Scrape wikipedia-science: 461 new, 879 updated, 1382 total (kb-cron)

This commit is contained in:
turtle89431 2026-05-04 21:01:48 -07:00
parent f1caa78bc3
commit 3c223f112b
20 changed files with 552 additions and 10 deletions

BIN
_index.db

Binary file not shown.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,75 @@
---
title: "Ada Twist, Scientist (TV series)"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Twist,_Scientist_(TV_series)"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:45.730076+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
Ada Twist, Scientist is an animated preschool television series, based on the eponymous book series by Andrea Beaty and David Roberts. Developed and executive produced by Chris Nee for Netflix, the series premiered on September 28, 2021. A second season was released on January 25, 2022, followed by a third season on September 12, 2022, and a fourth season on April 22, 2023.
== Characters ==
=== Main ===
Ada Twist (voiced by Amanda Christine in Seasons 1-3 and Kaya Jackson in Season 4) is an intellectual 9-year-old girl, and a scientist. She's smart, kindhearted, sensitive, and always sweet. Her catchphrases are "Loading the Lab!", "Wasn't that cool? Science is the best.", and "We don't quit, we got grit!" She has her own magic lab and her big book of discoveries and inventions. Her favorite animal is a ladybug.
Iggy Peck (voiced by Nicholas Crovetti) is a fearful 8-year-old boy, and an architect. He's caring, extremely nervous, shy, quiet, and easygoing. His favorite animal is a whale shark.
Rosie Revere (voiced by Candace Kozak) is an energetic 7-year-old girl, and an engineer. She's funny, a bit bossy, positive, and confident. She is also tomboyish which is what makes her always have her red bandanna with white polka dots all the time. Her favorite animal is a unicorn.
Benny B. (voiced by Corey J) is an optimistic 10-year-old boy, the newcomer of the show's fourth season, and a technician. He always comes up with great ideas and has a robotic dog built by himself. Ever since he moved into town, he misses his old life but thanks to Ada and friends, they helped him find his way back home. He is the only character to not have a favorite animal.
=== Supporting ===
Arthur Twist (voiced by Terrence Little Gardenhigh) is Ada's 11-year-old brother who loves magic and sports. He's a bit bored and cool. He has a pet lizard, named Lil Liz.
Aisha Twist (voiced by Susan Kelechi Watson) is Ada and Arthur's mother.
Amari Twist (voiced by Taye Diggs) is Ada and Arthur's father.
Mushu Kitty (voiced by Frank Welker) is Ada's pet cat.
Bianca "Bee Bee" (voiced by Nia Thompson) is Benny's 4-year-old sister who loves tea parties.
== Episodes ==
=== Series overview ===
=== Season 1 (2021) ===
=== Season 2 (2022) ===
=== Season 3 (2022) ===
=== Season 4 (2023) ===
== Production ==
The series was first announced in October 2020.
== Release ==
Ada Twist, Scientist was released on Netflix on September 28, 2021.
== LGBT representation ==
In the episode "Blue River Wedding" (Season 4 Episode 11), friends Ada Twist, Rosie Revere, Iggy Peck, and Benny B are helping Sensei Dave (voiced by George Takei) and Jiu Jitsu Joe (voiced by Guillermo Díaz) get ready for their wedding. This became controversial for more conservative parents.
== Reception ==
=== Accolades ===
The series received a 2022 Annie Award for Best Animated Television/Broadcast Production for Preschool Children.
The series also received a 2022 Children's and Family Emmy Awards award for Outstanding Preschool Animated Series.
The series also received a 2024 GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Children's Programming for the episode "Blue River Wedding".
== References ==
== External links ==
Ada Twist, Scientist at IMDb

