-
Eötvös is an old
spelling of the
Hungarian word ötvös,
meaning "gold- and silversmith".
Eötvös can
refer to one of
several Hungarian people: Ignác Eötvös...
-
Eötvös Loránd
University (Hungarian:
Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem, ELTE, also
known as
University of Budapest) is a
Hungarian public research university...
- the son of Ignác
baron Eötvös de Vásárosnamény and Anna von Lilien, who
stemmed from an Erbsälzer
family of Werl in Germany.
Eötvös name is
sometimes anglicised...
-
Hungarian physicist Loránd
Eötvös (1848–1919) and the
English physicist Wilfrid Noel Bond (1897–1937), respectively. The term
Eötvös number is more frequently...
- to 1 in 100 million.
Eötvös died in 1919, and the
complete measurements were only
published in 1922 by Pekár and Fekete.
Eötvös also
studied similar experiments...
- Péter
Eötvös (Hungarian:
Eötvös Péter,
pronounced [ˈøtvøʃ ˈpeːtɛr]; 2
January 1944 – 24
March 2024) was a
Hungarian composer,
conductor and
academic teacher...
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Baron Loránd
Eötvös de Vásárosnamény (or Loránd
Eötvös,
pronounced [ˈloraːnd ˈøtvøʃ], Hungarian: vásárosnaményi báró
Eötvös Loránd Ágoston; 27 July 1848...
-
units (cgs). The
eotvos is
defined as 10−9
galileos per centimetre. The
symbol of the
eotvos unit is E. In SI
units or in cgs units, 1
eotvos = 10−9 second−2...
- results, the
Hungarian nobleman and
physicist Baron Roland von
Eötvös (Loránd
Eötvös)
noticed that the
readings were
lower when the boat
moved eastwards...
- The
Eötvös rule,
named after the
Hungarian physicist Loránd (Roland)
Eötvös (1848–1919)
enables the
prediction of the
surface tension of an arbitrary...