Fell;Fell, John Barraclough: 1815 to 1902, engineer
Ferber;Ferber, Ferdinand: 1862 to 1909, aviation pioneer
Fermi;Fermi, Enrico (1901-1954), Italian-American physicist, Nobel prize winner for physics 1938
Ferranti;Ferranti, Ziano de: 1864 to 1930, electrical engineer
Ferraris;Ferraris, Hermann: 1811 to 1885, chemist
FerriΘ;FerriΘ, Gustave: 1868 to 1932, radio frequency engineer
Ferry;A ferry is a boat specially equipped to transport passengers, freight and land vehicles regularly across inland waters, straits, channels and seas.
Fessenden;Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey (1866-1932), Canadian inventor
Filarete;Filarete, Antonio (real name Antonio Averlino): c. 1400 to c. 1469, architect and sculptor
Fischer;Fischer, Emil Hermann: 1852 to 1919, chemist
Fitch;Fitch, John: 1743 to 1798, engineer
Fitzeau;Fitzeau, Armand-Hippolyte-Louis: 1819 to 1896, physicist
Fleming;Fleming, John Ambrose (1949-1945), British electrical engineer
Focal length;The focal length is the distance between the focal point and the center of a mirror or a lens.
Focal point;Point on the optical axis where parallel incident rays intersect after refraction.
Focke;Focke, Heinrich (1890-1979), German aircraft maker
Fokker;Fokker, Anthony Herman Gerard: 1890 to 1939, aircraft designer
Fontana;Fontana, Domenico: 1543 to 1607, architect
Foot rope;A boltrope is a rope hemming sewn around every sail made of cloth.
F÷ppl;F÷ppl, August: 1854 to 1924, physicist and structural engineer
Force;Force is a physical quantity as well as the cause of any movement. It is determined by its absolute value and its acceleration. The following equation applies to power: Force equals mass multiplied by acceleration. The unit of measurement for power is 1 Newton (N).
Ford;Ford, Henry: 1863 to 1947, engineer
Forest;Forest, Ferdinand: 1851 to 1914, mechanic and engine manufacturer
Forest;Forest, Lee de: 1873 to 1961, radio frequency engineer
Forlanini;Forlanini, Enrico (1848-1930), Italian airship builder
Fossil;The adjective fossil describes things that were created in earlier times and have been covered by newer deposits.
Fourier;Fourier, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Baron de: 1768 to 1830, mathematician and physicist
Fourneyron;Fourneyron, Ben⌠it (1802-1867), French engineer
Fowler;Fowler, Sir John (1817-1898), British railway engineer
Francis;Francis, James Bicheno: 1815 to 1892, engineer
Frank;Frank, James: 1882 to 1964, nuclear physicist
Frank;Frank, Adolf: 1834 to 1916, chemist and technologist
Franklin;Franklin, Benjamin: 1706 to 1790, politician, writer and physicist
Fraunhofer;Fraunhofer, Joseph von: 1787 to 1826, physicist
Fraunhofer lines;Fraunhofer lines: Dark absorption lines in the Sun's spectrum.
Frei;Frei, Otto: 1925 to today?, engineer
Frenkel;Frenkel, Jakow Illjitsch: 1894 to 1952, physicist
Frequency;In a physical sense frequency means the number of electromagnetic or acoustic oscillations per second. It is measured in Hertz.
Fresnel;Fresnel, Augustin-Jean: 1788 to 1827, physicist
Freyssinet;Freyssinet, EugΦne: 1879 to 1962, engineer
Friedrich;Friedrich, Walter: 1883 to 1968, biophysicist
Frisch;Frisch, Otto Robert (1904-1979), German physicist
Frischen;Frischen, Carl: 1830 to 1890, electrical engineer
Fritt;Fritt, Charles Edgar: 1838 to 1905, clockmaker and engineer
Frolov;Frolov, Kosma Dimitriyevich, engineer.
Froment;Froment, Gustave: 1815 to 1864, electrical engineer
Froude;Froude, William: 1810 to 1879, engineer
Frytag;Frytag, Conrad: 1846 to 1921, civil engineer and businessman
FTP;FTP is the abbreviation for File Transfer Protocol, a set of conventions facilitating exchange of data between two computers in a local network or via the Internet.
Fuller;Fuller, Richard Buckminster: 1895 to 1983, engineer
Fulton;Fulton, Robert (1765-1815), American mechanic and shipbuilder