View File

@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
---
title: "Bio Hunter"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bio_Hunter"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:46.847740+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
Bio Hunter (バイオ・ハンター, Baio Hantā) is a Japanese manga series authored by Fujihiko Hosono. It tells the story about two molecular biologists, Koshigaya and Komada who take on humans with strange viruses that make them less human and more demonic. It was serialized in the Scola manga magazine Comic Burger.
The manga was also adapted into an hour-long single-episode anime OVA, produced by Madhouse Studios and Toei Video, directed by Yuzo Sato and scripted by Yoshiaki Kawajiri. It was distributed throughout the United States and Canada by Urban Vision. The English dub is distributed by MVM Films in the United Kingdom and Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand.
The movie has similar animation and dark urban fantasy themes that Kawajiri worked on before and after Bio Hunter, such as Ninja Scroll, Devilman OVA, X/1999 anime TV series, and Gungrave. Kawajiri, Yamamoto and Maruyama worked again as a team between 1997 and 2000 in making the Madhouse's Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust.
== Plot ==
Two scientists are attempting to distribute the cure for a demon virus that is affecting people all over Japan, however, things have become complicated. One of them has become infected. So begins his battle with himself, as he attempts to not only control his emerging demon side, but also to save the lives of others by wielding its great strength.
== Characters ==
Komada
Voiced by: Toshihiko Seki (Japanese); Matt McKenzie (English)
Koshigaya
Voiced by: Kazuhiko Inoue (Japanese); Matt K. Miller (English)
Sayaka
Voiced by: Yuko Minaguchi (Japanese); Sherry Lynn (English)
Bokudō
Voiced by: Chikao Ōtsuka (Japanese); Mike Reynolds (English)
Tabe
Voiced by: Tarô Ishida (Japanese); Barry Stigler (English)
Mikawa
Voiced by: Ryūzaburō Ōtomo (Japanese); Jamie Hanes (English)
Mary
Voiced by: Rei Igarashi (Japanese); Barbara Goodson (English)
Boss
Voiced by: Yutaka Shimaka (Japanese); John Hostetter (English)
Police Officer
Voiced by: Daiki Nakamura (Japanese); TBA (English)
== References ==
== External links ==
Bio Hunter at IMDb
Bio Hunter (OVA) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

View File

@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
---
title: "Edison (poem)"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edison_(poem)"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:48.163385+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
Edison is an epic poem by Czech poet Vítězslav Nezval. It was written in 1927. Later it was included in the poetic book Básně noci (Poems of the Night) which was published in 1930. The main hero of the poem is American inventor Thomas Alva Edison, considered by the author to be a modern genius. Nezval's work is a praise of human activity, technology, and science, but also an expression of anxiety about civilisation. Nezval compares the inventor's work to writing poetry. He points out that every creative work demands much toil and courage. After Edison's death in 1931 Nezval wrote Signál času (Signal of time) which is an elegy. Both poems are written in the same measure, trochaic hexameter. Nezval uses long enumerations, building sophisticated poetical imagery. Nezval's Edison was probably influenced by Guillaume Apollinaire's work, especially the poem Zone, which was translated into Czech by Karel Čapek.
== Translations ==
The poem was translated into English by Ewald Osers. François Kérel, helped by Nezval himself, translated the poem into French. It was also twice translated into Polish, by Kazimierz Andrzej Jaworski and Józef Waczków.
== Notes ==
== Bibliography ==
Vítězslav Nezval, Edison. Báseň o pěti zpěvech. Translated from the Czech by Ewald Osers (parallel Czech and English texts), Dvořák, Pelhřimov 2003.
Vítězslav Nezval, Cudowny czarodziej. Wybór i wstęp Jacek Baluch, redakcja Andrzej Piotrowski, Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy, Warszawa 1969 (in Polish).

