Karl Baedeker (scientist)
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For the publisher, see Karl Baedeker.
Karl Baedeker (ca. 1877 – 1914) was a German scientist.
One of his scientific discoveries was that the resistivity of cuprous iodide (CuI) depended on its stoichiometry.
Baedeker was killed in action during World War I.
[edit] References
- "Electronic Genie: The tangled history of silicon" by Frederick Seitz and Norman G. Einspruch, University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago, USA, 1998.

