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Musée Édouard Branly

75006 Paris, France (Île-de-France)

Address ICP Institut Catholique de Paris
21, rue d'Assas 
 
Floor area unfortunately not known yet  
 
Museum typ Exhibition
Science Museums in general
  • Electricity / Magnetism
  • Optics
  • Telephone / Telex
  • Morse technology
  • Physics


Opening times
Museum accessible only by appointment
Musée accessible uniquement sur Rendez-Vous

Admission
Status from 03/2023
We don't know the fees.

Contact
Tel.:+33-144-39 52 00  eMail:https://en.icp.fr/about-icp/contact-us  

Homepage www.icp.fr/vie-du-campus/un-campus-au-coeur-de-paris/musee-edouard-branly

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Location / Directions
N48.848890° E2.329444°N48°50.93340' E2°19.76664'N48°50'56.0040" E2°19'45.9984"

The Musée Édouard Branly is a museum dedicated to the work of radio pioneer Édouard Branly (1844-1940). It is located in the 6th arrondissement at the Institut Catholique de Paris-ISEP, 21, rue d'Assas, Paris, France.

Métro : Saint-Placide, Rennes
Bus : 89, 95, 96, 94

Description

The cultural heritage of the Institut Catholique de Paris also includes the Edouard Branly Museum. It was in his laboratory that Professor Branly, a teacher-researcher at the Institut Catholique de Paris in the 1875s, made the first wireless telegraphy transmission in 1890.

Built by the architect Paul Tournon in 1932, the Edouard Branly Museum is the former laboratory of Edouard Branly (1844-1940). It houses a collection of instruments described in his works. His publications also mention the orientations and areas of research he considered to be of capital importance, namely "radiant heat, optics and electricity".

The research that has contributed most to spreading Professor Branly's reputation is that which led him to the discovery of the principle of wireless telegraphy and the application of "radioconductors to telematics". The results of his research are notably exposed in numerous communications addressed to the Academy of Sciences.

Attached to the Institut Catholique de Paris, the physicist's laboratory has now become the present Musée Branly; it perpetuates its memory.

To go through the showcases presenting the apparatus used by the scientist, to see the rooms of his laboratory, his office and the "copper room", is to follow as closely as possible the itinerary of the museum. of this great scientist and glimpse the era of the history of science in which he is involved.

Wikipedia:
The museum contains the research laboratory and equipment used by Édouard Branly, a physics professor at the Institut Catholique de Paris and inventor of the first widely used radio receiver, the Branly coherer circa 1884-1886. Its collection includes a number of early devices used in wireless experiments, such as
electrolytic detectors,
insulated tubes filled with metal filings,
a Righi oscillator,
generators,
electromagnets,
metallic blades mounted on glass,
electrical contacts, and
a column of six steel balls stacked in a glass cylinder.


Description
(other)

Wikipedia:
Musée Édouard Branly (česky Muzeum Édouarda Branlyho) je muzeum shromažďující práci zakladatele rádiové komunikace Edouarda Branlyho (1844–1940). Nachází se v 6. obvodě v Paříži v Katolickém institutu na adrese Rue d'Assas č. 21


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