Template:Selected anniversaries/September 29: Difference between revisions

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||1511 – Michael Servetus, Spanish physician, cartographer, and theologian (d. 1553)
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||1561 – Adriaan van Roomen, Flemish priest and mathematician (d. 1615)
||1511: Michael Servetus born ... physician, cartographer, and theologian. Pic.


||1765: Astronomer Karl Ludwig Harding born. He will discover Juno.
File:Title page of the Astrolabium of Johannes Engel, printed by Johann Emerich, Venice 1494.jpg|link=Johannes Engel (nonfiction)|1512: Doctor, astronomer, and astrologer [[Johannes Engel (nonfiction)|Johannes Engel]] dies. He published numerous almanacs, planetary tables, and calendars.


||1803 – Jacques Charles François Sturm, French mathematician and theorist (d. 1850)
||1547: Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra born ... widely regarded as the greatest writer in the Spanish language and one of the world's pre-eminent novelists. His novel ''Don Quixote'' has been translated into over 140 languages and dialects; it is, after the Bible, the most-translated book in the world. Pic.


||1885 – The first practical public electric tramway in the world is opened in Blackpool, England.
||1561: Adriaan van Roomen born ... priest and mathematician. Pic: book cover.


||1895 Joseph Banks Rhine, American botanist and parapsychologist (d. 1980)
||1765: Astronomer Karl Ludwig Harding born. He will discover Juno. Pic.
 
||1800: Frederick Collier Bakewell born ... physicist who improved on the concept of the facsimile machine introduced by Alexander Bain in 1842 and demonstrated a working laboratory version at the 1851 World's Fair in London. Pic: https://alchetron.com/Frederick-Bakewell
 
||1803: Jacques Charles François Sturm born ... mathematician and theorist. Pic search good: https://www.google.com/search?q=Jacques+Charles+François+Sturm
 
||1838: Scientist and engineer Pierre-Dominique Bazaine dies. Pic.
 
||1853: Luther D. Bradley born ... illustrator and political cartoonist associated with the Chicago Daily News ... known for strong anti-war sentiments, opposing U.S. involvement in World War I. Pic.
 
||1885: The first practical public electric tramway in the world is opened in Blackpool, England.
 
||1895: Harold Hotelling born ... mathematical statistician and an influential economic theorist, known for Hotelling's law, Hotelling's lemma, and Hotelling's rule in economics, as well as Hotelling's T-squared distribution in statistics. Pic.
 
||1895: Joseph Banks Rhine born ... botanist and parapsychologist. Rhine who founded parapsychology as a branch of psychology, founding the parapsychology lab at Duke University, the Journal of Parapsychology, the Foundation for Research on the Nature of Man, and the Parapsychological Association. Pic.
 
||1898: Trofim Denisovich Lysenko born ... agronomist and biologist. Lysenko was a strong proponent of soft inheritance and rejected Mendelian genetics in favor of pseudoscientific ideas termed Lysenkoism. Pic.


File:Enrico Fermi 1943-49.jpg|link=Enrico Fermi (nonfiction)|1901: Physicist [[Enrico Fermi (nonfiction)|Enrico Fermi]] born.  He will be called the "architect of the nuclear age" and the "architect of the atomic bomb".
File:Enrico Fermi 1943-49.jpg|link=Enrico Fermi (nonfiction)|1901: Physicist [[Enrico Fermi (nonfiction)|Enrico Fermi]] born.  He will be called the "architect of the nuclear age" and the "architect of the atomic bomb".


||1913 – Rudolf Diesel, German engineer, invented the diesel engine (b. 1858)
||1902: Howard Walter Gilmore born - submarine commander in the United States Navy who posthumously received the Medal of Honor for his self-sacrifice during World War II. Pic.


||1931 – James Cronin, American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2016)
||1913: Rudolf Diesel dies ... engineer, invented the diesel engine. Pic.


||1954 – The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is signed.
||1920: Peter Mitchell born ... biochemist who was awarded the 1978 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his discovery of the chemiosmotic mechanism of ATP synthesis. Pic.


File:Baron Zersetzung.jpg|link=Baron Zersetzung|1957: Industrialist and alleged crime boss [[Baron Zersetzung]] authorizes the [[Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)]].
||1925: Paul B. MacCready Jr. born ... aeronautical engineer. He was the founder of AeroVironment and the designer of the human-powered aircraft that won the first Kremer prize. He devoted his life to developing more efficient transportation vehicles that could "Do more with less". Pic.
 
||1927: Willem Einthoven dies ... physician, physiologist, and academic, Nobel Prize laureate.  He invented the first practical electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) in 1895 and received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1924 for it ("for the discovery of the mechanism of the electrocardiogram"). Pic.
 
||1928: Ernst Steinitz dies ... mathematician. Pic: https://ztfnews.wordpress.com/2013/09/29/%EF%BB%BFernst-steinitz%EF%BB%BF-1871-1928/
 
||1931: James Cronin born ... physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.
 
||1954: The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is signed.


File:Kyshtym disaster map.png|link=Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)|1957: Twenty MCi (740 petabecquerels) of radioactive material is released in an explosion at the Soviet Mayak nuclear plant at Chelyabinsk. See [[Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)]].
File:Kyshtym disaster map.png|link=Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)|1957: Twenty MCi (740 petabecquerels) of radioactive material is released in an explosion at the Soviet Mayak nuclear plant at Chelyabinsk. See [[Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)]].


File:Egon Rhodomunde.jpg|link=Egon Rhodomunde|1957: Investor and arms dealer [[Egon Rhodomunde]] tell resporters that he "had nothing to do with the [[Kyshtym disaster (nonfiction)]]."
||1974: Carl B. Allendoerfer dies ... mathematician in the mid-twentieth century, known for his work in topology and mathematics education. Pic.
 
||1983: R. G. D. Allen born ... economist, mathematician, and statistician. Pic.
 
||1985: Beniamin Markarian dies ... astrophysicist. Markarian's Chain (of galaxies) was named after him when he discovered that this string of galaxies moves with a common motion.  Pic.
 
||1988: Charles Addams dies ... cartoonist. Pic.


||1988 – Charles Addams, American cartoonist (b. 1912)
||2007: Calder Hall, the world's first commercial nuclear power station, is demolished in a controlled explosion.


|File:Martin David Kruskal.jpg|link=David Kruskal (nonfiction)|2005: Physicist, mathematician, and crime-fighter [[Martin David Kruskal (nonfiction)|Martin David Kruskal]] uses theory of solitons to detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
||2008: György Elekes dies ... mathematician and computer scientist who specialized in Combinatorial geometry and Combinatorial set theory. He may be best known for his work in the field that would eventually be called Additive Combinatorics. Particularly notable was his "ingenious" application of the Szemerédi–Trotter theorem to improve the best known lower bound for the sum-product problem. He also proved that any polynomial-time algorithm approximating the volume of convex bodies must have a multiplicative error, and the error grows exponentially on the dimension. Pic: https://adamsheffer.wordpress.com/2014/07/01/incidences-lower-bounds-part-2/


||2007 – Calder Hall, the world's first commercial nuclear power station, is demolished in a controlled explosion.
||2010: Georges Charpak dies ... physicist from a Jewish family who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1992. Pic.


||2013 Harold Agnew, American physicist and engineer (b. 1921)
||2013: Harold Agnew dies ... physicist and engineer. Pic.


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Latest revision as of 14:11, 7 February 2022