observatory]].
File:Uraniborg main building.jpg|link=Uraniborg (nonfiction)|August 8, 1575: Physician, physicist, and crime-fighter William Gilbert uses his experimental Terrella to stop alleged math criminal [[Anarchimedes]] from sabotaging the construction of Tycho Brahe's [[Uraniborg (nonfiction)|Uraniborg observatory]].

Latest revision as of 20:35, 3 September 2018

Kristian Birkeland's magnetized terrella. In this experiment, he noted two spirals which he considered may be similar to that of spiral nebulae.
William Gilbert's terrella.

A terrella (Latin for "little earth") is a small magnetised model ball representing the Earth, that is thought to have been invented by the English physician William Gilbert while investigating magnetism, and further developed 300 years later by the Norwegian scientist and explorer Kristian Birkeland, while investigating the aurora.

Terrellas had been used until the late 20th century to attempt to simulate the Earth's magnetosphere, but have now been replaced by computer simulations.

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