atlassociety.org
It was initially believed that the charge was stored in the water in early Leyden jars. In the 1700s American statesman and scientist Benjamin Franklin performed extensive investigations of both water-filled and foil Leyden jars, which led him to conclude that the charge was stored in the glass, not in the water.
Leyden jar - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyden_jar
Leyden jar - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyden_jar
It was initially believed that the charge was stored in the water in early Leyden jars. In the 1700s American statesman and scientist Benjamin Franklin performed extensive investigations of both water-filled and foil Leyden jars, which led him to conclude that the charge was stored in the glass, not in the water.
Benjamin Franklin Explains the Leyden Jar - The Atlas Society
https://atlassociety.org/commentary/.../4935-benjamin-franklin-explains-the-leyden-ja...
Feb 22, 2012 - The Leyden jar is variously called a condenser or capacitor, and the reasons for those two names become obvious when one understands the ..."Electrical battery" of Leyden jars - The Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary
www.benfranklin300.org/frankliniana/result.php?id=72
The individual Leyden jar, the early form of what is now called a capacitor, gathers an electrical charge and stores it until it is discharged. Franklin grouped aThe Leyden Jar - Code Check
www.codecheck.com/cc/LeydenJar.html
The first device capable of storing an electric charge was the Leyden jar. Invented ... Benjamin Franklin used Leyden jars in his famous kite flying experiments.
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