Template:Selected anniversaries/October 27: Difference between revisions
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||1904: The first underground New York City Subway line opens; the system becomes the biggest in United States, and one of the biggest in world. | ||1904: The first underground New York City Subway line opens; the system becomes the biggest in United States, and one of the biggest in world. | ||
||1905: Henry Berthold Mann born ... professor of mathematics and statistics at Ohio State University. Mann proved the Schnirelmann-Landau conjecture in number theory. Pic: https://math.osu.edu/about-us/history/henry-berthold-mann | |||
||1910: Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau born ... chemical engineer - pencillin factory. | ||1910: Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau born ... chemical engineer - pencillin factory. |
Revision as of 09:32, 12 October 2018
1654: Blaise Pascal writes to Pierre de Fermat, praising him for his solution to the Problem of the Points, about which they had exchanged seven previous letters.
1675: Mathematician and academic Gilles de Roberval dies. He published a system of the universe in which he supports the Copernican heliocentric system and attributes a mutual attraction to all particles of matter.
1678: Mathematician Pierre Raymond de Montmort born. He will write Essay d'analyse sur les jeux de hazard, an influential book about probability and games of chance which will introduce the combinatorial study of derangements.
1853: Mark Twains interviews Wallace War-Heels. Twain will later call it "the interview of a lifetime."
1854: Physician Golding Bird dies. He pioneered the medical use of electricity.
1938: Mathematician and philosopher Edmund Husserl publishes new class of Gnomon algorithm functions based on transcendental consciousness as the limit of all possible knowledge.
1995: Richard Smalley uses carbon nanotubes to detect and prevent crimes against chemical constants.
2017: Dennis Paulson of Mars remembers Mariner 9, which was switched off forty-five years ago.