Richard Zsigmondy
In the year of 1903, Richard Zsigmondy came into view as a microscope inventor. He had developed a very “high tech” ultramicroscope that he could study specimens and organisms below wavelengths of light. This was a huge leap in the making of microscopes. The ultramicroscope made it more possible to view objects that couldn’t be seen through an ordinary microscope. Scientists used this device to study unpretentious* objects such as fog drops, smoke particles, and paint pigments within liquids or gases. He later won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1925.