Template:Selected anniversaries/November 2: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(22 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<gallery>
<gallery>
||1789: French Revolution: Assignats were paper money issued by the Constituent Assembly in France from 1789 to 1796, during the French Revolution, to address imminent bankruptcy. They were backed by the value of properties formerly held by the Catholic Church, which were confiscated, on the motion of Mirabeau, by the Assembly on 2 November 1789, and the crown lands, which had been taken over by the nation on 7 October. Pic.
File:George Boole.jpg|link=George Boole (nonfiction)|1815: Mathematician and philosopher [[George Boole (nonfiction)|George Boole]] born.  He will work in the fields of differential equations and algebraic logic, developing Boolean algebra and Boolean logic.
File:George Boole.jpg|link=George Boole (nonfiction)|1815: Mathematician and philosopher [[George Boole (nonfiction)|George Boole]] born.  He will work in the fields of differential equations and algebraic logic, developing Boolean algebra and Boolean logic.


||Henry John Stephen Smith (b. 2 November 1826) was a mathematician remembered for his work in elementary divisors, quadratic forms, and Smith–Minkowski–Siegel mass formula in number theory. Pic.
||1826: Henry John Stephen Smith born ... mathematician remembered for his work in elementary divisors, quadratic forms, and Smith–Minkowski–Siegel mass formula in number theory. Pic.
 
||1844: John Jacob Loud born ... inventor known for designing the first ballpoint pen. Pic.


||1863 – Theodore Judah, American engineer (b. 1826) rail Sierra Nevada
||1860: "Soapy" Smith born ... con artist and gangster in the Old West. His most famous scam, the prize package soap sell racket, earned him the sobriquet of "Soapy", which remained with him to his death. Although he traveled and operated his confidence swindles all across the western United States, he is most famous for having a major hand in the organized criminal operations of Denver and Creede, Colorado, and Skagway, Alaska, from 1879 to 1898. Pic.


||1885 – Harlow Shapley, American astronomer and academic (d. 1972)
||1863: Theodore Judah dies ... engineer ... rail Sierra Nevada. Pic.


File:George Chrystal.jpg|link=George Chrystal (nonfiction)|1893: Mathematician and crime-fighter [[George Chrystal (nonfiction)|George Chrystal]] publishes evidence that [[Seiche (nonfiction)|seiches]] (wave patterns in large inland bodies of water) are vulnerable to both [[crimes against physics]] and [[crimes against chemistry]].
||1885: Harlow Shapley born ... astronomer and academic. Pic.


||1894 Alexander Lippisch, German-American aerodynamicist and engineer (d. 1976)
||1894: Alexander Lippisch born ... aeronautical engineer, a pioneer of aerodynamics who made important contributions to the understanding of tailless aircraft, delta wings and the ground effect, and also worked in the U.S. His most famous designs are the Messerschmitt Me 163 rocket-powered interceptor and the Dornier Aerodyne. Pic.


File:George Metesky.jpg|link=George Metesky (nonfiction)|1903: [[George Metesky (nonfiction)|George P. Metesky]] born.  He will terrorize New York City for 16 years in the 1940s and 1950s with explosives that he plants in theaters, terminals, libraries, and offices.  
File:George Metesky.jpg|link=George Metesky (nonfiction)|1903: [[George Metesky (nonfiction)|George P. Metesky]] born.  He will terrorize New York City for 16 years in the 1940s and 1950s with explosives that he plants in theaters, terminals, libraries, and offices.  


||Raphael Mitchel Robinson (b. November 2, 1911) was an American mathematician. He will work on mathematical logic, set theory, geometry, number theory, and combinatorics. Pic.
||1911: Raphael Mitchel Robinson born ... mathematician. He will work on mathematical logic, set theory, geometry, number theory, and combinatorics. Pic.
 
||1911: Herbert G. MacPherson born ... nuclear engineer and deputy director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). He contributed to the design and development of nuclear reactors and in the opinion of Alvin Weinberg he was "the country's foremost expert on graphite". Pic: https://www.nap.edu/read/4779/chapter/30
 
||1912: Bertrand Goldschmidt born ... chemist. He is considered one of the fathers of the French atomic bomb, which was tested for the first time in 1960 in the nuclear test Gerboise Bleue.
 
||1914: Heinrich Friedrich Karl Ludwig Burkhardt dies ... mathematician. He famously was one of the two examiners of Albert Einstein's PhD thesis Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen. Pic.
 
||1916: Adriaan van Wijngaarden born ... mathematician and computer scientist, who is considered by many to have been the founding father of informatica (computer science) in the Netherlands. Even though he was trained as an engineer, Van Wijngaarden would emphasize and promote the mathematical aspects of computing, first in numerical analysis, then in programming languages and finally in design principles of programming languages. Pic.
 