View File

@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
---
title: "List of scientific units named after people"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scientific_units_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:42.657615+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
This is a list of scientific units named after people. For other lists of eponyms (names derived from people) see eponym. By convention, the name of the unit is properly written starting with a lowercase letter (except where any word would be capitalized), but the first letter of its symbol is a capital letter if it is derived from a proper name.
== SI units ==
ampere (A), electric current André-Marie Ampère
becquerel (Bq), radioactivity Henri Becquerel
degree Celsius (°C), temperature Anders Celsius
coulomb (C), electric charge Charles-Augustin de Coulomb
farad (F), capacitance Michael Faraday
gray (Gy), absorbed dose of radiation Louis Harold Gray
henry (H), inductance Joseph Henry
hertz (Hz), frequency Heinrich Rudolf Hertz
joule (J), energy, work, heat James Prescott Joule
kelvin (K), thermodynamic temperature Lord Kelvin
newton (N), force Isaac Newton
ohm (Ω), electrical resistance Georg Ohm
pascal (Pa), pressure Blaise Pascal
siemens (S), electrical conductance Werner von Siemens
sievert (Sv), radiation dose equivalent Rolf Sievert
tesla (T), magnetic flux density Nikola Tesla
volt (V), electric potential, electromotive force Alessandro Volta
watt (W), power, radiant flux James Watt
weber (Wb), magnetic flux Wilhelm Eduard Weber
== CGS units ==
biot (Bi), electric current Jean-Baptiste Biot
buckingham (B), electric quadrupole moment A. David Buckingham
debye (D), electric dipole moment Peter Debye
eotvos (E), gravitational gradient Loránd Eötvös
galileo (Gal), acceleration Galileo Galilei
gauss (G or Gs), magnetic flux density Carl Friedrich Gauss
gilbert (Gb), magnetomotive force William Gilbert
goeppert-mayer (GM), two-photon absorption cross section Maria Goeppert Mayer
kayser (kayser), wavenumber Heinrich Kayser
maxwell (Mx), magnetic flux James Clerk Maxwell
oersted (Oe), magnetic field strength Hans Christian Ørsted
poise (P), dynamic viscosity Jean Léonard Marie Poiseuille
Rayl or Rayleigh (Rayl), acoustic impedance John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh
rayleigh (R), photon flux Robert Strutt, 4th Baron Rayleigh
stokes (S or St), kinematic viscosity George Gabriel Stokes
=== No longer in use ===
franklin (Fr), electric charge Benjamin Franklin
clausius (Cl), entropy Rudolf Clausius
== Others ==
angstrom (Å), distance Anders Jonas Ångström
baud (Bd), symbol rate Émile Baudot
Bark scale, psychoacoustical scale Heinrich Barkhausen
brewster (B), stress optic coefficient David Brewster
centimorgan (cM), recombination frequency Thomas Hunt Morgan
curie (Ci), radioactivity Marie and Pierre Curie
dalton (Da), atomic mass John Dalton
darcy (D), permeability, Henry Darcy
decibel (dB) dimensionless proportions and ratios, e.g. relative power levels Alexander Graham Bell
degree Fahrenheit (°F), temperature Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit
degree Rankine (°R), temperature William John Macquorn Rankine
Dobson unit (DU), atmospheric ozone Gordon Dobson
erlang (E), dimensionless volume of telecommunications traffic Agner Krarup Erlang
fermi (fm), distance Enrico Fermi
hartley (Hart), information Ralph Hartley
hartree (Ha), energy Douglas Hartree
Hounsfield scale, radiodensity Godfrey Newbold Hounsfield
jansky (Jy), electromagnetic flux Karl Jansky
langley (ly), solar radiation Samuel Pierpont Langley
langmuir (L), gas exposure dose Irving Langmuir
neper (Np), relative power level John Napier
degree Öchsle (°Oe), density Ferdinand Öchsle
Rockwell scale (HR), indentation hardness Stanley Rockwell
röntgen (R), dosage of X-rays or gamma radiation Wilhelm Röntgen
Richter magnitude, earthquake power Charles Francis Richter
Scoville units, capsaicin content of chili peppers Wilbur Scoville
shannon (Sh), information Claude Shannon
siegbahn (xu), distance Manne Siegbahn
svedberg (S or Sv), sedimentation rate Theodor Svedberg
sverdrup (Sv), volume transport rate Harald Sverdrup
torr (Torr), pressure Evangelista Torricelli
troland (Td), luminance (human eye) Leonard Troland
=== Natural unit systems ===
Planck units Max Planck
Stoney units George Stoney
=== No longer in use ===
Mercalli intensity scale, earthquake effects Giuseppe Mercalli
degree Réaumur (°R), temperature René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur
degree Delisle (°D), temperature Joseph-Nicolas Delisle
degree Newton (°N), temperature Isaac Newton
degree Rømer (°Rø), temperature Ole Rømer
degree Baumé (°Bé), density Antoine Baumé
einstein (E), photochemistry Albert Einstein
poncelet (p), power Jean-Victor Poncelet
faraday (Fd), electrical charge Michael Faraday
== See also ==
List of eponyms
Lists of etymologies
List of obsolete units of measurement
List of unusual units of measurement
List of humorous units of measurement
List of scientists whose names are used as SI units
List of scientists whose names are used as non SI units
== References ==

