Template:Selected anniversaries/October 27: Difference between revisions

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||1449 Ulugh Beg, Persian astronomer, mathematician and sultan (b. 1394)
||1449: Ulugh Beg dies ... astronomer, mathematician and sultan. Pic: statue;


||1553 Michael Servetus, Spanish physician and theologian (b. 1511)
||1553: Michael Servetus dies ... physician and theologian. Pic.


|File:Geometers_program_medievel_pilgrimage.jpg|link=Pilgrimage|[[Pilgrimage|Geometers refactor medieval pilgrimage]].
File:Blaise Pascal.jpg|link=Blaise Pascal (nonfiction)|1654: [[Blaise Pascal (nonfiction)|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.  


||1666 Robert Hubert, French watchmaker (b. 1640) -  executed following his false confession of starting the Great Fire of London.
||1666: Robert Hubert dies ... executed following his false confession of starting the Great Fire of London.


File:Gilles Personne de Roberval.jpg|link=Gilles de Roberval (nonfiction)|1675: Mathematician and academic [[Gilles de Roberval (nonfiction)|Gilles de Roberval]] dies. He published a system of the universe in which he supports the [[Nicolaus Copernicus (nonfiction)|Copernican heliocentric system]] and attributes a mutual attraction to all particles of matter.
File:Gilles Personne de Roberval.jpg|link=Gilles de Roberval (nonfiction)|1675: Mathematician and academic [[Gilles de Roberval (nonfiction)|Gilles de Roberval]] dies. He published a system of the universe in which he supports the [[Nicolaus Copernicus (nonfiction)|Copernican heliocentric system]] and attributes a mutual attraction to all particles of matter.
File:Montmort - Essay d'analyse sur les jeux de hazard, 1713.jpg|link=Pierre Raymond de Montmort (nonfiction)|1678: Mathematician [[Pierre Raymond de Montmort (nonfiction)|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 [[Derangement (nonfiction)|derangements]].
||1798: Heinrich Scherk born ... mathematician notable for his work on minimal surfaces and the distribution of prime numbers. Pic.
||1811: Isaac Singer born ... inventor, actor, and businessman. He made important improvements in the design of the sewing machine and was the founder of what became one of the first American multi-national businesses, the Singer Sewing Machine Company. Pic.


File:Golding Bird.jpg|link=Golding Bird (nonfiction)|1854: Physician [[Golding Bird (nonfiction)|Golding Bird]] dies. He pioneered the medical use of electricity.
File:Golding Bird.jpg|link=Golding Bird (nonfiction)|1854: Physician [[Golding Bird (nonfiction)|Golding Bird]] dies. He pioneered the medical use of electricity.


||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.
||1865: Ernest William Hobson born ... mathematician, now remembered mostly for his books, some of which broke new ground in their coverage in English of topics from mathematical analysis. G. H. Hardy wrote, "Although he lived to be 76, he was active almost up to his death; his last book (and perhaps in some ways his best) was published when he was 74. He was a singular exception to the general rule that good mathematicians do their best work when they are young."  Pic.
 
||1883: Louis François Clément Breguet dies ... physicist and watchmaker, noted for his work in the early days of telegraphy. Pic.
 
||1890: Olive Clio Hazlett born ... mathematician who spent most of her career working for the University of Illinois. She mainly researched algebra, and wrote seventeen research papers on subjects such as nilpotent algebras, division algebras, modular invariants, and the arithmetic of algebras. WW2 Cryptanalyst. Pic search.
 
||1894: Sir John Lennard-Jones born ... mathematician who was a professor of theoretical physics at University of Bristol, and then of theoretical science at the University of Cambridge. He may be regarded as the initiator of modern computational chemistry. Pic.
 
||1902: SS Ventnor sinks off New Zealand, leading to the deaths of 13 crew and the loss of 499 bodies of gold miners which were being repatriated to southern China. This led to the end of the practice of exhuming and returning human remains, en masse, to China from New Zealand. Pics.
 
||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 search.
 
||1910: Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau born ... chemical engineer - pencillin factory. Pic.
 
||1915: Robert Alexander Rankin born ... mathematician who worked in analytic number theory. Pic search.
 
||1921: José Ádem born ... mathematician who worked in algebraic topology, and proved the Ádem relations between Steenrod squares. Pic.
 
||1927: Mikhail Mikhailovich Postnikov born ... mathematician, known for his work in algebraic and differential topology. Pic search.
 
||1930: Ellen Hayes dies ... mathematician and astronomer. Pic.


||1910 – Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau, American chemical engineer (d. 2000) - pencillin factory
||1930: Ratifications exchanged in London for the first London Naval Treaty, signed in April modifying the 1925 Washington Naval Treaty and the arms limitation treaty's modified provisions, go into effect immediately, further limiting the expensive naval arms race among its five signatories.


||1930 – Ellen Hayes, American mathematician and astronomer (b. 1851)
||1932: Sylvia Plath born ... poet, novelist, and short story writer.


||1930 – Ratifications exchanged in London for the first London Naval Treaty, signed in April modifying the 1925 Washington Naval Treaty and the arms limitation treaty's modified provisions, go into effect immediately, further limiting the expensive naval arms race among its five signatories.
||1941: Ernest Everett Just dies ... biologist, academic and science writer. Just's primary legacy is his recognition of the fundamental role of the cell surface in the development of organisms. In his work within marine biology, cytology and parthenogenesis, he advocated the study of whole cells under normal conditions, rather than simply breaking them apart in a laboratory setting. Pic.


||1932 – Sylvia Plath, American poet, novelist, and short story writer (d. 1963)
||1961: NASA tests the first Saturn I rocket in Mission Saturn-Apollo 1.


