Template:Selected anniversaries/January 12: Difference between revisions

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|File:Neon lighting Ne symbol.jpg|link=Neon lighting (nonfiction)|1932: [[Neon lighting (nonfiction)|Neon lighting]] says that it "enjoys the work," calls itself "the luckiest of technologies" for a life spent converting [[Electricity (nonfiction)|electricity]] into [[Light (nonfiction)|light]].
|File:Neon lighting Ne symbol.jpg|link=Neon lighting (nonfiction)|1932: [[Neon lighting (nonfiction)|Neon lighting]] says that it "enjoys the work," calls itself "the luckiest of technologies" for a life spent converting [[Electricity (nonfiction)|electricity]] into [[Light (nonfiction)|light]].


||1942 World War II: United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt creates the National War Labor Board.
||1942: World War II: United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt creates the National War Labor Board.


||1958 Charles Hatfield, American meteorologist (b. 1875)
||1958: Charles Hatfield dies ... meteorologist.


||1994 Gustav Naan, Estonian physicist and philosopher (b. 1919)
||1994: Gustav Naan dies ... physicist and philosopher.


||1996 Joachim Nitsche, German mathematician and academic (b. 1926)
||1996: Joachim Nitsche dies ... mathematician and academic.


||Bartel Leendert van der Waerden (d. January 12, 1996) was a Dutch mathematician and historian of mathematics.
||1996: Bartel Leendert van der Waerden dies ... mathematician and historian of mathematics.


||2003 Alan Nunn May, English physicist and spy (b. 1911)
||2003: Alan Nunn May dies ... English physicist and spy.


||2004 Olga Ladyzhenskaya, Russian mathematician and academic (b. 1921)
||2004: Olga Ladyzhenskaya dies ... mathematician and academic.


File:Deep Impact.png|link=Deep Impact (spacecraft) (nonfiction)|2005: [[Deep Impact (spacecraft) (nonfiction)|Deep Impact]] launches from Cape Canaveral on a Delta II rocket. It will be the first spacecraft to eject material from a comet's surface.
File:Deep Impact.png|link=Deep Impact (spacecraft) (nonfiction)|2005: [[Deep Impact (spacecraft) (nonfiction)|Deep Impact]] launches from Cape Canaveral on a Delta II rocket. It will be the first spacecraft to eject material from a comet's surface.
||2012: Basil Gordon dies ... mathematician at UCLA, specializing in number theory and combinatorics.[1] He obtained his Ph.D. at California Institute of Technology under the supervision of Tom Apostol. Ken Ono was one of his students. Gordon is well known for Göllnitz–Gordon identities, generalizing the Rogers–Ramanujan identities.[2] He also posed the still-unsolved Gaussian moat problem in 1962. Pic: https://www.math.ucla.edu/news/memoriam-basil-gordon-professor-mathematics-emeritus-1931-%E2%80%93-2012
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Revision as of 12:54, 23 August 2018