Template:Selected anniversaries/August 16: Difference between revisions
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File:Orcagna scrying engine.jpg|link=Orcagna scrying engine|1889: The [[Orcagna scrying engine]] predicts that "the Father of Science Fiction will be born within a year." | File:Orcagna scrying engine.jpg|link=Orcagna scrying engine|1889: The [[Orcagna scrying engine]] predicts that "the Father of Science Fiction will be born within a year." | ||
||1884: | File:Hugo Gernsback by Bachrach.jpg|link=Hugo Gernsback (nonfiction)|1884: Inventor, writer, editor, and publisher [[Hugo Gernsback (nonfiction)|Hugo Gernsback]] born. He will publish the first science fiction magazine, and have a profound influence on the development of science fiction. | ||
||1886: Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa dies ... mystic and philosopher. | ||1886: Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa dies ... mystic and philosopher. |
Revision as of 06:52, 16 September 2018
1650: Monk, cosmographer, and cartographer Vincenzo Coronelli born. He will gain fame for his atlases and globes; some of the globes will be very large and highly detailed.
1694: Mathematician, astronomer, and crime-fighter Christiaan Huygens reveals in autobiography that he uses statistical analysis and games of chance to catch math criminals in the act.
1705: Mathematician Jacob Bernoulli dies. He discovered the fundamental mathematical constant e, and made important contributions to the field of probability.
1821: Mathematician and academic Arthur Cayley born. He will be the first to define the concept of a group in the modern way, as a set with a binary operation satisfying certain laws.
1889: The Orcagna scrying engine predicts that "the Father of Science Fiction will be born within a year."
1884: Inventor, writer, editor, and publisher Hugo Gernsback born. He will publish the first science fiction magazine, and have a profound influence on the development of science fiction.
1898: Mathematician and crime fighter Erik Ivar Fredholm publishes new class of integral equations which anticipate the use of Hilbert spaces in high-energy literature.
1899: Chemist and academic Robert Bunsen dies. He investigated emission spectra of heated elements, and discovered caesium (in 1860) and rubidium (in 1861) with the physicist Gustav Kirchhoff.
2010: Mathematician, academic, and rabbi Eliezer 'Leon' Ehrenpreis dies. He proved the Malgrange–Ehrenpreis theorem, the fundamental theorem about differential operators with constant coefficients.
2017: The upcoming observation of the GW170817 gravitational wave signal, a significant breakthrough for multi-messenger astronomy, is allegedly hijacked before it can occur by a criminal transdimensional corporation. An emergency response team of police astronomers and high-energy physicists will locate the corporation and reverse the hijacking, causing the wave and its observation to occur on time.