View File

@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
---
title: "List of things named after Alan Turing"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Alan_Turing"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:41.349480+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
Alan Turing (19121954), a pioneer computer scientist, mathematician, and philosopher, is the eponym of all of the things listed below.
Alan Turing Building, Manchester, England
The Turing School, Eastbourne, England
Alan Turing Centenary Conference, Manchester, England
Alan Turing Institute, London, England
Alan Turing law
Alan Turing Memorial, Manchester, England
Alan Turing sculpture, Eugene, Oregon, United States
Statue of Alan Turing, Bletchley Park, England
Alan Turing: The Enigma
Alan Turing Year
The Annotated Turing
ChurchTuring thesis
ChurchTuringDeutsch principle
GoodTuring frequency estimation
Object-Oriented Turing (programming language)
Super-Turing computation
Turing-acceptable language
Turing Award
Turing (cipher)
Turing College, Kent, England
Turing completeness
Turing computability
Turing degree
Turing Foundation, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Turing Gateway to Mathematics, Cambridge, England
The Turing Guide
Turing House School
Turing Institute, Glasgow, Scotland
Turing jump
Turing Lecture
Turing machine
Alternating Turing machine
Multi-track Turing machine
Multitape Turing machine
Neural Turing machine
Non-deterministic Turing machine
PostTuring machine
Probabilistic Turing machine
Quantum Turing machine
Read-only right moving Turing machines
Read-only Turing machine
Symmetric Turing machine
Unambiguous Turing machine
Universal Turing machine
Wolfram's 2-state 3-symbol Turing machine
Turing Machine (band)
Turing (microarchitecture)
Turing OS
Turing pattern
Turing Pharmaceuticals
Turing (programming language)
Turing reduction
Turing Robot, China
Turing scheme
Turing table
Turing tarpit
Turing test
CAPTCHA (Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart)
Computer game bot Turing Test
Graphics Turing Test
Reverse Turing test
Subject matter expert Turing test
The Turing Test (novel)
The Turing Test (video game)
Visual Turing Test
The Turing Trust
Turing Tumble
Turing's method
Turing's proof
Turing's Wager
Turing+ (programming language)
Turing.jl (probabilistic programming)
Turingery
Turingismus
Turmite
Turochamp
Other items
Alan Turing (MI) Building, University of Wolverhampton, England
Turing Street, East London, England
Turing Gate, Bletchley
Turing Close, Leeds
NE Turing Street, near Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Washington
== See also ==
Bank of England £50 note (in 2021)
Turing baronetcy
Turing (disambiguation)
== References ==

View File

@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
---
title: "List of things named after Glenn T. Seaborg"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Glenn_T._Seaborg"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:40.112509+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
This is a list of things named after the Nobel Prize-winning American chemist Glenn T. Seaborg (19121999). Known for his considerable legacy, Seaborg was once listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the longest entry in Marquis Who's Who. His legacy was cemented with the naming of element 106 as seaborgium in his honor. He is the first of two individuals (the other being Yuri Oganessian) to have had an element named after them during their lifetime (the names einsteinium and fermium were proposed when Einstein and Fermi were alive, but were not approved until after their deaths).
== List ==
The following list of things named after Glenn T. Seaborg supplements his biographical entry:
Seaborgium, a synthetic chemical element with the symbol Sg and atomic number 106
Glenn T. Seaborg Center, Northern Michigan University
Seaborg is an IBM RS/6000 SP supercomputer at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Local Lodge Glenn T. Seaborg #719, Vasa Order of America. The Seaborg Lodge also offers the Seaborg Scholarship.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Medal has been awarded by the UCLA Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry since 1987 to honor significant contributions to chemistry.
The American Nuclear Society (ANS) Seaborg Medal is awarded to recognize exceptional achievement in nuclear science or engineering.
A Glenn T. Seaborg Actinide Separation Award presented at the annual Actinide Separation Conference
The Glenn T. Seaborg Award for Nuclear Chemistry is awarded annually by the Nuclear Chemistry and Technology Division of the American Chemical Society.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Institute (GTSI) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory studies the impact of radionuclides in the environment.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Institute (GTSI) at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) studies plutonium and heavy elements.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Institute (GTSI) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) studies bionuclear science.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Center (GTSC) at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is a part of the Chemical Sciences Division and studies the chemistry of transactinide elements.
Glenn Seaborg Fellowships are offered by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Glenn Seaborg Postdoctoral Fellowship, Argonne National Laboratory
The Seaborg Prize, awarded to the elected leader of 40 high school students selected in the Intel Science Talent Search
Glenn T. Seaborg Award for Nuclear Chemistry sponsored by the ACS Division of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
Glenn T. Seaborg Science Award was established by the Swedish Council of America in 1979 and is awarded to a student enrolled in science or mathematics at one of six colleges and universities founded by Swedish immigrants.
Glenn T. Seaborg Scholarship, Swedish Club of Los Angeles
Dr. Glenn Seaborg Way, South Gate, California. It has been proposed as the future site of the Seaborg Home.
Seaborg Road, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Seaborg Lane, Ventura, California
Glenn Seaborg Trail, Department of Energy, Germantown, Maryland
Seaborg Fellow in Nuclear History, fellowship offered by the U.S. Department of Energy
Seaborg Trail, Briones Regional Park, near Lafayette, California
Glenn T. Seaborg National Public Leadership Award, American Hiking Society
Seaborg Open Space Fund, a non-profit foundation, was founded by David Seaborg in his father's honor.
Glenn T. Seaborg Award at the UC Berkeley Athletic Department, is given to a University of California football player who distinguishes himself after graduation.
The Glenn Seaborg Learning Consortium, Lafayette Library and Learning Center, Lafayette, California
Asteroid 4856 Seaborg, discovered by Carolyn Shoemaker at Palomar in 1983, was named in his honor. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 17 March 1995 (M.P.C. 24916).
Seaborg Field at David Starr Jordan High School a high school football field in Watts, California in which they show pride in their most prominent alumnus
Seaborg Technologies is a Danish-based company developing a novel type of nuclear reactor, the Molten salt reactor.
== References ==

