Template:Selected anniversaries/May 8: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<gallery>
<gallery>
||1551: Thomas Drury born ... government informer and swindler ... noted for having been one of the main people responsible for accusations of heresy, blasphemy and seditious atheism on the part of the Elizabethan playwright Christopher Marlowe given to the Privy Council in May 1593. No pics online.
||1778: Lorenz Christoph Mizler dies ... physician, mathematician, and historian. Pic search good: https://www.google.com/search?q=Lorenz+Christoph+Mizler
File:Scopoli Giovanni Antonio.jpg|link=Giovanni Antonio Scopoli (nonfiction)|1788: Physician, geologist, and botanist [[Giovanni Antonio Scopoli (nonfiction)|Giovanni Antonio Scopoli]] dies. He has been called the "first anational European" and the "Linnaeus of the Austrian Empire".
File:Scopoli Giovanni Antonio.jpg|link=Giovanni Antonio Scopoli (nonfiction)|1788: Physician, geologist, and botanist [[Giovanni Antonio Scopoli (nonfiction)|Giovanni Antonio Scopoli]] dies. He has been called the "first anational European" and the "Linnaeus of the Austrian Empire".
|File:Bernoulli_wappen.png|link=Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|1789: Advances in [[Cellular automaton (nonfiction)|dynastic cellular automata theory]] reveal new members of [[Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Bernoulli family]].


File:Antoine Lavoisier.jpg|link=Antoine Lavoisier (nonfiction)|1794: Branded a traitor during the Reign of Terror by revolutionists, French chemist [[Antoine Lavoisier (nonfiction)|Antoine Lavoisier]], who was also a tax collector with the Ferme générale, is tried, convicted and guillotined in one day in Paris.
File:Antoine Lavoisier.jpg|link=Antoine Lavoisier (nonfiction)|1794: Branded a traitor during the Reign of Terror by revolutionists, French chemist [[Antoine Lavoisier (nonfiction)|Antoine Lavoisier]], who was also a tax collector with the Ferme générale, is tried, convicted and guillotined in one day in Paris.
||1824: William Walker born ... physician, lawyer, journalist and mercenary who organized several private military expeditions into Latin America, with the intention of establishing English-speaking slave colonies under his personal control, an enterprise then known as "filibustering". Walker usurped the presidency of the Republic of Nicaragua in 1856 and ruled until 1857, when he was defeated by a coalition of Central American armies. He returned in an attempt to reestablish his control of the region and was captured and executed by the government of Honduras in 1860. Pic.
||1834: Loftus Perkins born ... engineer, particularly involved in developing the practical technologies of central heating and refrigeration. Pic.
||1842: Emil Christian Hansen born ... mycologist who revolutionized beer-making through development of new ways to culture yeast. He financed his education by writing novels. Though he never reached an M.Sc., in 1876, he received a gold medal for an essay on fungi. In 1879, he became superintendent of the Carlsberg breweries. In 1883, he successfully developed a cultivated yeast that revolutionized beer-making around the world, because Hansen by refusing to patent his method made it freely available to other brewers. He also proved there are different species of yeast. Hansen separated two species: Saccaromyces cerevisae, an over-yeast (floating on the surface of the fermenting beer) and S. carlsbergensis*, an under-yeast (laying on the bottom of the liquid). Pic.
||1859: Johan Jensen born ... mathematician and engineer. Pic.
File:Wallace War-Heels.jpg|link=Wallace War-Heels|1872: Adventurer [[Wallace War-Heels]] defeats alleged criminal mastermind [[Baron Zersetzung]] in single combat.


File:John Stuart Mill circa 1870.jpg|link=John Stuart Mill (nonfiction)|1873: Economist, civil servant, and philosopher [[John Stuart Mill (nonfiction)|John Stuart Mill]] dies. He was one of the most influential thinkers in the history of liberalism, and the first Member of Parliament to call for women's suffrage.
File:John Stuart Mill circa 1870.jpg|link=John Stuart Mill (nonfiction)|1873: Economist, civil servant, and philosopher [[John Stuart Mill (nonfiction)|John Stuart Mill]] dies. He was one of the most influential thinkers in the history of liberalism, and the first Member of Parliament to call for women's suffrage.


||1876: Osip Ivanovich Somov dies ... mathematician. Pic.
File:Renato Caccioppoli.jpg|link=Renato Caccioppoli (nonfiction)|1959: Mathematician [[Renato Caccioppoli (nonfiction)|Renato Caccioppoli]] takes his own life. Caccioppoli contributed to mathematical analysis, including the theory of functions of several complex variables, functional analysis, and measure theory.
 
||1886: Pharmacist John Pemberton first sells a carbonated beverage named "Coca-Cola" as a patent medicine. Pic.
 
||1891: Helena Blavatsky dies ... mystic and author. Pic.
 
||1898: Ernst Adolph Guillemin born ... electrical engineer and computer scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who spent his career extending the art and science of linear network analysis and synthesis. Pic: http://museum.mit.edu/nom150/entries/1125
 
||1904: Eadweard Muybridge dies ... photographer and cinematographer. Pic.
 