||1917: Li Minhua born ... physicist and expert in solid mechanics. Pic.
 
||1920: In the United States, KDKA of Pittsburgh starts broadcasting as the first commercial radio station. The first broadcast is the result of the United States presidential election, 1920.
 
||1924: David E. Muller born ... mathematician, computer scientist, and academic. He will invent the Muller C-element, a device used to implement asynchronous circuitry in electronic computers, and the Muller automata, an automaton model for infinite words. In geometric group theory Muller is known for the Muller–Schupp theorem, joint with Paul Schupp, characterizing finitely generated virtually free groups as finitely generated groups with context-free word problem. Pic search.
 
||1929: Richard Edward Taylor born ... physicist and Stanford University professor. He shared the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics with Jerome Friedman and Henry Kendall "for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics." Pic.
 
||1932: Melvin Schwartz born ... physicist. He shared the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics with Leon M. Lederman and Jack Steinberger for their development of the neutrino beam method and their demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino. Pic.
 
||1936: Martin Lowry dies ... chemist and academic. He developed the Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory simultaneously with and independently of Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted. Pic.
 
||1936: The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is established.


||Bertrand Goldschmidt was a French chemist, born in Paris on 2 November 1912. He is considered one of the fathers of the French atomic bomb, which was tested for the first time in 1960 in the nuclear test Gerboise Bleue.
||1937: Rudolf Wille born ... mathematician and was professor of General Algebra from 1970 to 2003 at Technische Universität Darmstadt (TU Darmstadt). His most celebrated work is the invention of formal concept analysis, an unsupervised machine learning technique that applies mathematical lattice theory to organize data based on objects and their shared attributes. Pic.


||Heinrich Friedrich Karl Ludwig Burkhardt (d. 2 November 1914) was a German mathematician. He famously was one of the two examiners of Albert Einstein's PhD thesis Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen. Pic.
||1936: The British Broadcasting Corporation initiates the BBC Television Service, the world's first regular, "high-definition" (then defined as at least 200 lines) service. Renamed BBC1 in 1964, the channel still runs to this day.


||1920 In the United States, KDKA of Pittsburgh starts broadcasting as the first commercial radio station. The first broadcast is the result of the United States presidential election, 1920.
||1944: Thomas Midgley, Jr. dies ... Freon, CFC ... An instinct for the regrettable that is almost uncanny ... Doctor Thomas Midgley Jr. (May 18, 1889 November 2, 1944) was an American mechanical engineer and chemist. He was a key figure in a team of chemists, led by Charles F. Kettering, that developed the tetraethyllead (TEL) additive to gasoline as well as some of the first chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). Pic.


||1936 – The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is established.
||1957: The Levelland UFO Case occurred on November 2–3, 1957 in and around the small town of Levelland, Texas.  


||1936 – The British Broadcasting Corporation initiates the BBC Television Service, the world's first regular, "high-definition" (then defined as at least 200 lines) service. Renamed BBC1 in 1964, the channel still runs to this day.
||1959: Quiz show scandals: Twenty One game show contestant Charles Van Doren admits to a Congressional committee that he had been given questions and answers in advance.


||1944 – Thomas Midgley, Jr., American chemist and engineer (b. 1889)  - Freon, CFC ... An instinct for the regrettable that is almost uncanny ... Doctor Thomas Midgley Jr. (May 18, 1889 – November 2, 1944) was an American mechanical engineer and chemist. He was a key figure in a team of chemists, led by Charles F. Kettering, that developed the tetraethyllead (TEL) additive to gasoline as well as some of the first chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).
||1961: James Thurber born ... humorist and cartoonist. Pic.


||The Levelland UFO Case occurred on November 2–3, 1957 in and around the small town of Levelland, Texas.  
||1966: Peter Debye dies ... physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1959 – Quiz show scandals: Twenty One game show contestant Charles Van Doren admits to a Congressional committee that he had been given questions and answers in advance.
||1970: Abram Samoilovitch Besikovitch dies ... mathematician. He will work on combinatorial methods and questions in real analysis, such as the Kakeya needle problem and the Hausdorff-Besicovitch dimension. Pic.


||1966 – Peter Debye, Dutch-American physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1884)
||1984: István Fáry dies ... mathematician known for his work in geometry and algebraic topology. He proved Fáry's theorem that every planar graph has a straight line embedding in 1948, and the Fary–Milnor theorem lower-bounding the curvature of a nontrivial knot in 1949. Pic.


||István Fáry (d. 2 November 1984) was a Hungarian-born mathematician known for his work in geometry and algebraic topology. He proved Fáry's theorem that every planar graph has a straight line embedding in 1948, and the Fary–Milnor theorem lower-bounding the curvature of a nontrivial knot in 1949. Pic.
||1988: The Morris worm, the first Internet-distributed computer worm to gain significant mainstream media attention, is launched from MIT.


