Template:Selected anniversaries/October 2: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(21 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<gallery>
<gallery>
||Marino Ghetaldi (b. 2 October 1568) was a Ragusan scientist. A mathematician and physicist who studied in Italy, England and Belgium, his best results are mainly in physics, especially optics, and mathematics.
|| *** DONE: Pics ***
 
||1568: Marino Ghetaldi born ... scientist. A mathematician and physicist who studied in Italy, England and Belgium, his best results are mainly in physics, especially optics, and mathematics. Pic.


File:Bernardino Telesio.jpg|link=Bernardino Telesio (nonfiction)|1588: Philosopher and scientist [[Bernardino Telesio (nonfiction)|Bernardino Telesio]] dies. While his natural theories were later disproven, his emphasis on observation influenced the emergence of the scientific method.
File:Bernardino Telesio.jpg|link=Bernardino Telesio (nonfiction)|1588: Philosopher and scientist [[Bernardino Telesio (nonfiction)|Bernardino Telesio]] dies. While his natural theories were later disproven, his emphasis on observation influenced the emergence of the scientific method.


File:Michele_Mercati_by_Petrus_Nellus.jpg|link=Michele Mercati (nonfiction)|1589: Physician, archaeologist, and crime-fighter [[Michele Mercati (nonfiction)|Michele Mercati]] publishes study of prehistoric stone tools, including evidence of prehistoric [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
File:Sir Isaac Newton by Sir Godfrey Kneller.jpg|link=Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|1667: Mathematician and physicist [[Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|Isaac Newton]] becomes a fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge. He had earned his bachelor's degree in 1665 and then spent two years at home in Lincolnshire inventing much of differential and integral calculus while Cambridge was closed due to plague.
 
||1745: Isaac Greenwood dies ... first Hollisian Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard College. During his tenure, he wrote anonymously the first natively-published American book on mathematics – the Greenwood Book, published in 1729. Pic search.
 
||1804: Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot dies ... engineer. Pic.
 
||1826: Gustav Heinrich Wiedemann born ... physicist known mostly for his literary work. Pic.


||1804 – Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot, French engineer (b. 1725)
||1852: William Ramsay born ... chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||Gustav Heinrich Wiedemann (b. October 2, 1826) was a German physicist known mostly for his literary work. Pic.
File:François Arago.jpg|link=François Arago (nonfiction)|1853: Mathematician and politician [[François Arago (nonfiction)|François Arago]] born. He observed that a rotating plate of copper tends to communicate its motion to a magnetic needle suspended over it, an effect now known as eddy current.  


||1852 – William Ramsay, Scottish-English chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1916)
||1854: Patrick Geddes born ... biologist, sociologist, geographer, and philanthropist. Pic.


||1853 – François Arago, French mathematician, physicist, astronomer, and politician, 25th Prime Minister of France (b. 1786)
||1883: Karl von Terzaghi born ... geologist and engineer. Pic.


||1854 – Patrick Geddes, Scottish biologist, sociologist, geographer, and philanthropist (d. 1932)
||1886: Astronomer Robert Julius Trumpler born. He will observe that the brightness of the more distant open clusters is lower than expected, and the stars appear more red, a phenomenon caused by interstellar dust absorbing interstellar light. Pic.


File:François Arago.jpg|link=François Arago (nonfiction)|1853: Mathematician and politician [[François Arago (nonfiction)|François Arago]] born. He observed that a rotating plate of copper tends to communicate its motion to a magnetic needle suspended over it, an effect now known as eddy current.  
||1901: Rudolph Koenig dies ... physicist and academic.  He was a pioneer of acoustical physics and engineering; his Koenig sound analyzer revolutionized musical and scientific worlds by demonstrated visually that musical notes and voices were in fact made up of simple sounds. Pic.
 
||1901: Charles Stark Draper born ... scientist and engineer, known as the "father of inertial navigation". He was the founder and director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Instrumentation Laboratory, later renamed the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, which made the Apollo Moon landings possible through the Apollo Guidance Computer it designed for NASA. Pic search.
 
||1906: Willy Ley born ... science writer, spaceflight advocate, and historian of science who helped to popularize rocketry, spaceflight, and natural history in both Germany and the United States. Pic.
 
||1907: Alexander R. Todd born ... biochemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.
 
||1909: Alex Raymond born ... cartoonist, creator of Flash Gordon. Pic.


||1883 – Karl von Terzaghi, Czech-American geologist and engineer (d. 1963)
||1914: Jack Parsons born ... chemist, occultist, and engineer. Pic.


||Charles Stark "Doc" Draper (b. October 2, 1901) was an American scientist and engineer, known as the "father of inertial navigation". He was the founder and director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Instrumentation Laboratory, later renamed the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, which made the Apollo Moon landings possible through the Apollo Guidance Computer it designed for NASA.
||1916: Leonard C. Lewin born ... writer, best known as the author of the bestseller ''The Report from Iron Mountain'' (1967). No pics?


||Willy Otto Oskar Ley (b. 1906) was a German-American science writer, spaceflight advocate, and historian of science who helped to popularize rocketry, spaceflight, and natural history in both Germany and the United States.
||1917: Christian de Duve born ... cytologist and biochemist, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1907 – Alexander R. Todd, Scottish-English biochemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1997)
||1921: Albert Scott Crossfield born ... pilot and engineer. Pic.


||1909 – Alex Raymond, American cartoonist, creator of Flash Gordon (d. 1956)
File:John Logie Baird 1917.jpg|link=John Logie Baird (nonfiction)|1925: [[John Logie Baird (nonfiction)|John Logie Baird]] performs the first test of a working television system.


