Every high school chemist has no doubt fiddled with a Bunsen burner—but where did the apparatus get its name? Science historian Howard Markel talks about the German chemist Robert Bunsen, and why his ...
Today is National Bunsen Burner Day, a good time to explore the device's connection to Cedar Rapids. Bunsen burners are used in laboratories to produce an open gas flame for heating and sterilization.
The Flame 100 is ideally suited for all flame related applications in the laboratory. The 15 millimeter precision flame allows graduated heating of dental tools as well as safe sterilization of ...
Scientific American is part of Springer Nature, which owns or has commercial relations with thousands of scientific publications (many of them can be found at www ...
Internet search giant Google is marking what would have been the 200th birthday of Robert Bunsen, the scientist who developed the Bunsen burner, with an animated Google Doodle on its homepage. The ...
As a rule, stories about Bunsen burners probably aren't that entertaining. They are, after all, pieces of lab equipment, which makes them inherently boring to anyone who thinks of labs as ...
The video features animated lab hero Mason in his romantic quest to win the heart of his adorable assistant Mary. Watching this simple, concise and funny video you will learn about how the FIREBOY ...