Template:Selected anniversaries/November 21: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(8 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<gallery>
<gallery>
||1555: Georgius Agricola dies ... mineralogist, philologist, and scholar.
|| *** DONE: Pics ***
 
||1555: Georgius Agricola dies ... mineralogist, philologist, and scholar. Pic.


File:Jan Brożek.jpg|link=Jan Brożek (nonfiction)|1652: Mathematician, physician, and astronomer [[Jan Brożek (nonfiction)|Jan Brożek]] dies. He contributed to a greater knowledge of [[Nicolaus Copernicus (nonfiction)|Nicolaus Copernicus]]' theories and was his ardent supporter and early prospective biographer.
File:Jan Brożek.jpg|link=Jan Brożek (nonfiction)|1652: Mathematician, physician, and astronomer [[Jan Brożek (nonfiction)|Jan Brożek]] dies. He contributed to a greater knowledge of [[Nicolaus Copernicus (nonfiction)|Nicolaus Copernicus]]' theories and was his ardent supporter and early prospective biographer.


File:Sir Isaac Newton by Sir Godfrey Kneller.jpg|link=Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|1675: [[Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|Isaac Newton]] publishes new class of [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] which detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
||1773: Chemist Hippolyte-Victor Collet-Descotils born. He studied in the École des Mines de Paris, and was a student and friend of Louis Nicolas Vauquelin. He is best known for confirming the discovery of chromium by Vauquelin, and for independently discovering iridium in 1803. Pic.
 
File:Ole Rømer.jpg|link=Ole Rømer (nonfiction)|1676: Astronomer [[Ole Rømer (nonfiction)|Ole Rømer]] presents the first quantitative measurements of the speed of light.
 
||1737: José Antonio Alzate y Ramírez born ... scientist and cartographer.
 
||1773: born: Hippolyte-Victor Collet-Descotils was a French chemist. He studied in the École des Mines de Paris, and was a student and friend of Louis Nicolas Vauquelin. He is best known for confirming the discovery of chromium by Vauquelin, and for independently discovering iridium in 1803. Pic.


||1782: Jacques de Vaucanson dies ... inventor and artist who was responsible for the creation of impressive and innovative automata. He also was the first man to design an automatic loom and built the first all-metal lathe. Pic.
||1782: Jacques de Vaucanson dies ... inventor and artist who was responsible for the creation of impressive and innovative automata. He also was the first man to design an automatic loom and built the first all-metal lathe. Pic.


||1783: In Paris, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and François Laurent d'Arlandes, make the first untethered hot air balloon flight.
||1783: In Paris, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and François Laurent d'Arlandes, make the first untethered hot air balloon flight. Pic.


||1835: Surgeon Hanaoka Seishū dies ... with a knowledge of Chinese herbal medicine, as well as Western surgical techniques he had learned through Rangaku (literally "Dutch learning", and by extension "Western learning"). Hanaoka is said to have been the first to perform surgery using general anesthesia. Pic.
||1835: Surgeon Hanaoka Seishū dies ... with a knowledge of Chinese herbal medicine, as well as Western surgical techniques he had learned through Rangaku (literally "Dutch learning", and by extension "Western learning"). Hanaoka is said to have been the first to perform surgery using general anesthesia. Pic.
||1835: Walter William Skeat born ... pre-eminent philologist of his time. He was instrumental in developing the English language as a higher education subject in the United Kingdom. Pic.


||1843: Gaston Tissandier born ... chemist, meteorologist, aviator and editor. Adventurer could be added to the list of his titles, as he managed to escape besieged Paris by balloon in September 1870. He founded and edited the scientific magazine La Nature and wrote several books. Pic.
||1843: Gaston Tissandier born ... chemist, meteorologist, aviator and editor. Adventurer could be added to the list of his titles, as he managed to escape besieged Paris by balloon in September 1870. He founded and edited the scientific magazine La Nature and wrote several books. Pic.
Line 22: Line 20:
||1866: Gustav Roch dies ... mathematician who made significant contributions to the theory of Riemann surfaces in a career that ended when he died at the age of 26. Pic.
||1866: Gustav Roch dies ... mathematician who made significant contributions to the theory of Riemann surfaces in a career that ended when he died at the age of 26. Pic.


||1877: Thomas Edison announces his invention of the phonograph, a machine that can record and play sound.
||1877: Thomas Edison announces his invention of the phonograph, a machine that can record and play sound. TO_DO.


||1895: Josef Mattauch born ... physicist known for his work in the investigation of the isotopic abundances by mass spectrometry. He developed the Mattauch isobar rule in 1934. Pic.
||1895: Josef Mattauch born ... physicist known for his work in the investigation of the isotopic abundances by mass spectrometry. He developed the Mattauch isobar rule in 1934. Pic.
File:Clock Head 2.jpg|link=Clock Head 2|1904: Mechanical engineer [[Clock Head 2]] warns theoretical physicist [[Albert Einstein (nonfiction)|Albert Einstein]] that the mass–energy equivalence formula, E = mc², will have "earth-shaking consequences."