View File

@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
---
title: "List of things named after Hermann Weyl"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Hermann_Weyl"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:43.956620+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
This is a list of topics named after Hermann Weyl, the influential German mathematician from the 20th century.
== Mathematics and physics ==
== Other ==
Weyl (crater)
== References ==

View File

@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
---
title: "List of things named after Max Planck"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Max_Planck"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:37.704015+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
This is a list of things named for the German scientist Max Planck:
== Physics ==
BoltzmannPlanck equation
FokkerPlanck equation
NernstPlanck equation
KelvinPlanck statement of the second law of thermodynamics
MassieuPlanck potentials
Planck potential
Planck proposition, Planck statement, Planck's principle; see KelvinPlanck statement
Planckian locus
=== Quantum mechanics ===
Planck constant
Planck postulate
Planck's law of black body radiation
Planck-taper window
PlanckBessel window
PlanckEinstein relation
=== Cosmology ===
Planck units
Planck energy
Planck length
Planck mass
Planck time
Planck temperature
Planck epoch
Planck postulate
Planck scale
Planck star
Trans-Planckian problem
== Other ==
1069 Planckia, asteroid
Max Planck Society
Planck's principle
Planck (crater) on the Moon
Planck (spacecraft), space observatory
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, see Max Planck Society
Colegio Max Planck, in Trujillo, Peru.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
---
title: "List of things named after Roger Penrose"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Roger_Penrose"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:36.509670+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
This is a list of things named for the British scientist Roger Penrose:
== Mathematics ==
MoorePenrose inverse, the most widely known generalization of the inverse matrix in particular linear algebra
Penrose graphical notation, a visual depiction of multilinear functions or tensors
Penrose stairs, impossible object (co-created with his father Lionel Penrose)
Penrose tiling, an example of an aperiodic tiling
Penrose triangle, impossible object (co-created with his father Lionel Penrose)
Penrose unilluminable room, first solution to the illumination problem
== Physics ==
DiósiPenrose model, possible solution to the measurement problem
GerochHeldPenrose formalism
NewmanPenrose formalism, a set of notation for general relativity
Penrose diagram, a two-dimensional diagram capturing the causal relations between different points in spacetime
Penrose inequality, estimation of the mass of a spacetime
Penrose conjecture
Penrose interpretation, speculation about the relationship between quantum mechanics and general relativity
Penrose process, or Penrose mechanism, a theoretical means whereby energy can be extracted from a rotating black hole
Penrose singularity theorem in general relativity
Penrose transform, a complex analogue of the Radon transform in theoretical physics
PenroseTerrell effect, visual distortion according to the special theory of relativity
PenroseWard correspondence
RietdijkPutnamPenrose argument, version of RietdijkPutnam argument
== Other ==
PenroseLucas argument, a logical argument
Penrose tennis ball, 1995, a novel economical design in which the two halves that cup to form the ball very nearly tile the plane.

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 1/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 2/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 3/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 4/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 5/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 6/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 7/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 8/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 9/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---

View File

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ chunk: 10/10
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_phenomena_named_after_people"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T03:30:18.817718+00:00"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T04:01:38.936512+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---