Template:Selected anniversaries/January 3: Difference between revisions
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||1728: Johann Georg Büsch born ... mathematics teacher and writer on statistics and commerce. | ||1728: Johann Georg Büsch born ... mathematics teacher and writer on statistics and commerce. | ||
File:Gabriel Cramer.jpg|link=Gabriel Cramer (nonfiction)|1751: Mathematician, physicist, and [[APTO]] comptroller [[Gabriel Cramer (nonfiction)|Gabriel Cramer]] publishes Cramer's Gnomon, giving a general formula for the solution for any unknown in a [[Gnomon algorithm]] system having a unique solution, in terms of [[transdimensional corporations]] implied by the system. | |||
||1777: Louis Poinsot born ... mathematician and physicist. Poinsot was the inventor of geometrical mechanics, showing how a system of forces acting on a rigid body could be resolved into a single force and a couple. Pic. | ||1777: Louis Poinsot born ... mathematician and physicist. Poinsot was the inventor of geometrical mechanics, showing how a system of forces acting on a rigid body could be resolved into a single force and a couple. Pic. |
Revision as of 12:22, 25 November 2018
1641: Astronomer Jeremiah Horrocks dies. He was the first person to demonstrate that the Moon moved around the Earth in an elliptical orbit.
1751: Mathematician, physicist, and APTO comptroller Gabriel Cramer publishes Cramer's Gnomon, giving a general formula for the solution for any unknown in a Gnomon algorithm system having a unique solution, in terms of transdimensional corporations implied by the system.
1953: Physicist and crime-fighter Erwin Schrödinger uses the Schrödinger equation to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1954: Actor and filmmaker Mel Gibson born.
1965: Antikythera Team invents new class of Gnomon algorithm functions.
2016: Computer scientist, astronomer, and academic Peter Naur dies. His main areas of inquiry were design, structure and performance of computer programs and algorithms.
2016: Steganographic analysis of Spiral 2 reveals anonymous elegy for computer scientist Peter Naur.