File:Edmund Husserl 1910s.jpg|link=Edmund Husserl (nonfiction)|1938: Mathematician and philosopher [[Edmund Husserl (nonfiction)|Edmund Husserl]] publishes new class of [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] based on transcendental consciousness as the limit of all possible knowledge.
||1962: Major Rudolf Anderson of the United States Air Force becomes the only direct human casualty of the Cuban Missile Crisis when his U-2 reconnaissance airplane is shot down over Cuba by a Soviet-supplied SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile.


||1961 – NASA tests the first Saturn I rocket in Mission Saturn-Apollo 1.
||1962: A plane carrying Enrico Mattei, post-war Italian administrator, crashes in mysterious circumstances.


||1962 – Major Rudolf Anderson of the United States Air Force becomes the only direct human casualty of the Cuban Missile Crisis when his U-2 reconnaissance airplane is shot down over Cuba by a Soviet-supplied SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile.
||1968: Lise Meitner dies ... physicist and academic.


||1962 – A plane carrying Enrico Mattei, post-war Italian administrator, crashes in mysterious circumstances.
File:Mariner 9.jpg|link=Mariner 9 (nonfiction)|1972: The [[Mariner 9 (nonfiction)|Mariner 9]] spacecraft is switched off. During its mission, Mariner mapped 70% of the surface of [[Mars (nonfiction)|Mars]], and studied temporal changes in the atmosphere and surface.


||1968 – Lise Meitner, Austrian-English physicist and academic (b. 1878)
||1973: A 1.4 kg chondrite-type meteorite strikes in Cañon City, Colorado.


File:Mariner 9.jpg|link=Mariner 9 (nonfiction)|1972: [[Mariner 9 (nonfiction)|Mariner 9]] spacecraft is switched off. During its mission, Mariner map 70% of the surface, and studied temporal changes in the atmosphere and surface.
||1974: C. P. Ramanujam dies ... mathematician and academic. Pic search.


||1973 – A 1.4 kg chondrite-type meteorite strikes in Cañon City, Colorado.
||1975: Rex Stout dies ... detective novelist.


||1974 – C. P. Ramanujam, Indian mathematician and academic (b. 1938)
||1980: John Hasbrouck Van Vleck dies ... physicist and mathematician, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1975 – Rex Stout, American detective novelist (b. 1886)
||1981: The Soviet submarine S-363 runs aground on the east coast of Sweden.


||1980 – John Hasbrouck Van Vleck, American physicist and mathematician, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1899)
||1985: Thomas Townsend Brown born ... physicist and engineer, ionic propulsion. Pic search.


||1981 The Soviet submarine S-363 runs aground on the east coast of Sweden.
||1992: David Joseph Bohm dies ... scientist who has been described as one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th century and who contributed unorthodox ideas to quantum theory, neuropsychology and the philosophy of mind. Bohm advanced the view that quantum physics meant that the old Cartesian model of reality that there are two kinds of substance, the mental and the physical, that somehow interact – was too limited. To complement it, he developed a mathematical and physical theory of "implicate" and "explicate" order. He also believed that the brain, at the cellular level, works according to the mathematics of some quantum effects, and postulated that thought is distributed and non-localised just as quantum entities are.


||1992 – David Bohm, American-English physicist and philosopher (b. 1917)
||1994: Gliese 229B is the first Substellar Mass Object to be unquestionably identified.


||1994 – Gliese 229B is the first Substellar Mass Object to be unquestionably identified.
||1998: Dan Pedoe dies ... mathematician and geometer. Pic search.


||1999 Robert Mills, American physicist and academic (b. 1927)
||1999: Robert Mills dies ... physicist and academic. Pic search.


File:Dennis_Paulson_of_Mars.jpg|link=Dennis Paulson of Mars|2017: ''[[Dennis Paulson of Mars]]'' observes a minute of silence in memory of [[Mariner 9 (nonfiction)|Mariner 9]], which was switched off forty-five years ago.


|File:Wumpuss-compass.jpg|link=Wumpus-compass|[[Wumpus-compass]] syndrome linked to [[Extract of Radium]] binge.
|File:David_Hedison_releasing_neurotransmitters.jpg|link=Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV series) (nonfiction)|"Neurotransmitters deployed" says [[Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV series) (nonfiction)|David Hedison]].
|File:Bernoulli_wappen.png|link=Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Advances in [[Cellular automaton (nonfiction)|dynastic cellular automata theory]] reveal new members of [[Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Bernoulli family]].
|File:Voronoi-diagram-color-commentators.jpg|link=Fantasy Voronoi diagram|[[Fantasy Voronoi diagram]] upstages [[Fantasy football (American) (nonfiction)|Fantasy Football]].
|File:Red-Charter.jpg|link=Posthumous holography of H. P. Lovecraft|Discovery of "Red Charter" implicates The Rubrics in blood sacrifice of [[H. P. Lovecraft]];  see the [[Posthumous holography of H. P. Lovecraft]].
|File:Twin_Cities_Rapid_Transit_Route_Map_1914.jpg|link=Gnomon algorithm|1914: New study of [[Twin Cities|Twin Cities streetcar map]] finds [[Gnomon algorithm]] subroutines.
|File:Pika-computational-activity.jpg|link=The Pika|2013: New wave of computational activity by [[The Pika]].
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Latest revision as of 13:37, 7 February 2022