||1904: Nikolaus Hofreiter born ... mathematician who worked mainly in number theory. Pic: http://geschichte.univie.ac.at/de/node/33601
 
||1905: Karol Borsuk born ... mathematician. His main interest was topology. Borsuk introduced the theory of absolute retracts (ARs) and absolute neighborhood retracts (ANRs), and the cohomotopy groups, later called Borsuk–Spanier cohomotopy groups. He also founded Shape theory. He has constructed various beautiful examples of topological spaces, e.g. an acyclic, 3-dimensional continuum which admits a fixed point free homeomorphism onto itself; also 2-dimensional, contractible polyhedra which have no free edge. His topological and geometric conjectures and themes stimulated research for more than half a century.
 
||1920: Saul Bass born ... graphic designer and director.
 
||1932: Heinz-Dieter Zeh born ... a professor (later professor emeritus) of the University of Heidelberg and theoretical physicist. He was one of the developers of the many-minds interpretation of quantum mechanics and the discoverer of decoherence, first described in his seminal 1970 paper. Pic: https://scilogs.spektrum.de/das-zauberwort/der-alte-mann-und-das-multiversum-ein-nachruf-auf-h-dieter-zeh/
 
||1940: "Foss's Day" in honour of Hugh Foss, the cryptanalyst who achieved the feat. Pic: https://alchetron.com/Hugh-Foss
 
||1942: World War II: The Battle of the Coral Sea comes to an end with Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft carrier aircraft attacking and sinking the United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Lexington. The battle marks the first time in the naval history that two enemy fleets fight without visual contact between warring ships.
 
||1942: World War II: Gunners of the Ceylon Garrison Artillery on Horsburgh Island in the Cocos Islands rebel in the Cocos Islands Mutiny. Their mutiny is crushed and three of them are executed, the only British Commonwealth soldiers to be executed for mutiny during the Second World War.
 
||1947: Cassius Jackson Keyser dies ... mathematician. Pic.
 
||1951: Gilbert Ames Bliss dies ... mathematician, known for his work on the calculus of variations. Pic.
 
||19953: Veniamin Kagan dies ... mathematician and academic. He contributed to hyperbolic geometry and Riemannian geometry.  Pic search yes: https://www.google.com/search?q=Veniamin+Kagan
 
|File:Rhizolith Group.jpg|link=Rhizolith Group|1954: [[Rhizolith Group]] debuts new work based on the [[Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Bernoulli family]].
 
||1959: Renato Caccioppoli dies ... mathematician, known for his contributions to mathematical analysis, including the theory of functions of several complex variables, functional analysis, measure theory. Pic.


File:Henry Whitehead.jpg|link=J. H. C. Whitehead (nonfiction)|1960: Mathematician and academic [[J. H. C. Whitehead (nonfiction)|J. H. C. Whitehead]] dies. During the Second World War, he worked with the codebreakers at Bletchley Park.
File:Henry Whitehead.jpg|link=J. H. C. Whitehead (nonfiction)|1960: Mathematician and academic [[J. H. C. Whitehead (nonfiction)|J. H. C. Whitehead]] dies. During the Second World War, he worked with the codebreakers at Bletchley Park.


||1972: Vietnam War: U.S. President Richard Nixon announces his order to place mines in major North Vietnamese ports in order to stem the flow of weapons and other goods to that nation.
</gallery>


||1972: Beatrice Helen Worsley dies ... computer scientist. Pic: https://www.google.com/search?q=Beatrice+Helen+Worsley
{{Template:Categories: May 8}}
 
||1973: A 71-day standoff between federal authorities and the American Indian Movement members occupying the Pine Ridge Reservation at Wounded Knee, South Dakota ends with the surrender of the militants.
 
||1988: Robert A. Heinlein dies ... science fiction writer and screenwriter. Pic.
 
||1988: A fire at Illinois Bell's Hinsdale Central Office triggers an extended 1AESS network outage once considered the "worst telecommunications disaster in US telephone industry history".
 
||2002: Boyce Dawkins McDaniel dies ... nuclear physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project and later directed the Cornell University Laboratory of Nuclear Studies (LNS). McDaniel was skilled in constructing "atom smashing" devices to study the fundamental structure of matter and helped to build the most powerful particle accelerators of his time. Together with his graduate student, he invented the pair spectrometer. Pic.
 
||2008: Aryeh Dvoretzky dies ... mathematician, the winner of the 1973 Israel Prize in Mathematics. He is best known for his work in functional analysis, statistics and probability. Pic.
 
||2008: Kôdi Husimi dies ... theoretical physicist who served as the president of the Science Council of Japan. Husimi trees in graph theory, the Husimi Q representation in quantum mechanics, and Husimi's theorem in the mathematics of paper folding are named after him. No pic online (except diagrams from papers).
 
||2012: Maurice Sendak dies ... author and illustrator.
 
||2014: Roger L. Easton dies ... scientist, co-invented the GPS. Pic.
 
Violet_Spiral_2.jpg|link=Violet Spiral 2 (nonfiction)|2016: Signed first edition of ''[[Violet Spiral 2 (nonfiction)|Violet Spiral 2]]'' stolen from the Walker Art Center in [[New Minneapolis, Canada]] by the [[Forbidden Ratio]] gang.
 
||2016: Tom M. Apostol dies ... analytic number theorist. Pic search: https://www.google.com/search?q=tom+m.+apostol
 
||2017: Cécile Andrée Paule DeWitt-Morette dies ... mathematician and physicist.  Pic.
 
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 09:36, 7 May 2024