Category Scientist & Invensions

How was wheel invented?

          The invention of wheel has proved to be one of the biggest blessings for the mankind. It is used in almost all modes of transportation: trains, buses, trucks, cars, aeroplanes, scooters, cycles, rickshaws, bullock carts, etc. It has become very easy to cover long distances in a short time, thanks to the wheel.

          Before the invention of wheel, man himself carried the load. Later on, he started taming the animals like oxen, donkeys, horses and camels and used them for carrying their load. Gradually man started carrying load by dragging wood planks with the help of animals. Stone Age people may have learned to roll loads along on logs. The oldest known wheels looked like slices cut across a log with a hole in centre. Each solid disc was made of tree parts. After this invention, two wheels were joined by an axle and the axle was fastened to a platform of wood. This was the first crude cart of the world. In this cart both the wheels and the axle used to move.

          Later, a sophisticated version of wheel was developed. Wheels were made in ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) between 3,500 BC to 3,000 BC. The picture of a cart wheel appears on some clay tablets from Mesopotamia dating 3,500 BC. About 2500 BC wheel was in use in Indus valley also.

         The next improvement in the use of wheel was fastening the axle to the vehicle and letting the wheels spin freely. The first wheeled vehicles were bullock carts, war- chariots and four-wheeled carts of the gods. Gradually the spoke wheel was invented in Asia about 2000 BC. This reduced the weight of the wheel considerably.

          With the passage of time, numerous improvements have been made in the design of wheels. Today, we have the rims and spokes of the wheels made of iron. Rubber tyres and tubes are put around them. To make tyres durable, nylon fabrics are used in rubber solution. Rubber tyres are so designed that these can have firm grips over the road surface to avoid skidding. Now wheel has become lighter, more efficient and long lasting. The invention of an unknown genius carried us a long way along the path of technology and civilization. 

 

How did Archimedes detect impurity in the golden crown?

          Archimedes, the “Father of experimental science”, was an ancient Greek physicist and mathematician. He was born at Syracuse in Sicily in the year 287 B.C. and educated in Alexandria. His teacher was a disciple of Euclid. The principles of science discovered by him are still taught to students. The famous “Archimedes’ Principle” tells us that if we weigh an object in air and then weigh it again when submerged in a liquid, it will apparently lose weight equal to the weight of the liquid it displaces.

          The story of discovery of the famous Archimedes’ Principle is very interesting. Once King Heron of Syracuse gave him a crown made of gold. He suspected that it was alloyed with silver. He asked Archimedes to test its purity without damaging it. It was absolutely a new problem for him. Interestingly he found its solution one day in a very peculiar manner. When he entered his bathtub, he found that his body displaced some water, and the water level in the tub rose. He then jumped out and ran down the street, naked, shouting “Eureka! Eureka!” (“I have found it! I have found it!”). He filled a vessel with water and dipped the crown in it. The water displaced by it was measured. Again he filled the vessel with water and dipped an equal mass of pure gold in it. The water displaced was again collected and measured. The amount of water displaced in the two observations was different. From this experiment he estimated the impurity in the gold crown. On the basis of this discovery he gave the method of finding out the relative density of different substances. 

          Archimedes also gave the laws of flotation of bodies and the principle of lever. He, for the first time, calculated the value of pi. In addition to these, he discovered the use of levers and pulleys and how to pump water uphill using Archimedean screw. The system is still used to irrigate fields in Egypt. He also designed war machines.

          Romans captured Syracuse in 212 B.C. At that time Archimedes had become quite old. One day while he was drawing some geometrical figure on the sand, one of the Roman soldiers asked him to accompany him. And when he refused, the soldier pulled out his sword and killed him. He was cremated with great honours. 

Why Newton is called the Father of Physics?

          Sir Isaac Newton is considered as one of the greatest scientists and mathematicians of all time. He was born on the Christmas morning of 1642 at Woolsthorpe in Lincolnshire. It was also the year in which the famous scientist Galileo died.

          At the age of twelve Newton was sent to school. When he was eighteen, he went to Trinity College at the Cambridge University. There he showed his brilliance in mathematics. In 1669 he became Professor of mathematics in the same college.

