Charles de Coulomb: Difference between revisions
Acarnevale (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Acarnevale (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
==Personal Life== | ==Personal Life== | ||
Coulomb was born in Angoulême, France, on June 14, 1736 to Henry Coulomb and Catherine Bajet. | Coulomb was born in Angoulême, France, on June 14, 1736 to Henry Coulomb and Catherine Bajet. Both his parents were rather wealthy, as his father was a lawyer and his mother came from a well-established family. After being raised in Angoulême, Coulomb and his family moved to Paris where he would enter college. | ||
When Henry Coulomb made poor financial choices, lost all of his money, and moved from Montpellier, Charles de Coulomb had to make the decision of whether to move with him or stay in Paris with his mother. Coulomb decided to live with his father after a disagreement with mother about his future career. In March 1757, he joined the Society of Sciences in Montpellier to whom which he would read many papers on mathematics as well as astronomy. | |||
===University Education and Career=== | ===University Education and Career=== |
Revision as of 19:07, 29 November 2015
Claimed by Alanna Carnevale
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb was a French physicist most well known for the discovery of Coulomb's Law and his work with friction. The SI unit for electric charge known as the coulomb was named after him.
Personal Life
Coulomb was born in Angoulême, France, on June 14, 1736 to Henry Coulomb and Catherine Bajet. Both his parents were rather wealthy, as his father was a lawyer and his mother came from a well-established family. After being raised in Angoulême, Coulomb and his family moved to Paris where he would enter college.
When Henry Coulomb made poor financial choices, lost all of his money, and moved from Montpellier, Charles de Coulomb had to make the decision of whether to move with him or stay in Paris with his mother. Coulomb decided to live with his father after a disagreement with mother about his future career. In March 1757, he joined the Society of Sciences in Montpellier to whom which he would read many papers on mathematics as well as astronomy.