Template:Selected anniversaries/January 12: Difference between revisions
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File:Pierre de Fermat.jpg|link=Pierre de Fermat (nonfiction)|1665: Mathematician [[Pierre de Fermat (nonfiction)|Pierre de Fermat]] dies. He is recognized for his discovery of an original method of finding the greatest and the smallest ordinates of curved lines, which is analogous to that of [[Calculus (nonfiction)|differential calculus]], then unknown. | File:Pierre de Fermat.jpg|link=Pierre de Fermat (nonfiction)|1665: Mathematician [[Pierre de Fermat (nonfiction)|Pierre de Fermat]] dies. He is recognized for his discovery of an original method of finding the greatest and the smallest ordinates of curved lines, which is analogous to that of [[Calculus (nonfiction)|differential calculus]], then unknown. | ||
||1777: Hugh Mercer born ... general and physician. | ||1777: Hugh Mercer born ... general and physician. | ||
||1792: Johan August Arfwedson born . | File:Johan August Arfwedson.jpg|link=Johan August Arfwedson (nonfiction)|1792: Chemist and academic. [[Johan August Arfwedson (nonfiction)|Johan August Arfwedson]] born. Arfwedson will discover the element lithium in 1817 by isolating it as a salt. | ||
||1822: Étienne Lenoir born ... engineer, designed the internal combustion engine. Pic. | ||1822: Étienne Lenoir born ... engineer, designed the internal combustion engine. Pic. | ||
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||1958: Charles Hatfield dies ... meteorologist, rainmaker. Pic search (cool) yes: https://www.google.com/search?q=charles+hatfield&oq=Charles+Hatfield | ||1958: Charles Hatfield dies ... meteorologist, rainmaker. Pic search (cool) yes: https://www.google.com/search?q=charles+hatfield&oq=Charles+Hatfield | ||
File:Don't Get Aroma Much Anymore.jpg|link=Don't Get Aroma Much Anymore|1978: Willie Nelson releases his version of "'''[[Don't Get Aroma Much Anymore]]'''". | |||
||1984: Earl Muetterties born ... inorganic chemist born in Illinois, who is known for his experimental work with boranes, homogeneous catalysis, heterogeneous catalysis, fluxional processes in organometallic complexes and apicophilicity. Pic. | ||1984: Earl Muetterties born ... inorganic chemist born in Illinois, who is known for his experimental work with boranes, homogeneous catalysis, heterogeneous catalysis, fluxional processes in organometallic complexes and apicophilicity. Pic. | ||
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||2000: Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau dies ... chemical engineer - pencillin factory. Pic. | ||2000: Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau dies ... chemical engineer - pencillin factory. Pic. | ||
||2001: Engineer William Hewlett dies ... co-founder, with David Packard, of the Hewlett-Packard Company (HP). Pic. | |||
||2003: Alan Nunn May dies ... English physicist and Soviet spy ... who supplied secrets of British and United States atomic research to the Soviet Union during World War II. Pic. | ||2003: Alan Nunn May dies ... English physicist and Soviet spy ... who supplied secrets of British and United States atomic research to the Soviet Union during World War II. Pic. | ||
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||2009: Arne Næss dies ... philosopher and environmentalist. He will be an important intellectual and inspirational figure within the environmental movement of the late twentieth century, advocating for biological diversity and the understanding that each living thing is dependent on the existence of other creatures in the complex web of interrelationships. He will coin the phrase "deep ecology". Pic. | ||2009: Arne Næss dies ... philosopher and environmentalist. He will be an important intellectual and inspirational figure within the environmental movement of the late twentieth century, advocating for biological diversity and the understanding that each living thing is dependent on the existence of other creatures in the complex web of interrelationships. He will coin the phrase "deep ecology". Pic. | ||
||2012: Basil Gordon dies ... mathematician at UCLA, specializing in number theory and combinatorics. | ||2010: Praveen Chaudhari born ... physicist and academic. Pic search:https://www.google.com/search?q=praveen+chaudhari | ||
||2012: Basil Gordon dies ... mathematician at UCLA, specializing in number theory and combinatorics. He obtained his Ph.D. at California Institute of Technology under the supervision of Tom Apostol. Ken Ono was one of his students. Gordon is well known for Göllnitz–Gordon identities, generalizing the Rogers–Ramanujan identities.[2] He also posed the still-unsolved Gaussian moat problem in 1962. Pic: https://www.math.ucla.edu/news/memoriam-basil-gordon-professor-mathematics-emeritus-1931-%E2%80%93-2012 | |||
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Latest revision as of 18:01, 7 February 2022
1665: Mathematician Pierre de Fermat dies. He is recognized for his discovery of an original method of finding the greatest and the smallest ordinates of curved lines, which is analogous to that of differential calculus, then unknown.
1792: Chemist and academic. Johan August Arfwedson born. Arfwedson will discover the element lithium in 1817 by isolating it as a salt.
1875: Children reprogram Jacquard loom to perform scrying engine functions.
1876: Author Jack London born. He will become one of the first fiction writers to obtain worldwide celebrity and a large fortune from his fiction alone.
1909: Mathematician and academic Hermann Minkowski dies. He showed that Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity can be understood geometrically as a theory of four-dimensional space–time, since known as the "Minkowski spacetime".
1978: Willie Nelson releases his version of "Don't Get Aroma Much Anymore".
2005: Deep Impact launches from Cape Canaveral on a Delta II rocket. It will be the first spacecraft to eject material from a comet's surface.