          Newton was very fond of making mechanical toys in his childhood. It is said that one day while sitting in a garden, he saw an apple falling to the ground. He began to wonder: “Why did the apple fall towards the ground? Why did not it go towards the sky?” Such questions puzzled him. He worked on this problem and finally gave his famous ‘Law of Universal Gravitation’. According to this law, everybody in this universe attracts every other body with a force which is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. He established the fact that the earth attracts all objects towards its centre. That is why anything thrown upwards falls back to the earth.

          Great scientist as he was, he solved many mysteries of the nature. He showed that the sunlight which appears white is in reality made up of seven colours. He could split these seven colours with the help of a prism. He also showed that the mixture of these seven colours produces white light. He also built the first reflecting telescope. His work on light and colour was published in 1704 in a book called Optics. He did monumental work in the field of mathematics. He gave the famous Laws of motion. He invented calculus. Newton’s discoveries were published in his book called Principia. It is one of the most important books of science ever published. On account of these researches Newton is called the ‘Father of Physics’.

          In 1689 Newton was elected as a member of parliament. In 1703 he was elected President of the Royal Society and was re-elected as president every year until his death. When he was 85 years old, he went to London to preside over a meeting of the Royal Society. But on his return he fell ill and he died on March 20, 1727.

 

Man Mohan Sharma

Man Mohan Sharma (born May 1, 1937 in Jodhpur, Rajasthan) is an Indian chemical engineer. He was educated at Jodhpur, Mumbai and Cambridge. At the age of 27 years, he was appointed Professor of Chemical Engineering in the Institute of Chemical Technology (UDCT), Mumbai. He later went on to become the Director of Institute of Chemical Technology (ICT/ UDCT/ UICT), the first chemical engineering professor to do so from ICT.

In 1990, he became the first Indian engineer to be elected as a Fellow of Royal Society, UK. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan (1987) and the Padma Vibhushan (2001) by the President of India. He has also been awarded the Leverhulme Medal of the Royal Society, the S.S. Bhatnagar Prize in Engineering Sciences (1973), FICCI Award (1981), the Vishwakarma medal of the Indian National Science Academy (1985), G.M. Modi Award (1991), Meghnad Saha Medal (1994), and an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi (2001).

Field:

  • Chemical Engineering

Awards

Professor Sharma is a recipient of a number of prestigious academic honours and awards including the 1977 Moulton Medal of the Institution of Chemical Engineers, and is himself commemorated in the M M Sharma Medal awarded by the same institution for outstanding research contributions.

 

He won the Leverhulme Medal of the Royal Society for “for his work on the dynamics of multi-phase chemical reactions in industrial processes”. He was awarded the Padma Vibhushan (2001), and Padma Bhushan (1987) by the President of India. He was INSA President (1989-90). He is a Fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, Honorary Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences (India), Allahabad, Fellow of the Royal Society, London. Subsequently he was elected Honorary Fellow by the Royal Academy of Engineering and is Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Engineering.

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Shankar Abaji Bhise

Dr. Shankar Abaji Bhise  was an Indian scientist. Bhise has to his credit 200 inventions, for about 40 of which he took patents. In 1910, Sir Ratan Tata set up the Tata-Bhise invention syndicate in order to finance Bhise’s inventions. Among his inventions were a washing compound and type-caster machines, including the Bhisotype which could output 1,200 characters a minute.

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How does a Zip Fastener work?

Zip fastener is a fastening device in which two rows of teeth and sockets are brought together so that they interlock. Metal zips have lines of tiny teeth, while plastic zips contain small loops on each side. When you pull the slide of the zip fastener up, it pushes the teeth or loop together. The first zip was invented by Whitcomb Judson in 1893.

Beneath each tooth in a metal zip fastener is a small socket. The slide is narrow at the bottom so that it forces the teeth together as the zip is pulled up. The teeth on one side fit between the teeth on the other side. As they come together, each tooth slips into the socket under the tooth above and the zip stays closed. As the slide moves down, a divider at the top of the slide pulls the teeth apart.

 

 

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