Template:Selected anniversaries/September 10: Difference between revisions
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||Zdenko Hans Skraup (d. September 10, 1910) was a Czech-Austrian chemist who discovered the Skraup reaction, the first quinoline synthesis. | ||Zdenko Hans Skraup (d. September 10, 1910) was a Czech-Austrian chemist who discovered the Skraup reaction, the first quinoline synthesis. | ||
||Karl Eugen Guthe (d. 10 September 1915) was a German-born American academic and physicist, notable for being the first Dean of the Graduate Department at the University of Michigan. Pic. | |||
||1930 – Aino Kukk, Estonian chess player and engineer (d. 2006) | ||1930 – Aino Kukk, Estonian chess player and engineer (d. 2006) |
Revision as of 10:51, 1 April 2018
1749: Mathematician and physicist Émilie du Châtelet born. She translated and commented upon on Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica.
1796: Physician and physicist Luigi Galvani uses principles of bioelectronics to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1849: Mathematician and philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce born. He wil be remembered as "the father of pragmatism".
1888: Physicist and brewer James Prescott Joule uses the nature of heat, and its relationship to mechanical work, to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1892: American physicist and academic Arthur Compton born. He will win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1927 for his 1923 discovery of the Compton effect, demonstrating the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation.
1975: Physicist and academic Werner Heisenberg publishes new class of Gnomon algorithm functions based on the uncertainty principle which detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1975: Mathematician, computer scientist, and crime-fighter Andrzej Trybulec uses the Mizar system to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1976: Screenwriter and novelist Dalton Trumbo dies.
1977: Signed illustration of space pilot and alleged time-traveller Henrietta Bolt sells for seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars.