John Zeleny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| John Zeleny | |
| Born | March 26, 1872 |
|---|---|
| Died | 1951 |
| Residence | USA |
| Nationality | American |
| Fields | Physicist |
| Institutions | University of Minnesota Yale University |
| Alma mater | University of Minnesota (B.S. 1892, Ph.D. 1906) Cambridge University (B.A. 1899) |
| Doctoral advisor | Henry T. Eddy J. J. Thomson |
| Known for | Zeleny electroscope electrospray ion mobility |
John Zeleny (1872-1951) was a Czech-American physicist at the University of Minnesota, who in 1911 invented the Zeleny electroscope. He also studied the effect of an electric field on a liquid meniscus.[1][2] His work is seen by some as a beginning to emergent technologies like liquid metal ion sources and electrospraying and electrospinning.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ Zeleny, John (1914). "The electrical discharge from liquid points, and a hydrostatic method of measuring the electric intensity at their surfaces". Physical Review 3 (2): 69–91. doi:.
- ^ Zeleny, John (1917). "Instability of electrified liquid surfaces". Physical Review 10 (1): 1–6. doi:.