||1914 – Jack Parsons, American chemist, occultist, and engineer (d. 1952)
||1926: Michio Suzuki born ... mathematician who studied group theory. Pic search.


||1917 – Christian de Duve, English-Belgian cytologist and biochemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2013)
||1927: Svante Arrhenius born ... physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1921 – Albert Scott Crossfield, American pilot and engineer (d. 2006)
||1933: John Gurdon born ... biologist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. (Alive October 2020.)


||1925 – John Logie Baird performs the first test of a working television system.
||1947: P. D. Ouspensky dies ... mathematician and philosopher. Pic.


||1927 – Svante Arrhenius, Swedish physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1859)
||1950: Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz is first published.


||1933 – John Gurdon, English biologist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate
File:ENIAC.jpg|link=ENIAC (nonfiction)|1955: [[ENIAC (nonfiction)|ENIAC]] retired. After disassembly, parts of the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, the first general purpose electronic computer, were shipped to the Smithsonian for display.


||1947 – P. D. Ouspensky, Russian-English mathematician and philosopher (b. 1878)
||1959: The anthology series ''The Twilight Zone'' premieres on CBS television.


||1950 – Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz is first published.
||1962: Boris Yakovlevich Bukreev dies ... mathematician and author. Pic.


||1959 – The anthology series The Twilight Zone premieres on CBS television.
||1967: Hans Reissner dies ... aeronautical engineer whose avocation was mathematical physics. He solved Einstein's equation for the metric of a charged point mass.  His Reissner–Nordström metric demonstrated that an electron has a naked singularity rather that an event horizon. Pic.


||1962 – Boris Yakovlevich Bukreev, Russian mathematician and author (b. 1859)
||1977: Beniamino Segre dies ... mathematician who is remembered today as a major contributor to algebraic geometry and one of the founders of finite geometry. Pic.


File:John Crank.jpg|link=John Crank (nonfiction)|1963: Mathematician, physicist, and crime-fighter [[John Crank (nonfiction)|John Crank]] uses the Crank–Nicolson method to detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
||1990: Géza Ottlik dies ... mathematician and bridge theorist. His 1979 book ''Adventures in Card Play'', written with Hugh Kelsey, introduced and developed new concepts (such as Backwash squeeze and Entry-shifting squeeze).  Pic search.


||Beniamino Segre (d. 2 October 1977) was an Italian mathematician who is remembered today as a major contributor to algebraic geometry and one of the founders of finite geometry. Pic.
||1996: The Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments are signed by U.S. President Bill Clinton.


||1996 – The Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments are signed by U.S. President Bill Clinton.
||1998: Olin Jeuck Eggen dies ... astronomer. He became known as one of the best observational astronomers of his time. He will be the first to introduce the now-accepted notion of moving groups of stars, and co-author of a seminal 1962 paper which suggests for the first time that the Milky Way Galaxy had collapsed out of a gas cloud. Pic.


||Tosio Kato (d. October 2, 1999) was a Japanese mathematician who worked with partial differential equations, mathematical physics and functional analysis.
||1999: Tosio Kato dies ... mathematician who worked with partial differential equations, mathematical physics and functional analysis. Pic.


||2002 Heinz von Foerster, Austrian-American physicist and philosopher (b. 1911)
||2002: Heinz von Foerster dies ... physicist and philosopher. A polymath, von Foerster gained renown in fields from computer science and artificial intelligence to epistemology, and researched high-speed electronics and electro-optics switching devices as a physicist, and in biophysics, the study of memory and knowledge. He worked on cognition based on neurophysiology, mathematics, and philosophy. Pic.


File:Paul Halmos.jpg|link=Paul Halmos (nonfiction)|2006: Mathematician and academic [[Paul Halmos (nonfiction)|Paul Halmos]] dies. He made fundamental advances in the areas of mathematical logic, probability theory, statistics, operator theory, ergodic theory, and functional analysis (in particular, Hilbert spaces).  
File:Paul Halmos.jpg|link=Paul Halmos (nonfiction)|2006: Mathematician and academic [[Paul Halmos (nonfiction)|Paul Halmos]] dies. He made fundamental advances in the areas of mathematical logic, probability theory, statistics, operator theory, ergodic theory, and functional analysis (in particular, Hilbert spaces).  


File:The Safe-Cracker.jpg|link=The Safe-Cracker|2007: Signed first edition of ''[[The Safe-Cracker]]'' provides clues which lead to the arrest and imprisonment of [[math criminals]].
||2009: Shaun Wylie dies ... mathematician and World War II codebreaker. Pic.
 
||Shaun Wylie (d. 2 October 2009) was a British mathematician and World War II codebreaker.


||2013 Abraham Nemeth, American mathematician and academic (b. 1918)
||2013: Abraham Nemeth dies ... mathematician, academic, and inventor. Nemeth was blind, and was known for developing a system for blind people to read and write mathematics. Pic search.


|File:Edward Lorenz.jpg|link=Edward Lorenz (nonfiction)|1998: Mathematician [[Edward Lorenz (nonfiction)|Edward Lorenz]] awarded Pulitzer Prize for advances in [[high-energy literature]] theory.
|File:Epic of Gilgamesh tablet V.jpg|link=Literature (nonfiction)|1999: [[Literature (nonfiction)|Gilgamesh tablet]] unhappy about missing sections, demands [[high-energy literature]] therapy.
</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 13:14, 7 February 2022