Template:Selected anniversaries/February 16: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 82: | Line 82: | ||
||William Edwin Gordon (d. February 16, 2010) was a physicist and astronomer. He is referred to as the "father of the Arecibo Observatory". Pic. | ||William Edwin Gordon (d. February 16, 2010) was a physicist and astronomer. He is referred to as the "father of the Arecibo Observatory". Pic. | ||
||Neal R. Amundson (d. February 16, 2011) was an American chemical engineer and mathematician. Amundson was considered one of the most prominent chemical engineering educators and researchers in the United States. Pic. | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> |
Revision as of 19:51, 9 April 2018
1531: Mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, priest, maker of astronomical instruments, and professor Johannes Stöffler dies.
1610: Regicide François Ravaillac drinks Extract of Radium for the first time.
1698: Mathematician, geophysicist, and astronomer Pierre Bouguer born. He will be known as "the father of naval architecture".
1822: Statistician, progressive, polymath, sociologist, psychologist, anthropologist, eugenicist, tropical explorer, geographer, inventor, meteorologist, proto-geneticist, and psychometrician Francis Galton born.
1922: Mathematician Hing Tong born. He will provide the original proof of the Katetov–Tong insertion theorem.
1960: Mathematician and crime-fighter (left) stops aquatic cryptid and alleged supervillain Neptune Slaughter (right) from infiltrating Operation Sandblast, the U.S. Navy submarine circumnavigation of the globe.
1960: The U.S. Navy submarine USS Triton begins Operation Sandblast, setting sail from New London, Connecticut, to begin the first submerged circumnavigation of the globe.
1979: Mathematician and crime-fighter Nicolaas Govert de Bruijn publishes new class of Gnomon algorithm functions which use combinatorial number logic to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.