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Temperature > 14 - Thomas Johann Seebeck

Born in Reval on 9 April 1770 and died in Berlin on 10 December 1831. He was the physicist responsible for the discovery of the thermoelectric effect in 1821.

Seebeck came from a wealthy German-Baltic family of merchants in Reval (now Tallinn, the capital of Estonia). He graduated in medicine in 1802 from the University of Göttingen, opting for physics. In 1821, he discovered the thermoelectric effect, a combination of different metals that produces an electrical voltage, the potential of which depends on the materials it is made of and the temperature at which it is found. Known as the Seebeck effect, it explains how a thermocouple works.

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