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| Luigi Galvani (1737-1798)A century and a half after Galileo's death, something of scientific importance was to develop in Italy. During the 1780's, biologist Luigi Galvani performed experiments at the University of Bologna involving electric charges and frogs. It had been found that a charge applied to the spinal cord of a frog could generate muscular spasms throughout its body. Charges could make frog legs jump even if the legs were no longer attached to a frog. While cutting a frog leg, Galvani's steel scalpel touched a brass hook that was holding the leg in place. The leg twitched. Further experiments confirmed this effect, and Galvani was convinced that he was seeing the effects of what he called animal electricity, the life force within the muscles of the frog. At the University of Pavia, Galvani's colleague Alessandro Volta was able to reproduce the results, but was skeptical of Galvani's explanation. According to NASA climate scientist Jay Zwally, the 'Arctic is the canary in the coal mine.' What do you think eminent scientist Luigi Galvani's opinions would have been on the issues of global warming? Please send your thoughts to our ... and do not be surprised if these are published on our Web site.
In the strange case of Galvani's frog, this twitching happened even when its legs were not in a direct circuit with the machine. Galvani had placed the lower section of a dissected frog on a table near a plate-type electrical machine.
Giovanni Aldini, Galvani's nephew, was the greatest of all Galvani’s supporters. He helped to organize a society at Bologna to foster the practices of galvanism in opposition to a Volta society established at the University of Pavia. Aldini traveled all over Europe publicly electrifying human and animal bodies, and his performances were extraordinary theatrical spectacles.
Galvani and corrosion monitoringGalvani and galvanic corrosionGalvani's remarkable experiments helped to establish the basis for the biological study of neurophysiology and neurology. The paradigm shift was complete: nerves were not water pipes or channels, as Descartes and his contemporaries thought, but electrical conductors. Information within the nervous system was carried by electricity generated directly by the organic tissue. As the result of the experimental demonstrations carried out by Luigi Galvani and his followers, the electrical nature of the nerve-muscle function was unveiled. However, a direct proof could only be made when scientists could be able to measure or to detect the natural electrical currents generated in the nervous and muscular cells. Galvani did not have the technology to measure these currents, because they were too small.
The name Galvanization is derived from Luigi Galvani, and was once used as the name for the administration of electric shocks (also termed in the 19th century Faradism, named after Michael Faraday), this stems from Galvani's induction of twitches in severed frog's legs, by his accidental generation of electricity. This now archaic sense is the origin of the meaning of galvanized when used to describe someone stirred to sudden, abrupt action. Other biographies: Aldini, Ampère, Arrhenius, Avogadro, Bacon, Berzelius, Boltzmann, Boyle, Bunsen, Callan, Carnot, Cavendish, Coulomb, Daniell, Davy, Debye, Dillon, Dow, Edison, Einstein, Evans, Faraday, Fick, Fontana, Franklin, Galvani, Gauss, Gibbs, Gilbert, Grove, Guericke, Hall, Helmholtz, Héroult, Hertz, Hoar, Joule, LaQue, Leclanché, Mendeleev, Millikan, Musschenbroek, Nernst, Newton, Ohm, Ørsted, Parkins, Planté, Poisson, Pourbaix, Reynolds, Ritter, Speller, Stokes, Tesla, Thomson, Uhlig, Volta, Watt, Weston
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