File:Albert Einstein 1921.jpg|link=Albert Einstein (nonfiction)|1905: [[Albert Einstein (nonfiction)|Albert Einstein]]'s paper that leads to the mass–energy equivalence formula, E = mc², is published in the journal ''Annalen der Physik''.
File:Albert Einstein 1921.jpg|link=Albert Einstein (nonfiction)|1905: [[Albert Einstein (nonfiction)|Albert Einstein]]'s paper that leads to the mass–energy equivalence formula, E = mc², is published in the journal ''Annalen der Physik''.


||1913: Gunnar Kangro born ... mathematician, author, and academic.
||1913: Gunnar Kangro born ... mathematician, author, and academic. Pic.


||1927: Columbine Mine massacre: Striking coal miners are allegedly attacked with machine guns by a detachment of state police dressed in civilian clothes.
||1927: Columbine Mine massacre: Striking coal miners are allegedly attacked with machine guns by a detachment of state police dressed in civilian clothes.


||1931: Revaz Dogonadze born ... chemist and physicist.
||1931: Revaz Dogonadze born ... chemist and physicist. He was the first to view a chemical electron-transfer process as a quantum-mechanical transition between two separate electronic states, induced by weak electrostatic interactions between the molecular entities represented by the states. Pic search.


||1939: Jérôme Franel dies ... mathematician who specialized in analytic number theory. He is mainly known through a 1924 paper, in which he establishes the equivalence of the Riemann hypothesis to a statement on the size of the discrepancy in the Farey sequences. Pic.
||1939: Jérôme Franel dies ... mathematician who specialized in analytic number theory. He is mainly known through a 1924 paper, in which he establishes the equivalence of the Riemann hypothesis to a statement on the size of the discrepancy in the Farey sequences. Pic.
Line 46: Line 42:
||1969: The first permanent ARPANET link is established between UCLA and SRI.
||1969: The first permanent ARPANET link is established between UCLA and SRI.


||1970: C. V. Raman dies ... physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate.
||1970: C. V. Raman dies ... physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1978: Francesco Giacomo Tricomi dies ... mathematician famous for his studies on mixed type partial differential equations. Pic.
||1978: Francesco Giacomo Tricomi dies ... mathematician famous for his studies on mixed type partial differential equations. Pic.
File:Harry Lehmann.jpg|link=Harry Lehmann (nonfiction)|1984: Physicist and crime-fighter [[Harry Lehmann (nonfiction)|Harry Lehmann]] uses a combination of the LSZ reduction formula and the Källén–Lehmann spectral representation to detect and prevent [[crimes against physical constants]].


||1985: United States Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard is arrested for spying after being caught giving Israel classified information on Arab nations. He is subsequently sentenced to life in prison.
||1985: United States Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard is arrested for spying after being caught giving Israel classified information on Arab nations. He is subsequently sentenced to life in prison.
Line 56: Line 50:
||1986: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary start to shred documents allegedly implicating them in the Iran–Contra affair.
||1986: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary start to shred documents allegedly implicating them in the Iran–Contra affair.


||1991: Hans Julius Zassenhaus dies ... mathematician, known for work in many parts of abstract algebra, and as a pioneer of computer algebra.
||1991: Hans Julius Zassenhaus dies ... mathematician, known for work in many parts of abstract algebra, and as a pioneer of computer algebra. Pic.


||1993: Bruno Benedetto Rossi dies ... experimental physicist. He made major contributions to particle physics and the study of cosmic rays.
||1993: Bruno Rossi dies ... experimental physicist. He made major contributions to particle physics and the study of cosmic rays. Pic.


File:Abdus Salam 1987.jpg|link=Abdus Salam (nonfiction)|1996: Theoretical physicist [[Abdus Salam (nonfiction)|Mohammad Abdus Salam]] dies. He shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics with Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg for his contribution to the electroweak unification theory.
File:Abdus Salam 1987.jpg|link=Abdus Salam (nonfiction)|1996: Theoretical physicist [[Abdus Salam (nonfiction)|Mohammad Abdus Salam]] dies. He shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics with Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg for his contribution to the electroweak unification theory.
Line 64: Line 58:
||2004: Victor Andreevich Toponogov dies ... mathematician, noted for his contributions to differential geometry and so-called Riemannian geometry "in the large". Pic.
||2004: Victor Andreevich Toponogov dies ... mathematician, noted for his contributions to differential geometry and so-called Riemannian geometry "in the large". Pic.


||2009: Konstantin Feoktistov dies ... engineer and astronaut.
||2009: Konstantin Feoktistov dies ... engineer and astronaut. Pic.
 
||2014: Paul von Ragué Schleyer dies ... chemist and academic ... made contributions in the area of synthesis of adamantane and other cage molecules by rearrangement mechanisms. He also discovered new types of hydrogen bonding. Schleyer also identified solvolysis mechanisms, including reactive intermediates. As a pioneer in the field of computational chemistry, Schleyer identified a number of new molecular structures, especially related to lithium chemistry and electron deficient systems. Pic search.


File:Spiral.jpg|link=Spiral (image) (nonfiction)|2018: ''[[Spiral (image) (nonfiction)|Spiral]]'' voted Picture of the Day by the citizens of [[New Minneapolis, Canada]].


</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 09:15, 21 November 2023