Template:Selected anniversaries/March 26: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
||1893: James Bryant Conant born ... chemist, academic, and diplomat, 1st United States Ambassador to West Germany. | ||1893: James Bryant Conant born ... chemist, academic, and diplomat, 1st United States Ambassador to West Germany. | ||
||1903: Patrick du Val born ... mathematician, known for his work on algebraic geometry, differential geometry, and general relativity. The concept of Du Val singularity of an algebraic surface is named after him. Pic: http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Du_Val.html | |||
||1911: Bernard Katz born ... biophysicist, Nobel Prize laureate. | ||1911: Bernard Katz born ... biophysicist, Nobel Prize laureate. |
Revision as of 08:16, 13 January 2019
1773: American captain and mathematician Nathaniel Bowditch born. He will be a founder of modern maritime navigation; his book The New American Practical Navigator, first published in 1802, will be carried on board every commissioned U.S. Naval vessel.
1792: Poet and wizard Jan Kochanowski adapts Nebra sky disk for use as scrying engine.
1793: Physician and engineer John Mudge dies. He was the first self-proclaimed civil engineer, and often regarded as the "father of civil engineering".
1851: Mathematician George Chrystal born. He will be awarded a Gold Medal from the Royal Society of London (confirmed shortly after his death) for his studies of seiches (wave patterns in large inland bodies of water).
1909: Mathematician Carl Gottfried Neumann uses the finite propagation of electrodynamic actions to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1913: Mathematician and academic Paul Erdős born. He will firmly believe mathematics to be a social activity, living an itinerant lifestyle with the sole purpose of writing mathematical papers with other mathematicians.