1269 - Pélerin de Maricourt describes magnetic poles and remarks on the nonexistence of isolated magnetic poles,
1305 - Dietrich von Freiberg uses crystalline spheres and flasks filled with water to study the reflection and refraction in raindrops that leads to primary and secondary rainbows,
1630 - Cabaeus found that there are two types of electric charges
1637 - René Descartes quantitatively derives the angles at which primary and secondary rainbows are seen with respect to the angle of the Sun's elevation,
1833 - Heinrich Lenz states that an induced current in a closed conducting loop will appear in such a direction that it opposes the change that produced it (Lenz's law),
1845 - Michael Faraday discovers that light propagation in a material can be influenced by external magnetic fields,
1956 - R. Hanbury-Brown and R.Q. Twiss complete the correlation interferometer.
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