||1988 – The Morris worm, the first Internet-distributed computer worm to gain significant mainstream media attention, is launched from MIT.
||1990: Eliot Porter dies ... photographer, chemist, and academic. Pic search.


||1990 – Eliot Porter, American photographer, chemist, and academic (b. 1901)
||1993: Đuro Kurepa dies ... mathematician. Pic


||Đuro Kurepa (d. November 2, 1993) was a Yugoslav mathematician. Pic
||2002: William Howard Stein dies ... chemist and biologist, Nobel Prize laureate ... with Christian Boehmer Anfinsen and Stanford Moore, for their work on ribonuclease and for their contribution to the understanding of the connection between chemical structure and catalytic activity of the ribonuclease molecule. Pic.


||2002 – Charles Sheffield, American physicist and author (b. 1935)
||2005: Rutherford "Gus" Aris dies ... chemical engineer, control theorist, mathematician, and academic. Pic.


||Rutherford "Gus" Aris (d. November 2, 2005) was a chemical engineer, control theorist, mathematician, and academic. Pic.
||2006: Adrien Douady dies ... mathematician. Pic.


||Adrien Douady (d. 2 November 2006) was a French mathematician.  
||2009: Amir Pnueli dies ... computer scientist and the 1996 Turing Award recipient.  He worked on temporal logic and model checking, particularly regarding fairness properties of concurrent systems. Pic.  


||Amir Pnueli (d. November 2, 2009) was an Israeli computer scientist and the 1996 Turing Award recipient. He worked on temporal logic and model checking, particularly regarding fairness properties of concurrent systems. Pic.  
||2009: Captain Forrest R. "Tex" Biard dies ... American linguist in the U.S. Navy codebreaking organization during the Second World War. A pre-war student of Japanese, Biard's translation work is considered to have been an important part of American military success.


||Captain Forrest R. "Tex" Biard (d. November 2, 2009) was an American linguist in the U.S. Navy codebreaking organization during the Second World War. A pre-war student of Japanese, Biard's translation work is considered to have been an important part of American military success.
||2012: Shreeram Shankar Abhyankar dies ... mathematician known for his contributions to algebraic geometry. He, at the time of his death, held the Marshall distinguished professor of mathematics chair at Purdue University, and was also a professor of computer science and industrial engineering. He is known for Abhyankar's conjecture of finite group theory. His latest research was in the area of computational and algorithmic algebraic geometry. Pic.


||2015 Roy Dommett, English scientist and engineer (b. 1933) rockets
||2015: Roy Dommett dies ... scientist and engineer ... rockets. Pic search.


|File:Ada Lovelace.jpg|link=Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|[[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]] writes unit tests for [[Babbage simulator]].
|File:Cinnamon_pirate_flag_800x600.jpg|link=Cinnamon Jack (pirate)|Pirate captain [[Cinnamon Jack (pirate)|Cinnamon Jack]] fails to capture [[Fort Babbage]], acknowledges superior intellect of [[Ada Lovelace]]. "We shall match wits again, I feel sure," say Jack.
|File:Armada de capitaesanode.jpg|link=Simulada|[[Simulada|Simulated armada]] more dangerous than it appears, says [[Alan Turing]].
|File:Giacomo Puccini.jpg|link=Giacomo Puccini (nonfiction)|[[Giacomo Puccini (nonfiction)|Giacomo Puccini]] has complete faith in opera, orders champagne with [[Extract of Radium]].
|File:Brainiac Action Comics 242.png|link=Brainiac (nonfiction)|[[Brainiac (nonfiction)|Brainiac]] more dangerous than Action Comics realizes.
[[Time series (nonfiction)|time series analysis]].
|File:Time series diagram.png|link=Time series (nonfiction)|[[Time series (nonfiction)|Time series diagram]] indicates rise in [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
|File:Thefixisin pharmaceutical laboratory.jpg|link=Thefixisin (drug)|[[Thefixisin (drug)|Thefixisin]] laboratory in violation of numerous workplace safety laws.
|File:Georg Cantor diagonal argument.jpg|link=Georg Cantor|[[Georg Cantor]] and [[David Hilbert]] may form crime-fighting team in response to [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
|File:Gladiator movie poster.jpg|link=What we do in life echoes in eternity (nonfiction)|[[What we do in life echoes in eternity (nonfiction)|What we do in life echoes in eternity]], according to new [[Computation (nonfiction)|computational analysis]].
|File:Mud_pot.jpg|Mud pot in northern California runs dry, may relocate to [[Devil's Mud Pie]] area.
|File:Able Archer 83 After Action Report.jpg|link=Able Archer 83 (nonfiction)|1983:
</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 14:38, 7 February 2022