Template:Selected anniversaries/December 10: Difference between revisions

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|| *** DONE: Pics ***
File:Statue of Ibn Rushd in Cordoba.jpg|link=Ibn Rushd (nonfiction)|1198: Polymath [[Ibn Rushd (nonfiction)|Ibn Rushd]] (Averoess) dies. He wrote on logic, Aristotelian and Islamic philosophy, theology, the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, psychology, political and Andalusian classical music theory, geography, mathematics, and the mediæval sciences of medicine, astronomy, physics, and celestial mechanics.
File:Statue of Ibn Rushd in Cordoba.jpg|link=Ibn Rushd (nonfiction)|1198: Polymath [[Ibn Rushd (nonfiction)|Ibn Rushd]] (Averoess) dies. He wrote on logic, Aristotelian and Islamic philosophy, theology, the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, psychology, political and Andalusian classical music theory, geography, mathematics, and the mediæval sciences of medicine, astronomy, physics, and celestial mechanics.
||1317 – The "Nyköping Banquet" - King Birger of Sweden treacherously seizes his two brothers Valdemar, Duke of Finland and Eric, Duke of Södermanland, who were subsequently starved to death in the dungeon of Nyköping Castle.


File:Johannes Stöffler.jpg|link=Johannes Stöffler (nonfiction)|1452: Mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, priest, maker of astronomical instruments, and professor [[Johannes Stöffler (nonfiction)|Johannes Stöffler]] born.
File:Johannes Stöffler.jpg|link=Johannes Stöffler (nonfiction)|1452: Mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, priest, maker of astronomical instruments, and professor [[Johannes Stöffler (nonfiction)|Johannes Stöffler]] born.


||1588 Isaac Beeckman, Dutch scientist and philosopher (d. 1637)
||1588: Isaac Beeckman born ... scientist and philosopher. Pic search.


||1626 Edmund Gunter, English mathematician and academic (b. 1581)
||1626: Edmund Gunter dies ... mathematician and academic. No DOB. No pic online.


File:Sir Isaac Newton by Sir Godfrey Kneller.jpg|link=Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|1684: [[Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|Isaac Newton]]'s derivation of Kepler's laws from his theory of gravity, contained in the paper ''De motu corporum in gyrum'', is read to the Royal Society by Edmond Halley.
File:Sir Isaac Newton by Sir Godfrey Kneller.jpg|link=Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|1684: [[Isaac Newton (nonfiction)|Isaac Newton]]'s derivation of Kepler's laws from his theory of gravity, contained in the paper ''De motu corporum in gyrum'', is read to the Royal Society by Edmond Halley.


||1799 France adopts the metre as its official unit of length.
||1725: Nicolaas Hartsoeker dies ... mathematician and physicist. Pic: book cover.
 
||1799: France adopts the metre as its official unit of length.


File:Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.jpg|link=Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (nonfiction)|1804: Mathematician and academic [[Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (nonfiction)|Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi]] born. He will make fundamental contributions to elliptic functions, dynamics, differential equations, and number theory.
File:Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.jpg|link=Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (nonfiction)|1804: Mathematician and academic [[Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (nonfiction)|Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi]] born. He will make fundamental contributions to elliptic functions, dynamics, differential equations, and number theory.
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File:Ada Lovelace.jpg|link=Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|1815: Mathematician and writer [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]] born.  She will do pioneering work in symbolic languages for machine processes, developing what will later be called computer programs for Charles Babbage's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine.
File:Ada Lovelace.jpg|link=Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|1815: Mathematician and writer [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]] born.  She will do pioneering work in symbolic languages for machine processes, developing what will later be called computer programs for Charles Babbage's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine.


|File:Bergamot essential oil.jpg|link=Bergamot essential oil (nonfiction)|1825: [[Bergamot essential oil (nonfiction)|Bergamot essential oil]] gives [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey (nonfiction)|Charles Grey]] the strength to carry on against all opposition.
File:Thomas Seebeck.jpg|link=Thomas Johann Seebeck (nonfiction)|1831: Physicist and academic [[Thomas Johann Seebeck (nonfiction)|Thomas Johann Seebeck]] dies. He discovered the thermoelectric effect.
 
||1850: François Sulpice Beudant dies ... mineralogist and geologist. Pic.


File:Thomas Seebeck.jpg|link=Thomas Johann Seebeck (nonfiction)|1831: Physicist and academic [[Thomas Johann Seebeck (nonfiction)|Thomas Johann Seebeck]] dies. He discovered the thermoelectric effect.
||1851: Karl Freiherr von Drais born ... forest official and significant inventor in the Biedermeier period. Dandy horse. Pic.
 
File:Margaret Eliza Maltby circa 1908.jpg|link=Margaret Eliza Maltby (nonfiction)|1860: Physicist [[Margaret Eliza Maltby (nonfiction)|Margaret Eliza Maltby]] born.  She will contribute to the measurement of high electrolytic resistances and conductivity of very dilute solutions. 
 
||1864: Henry Schoolcraft dies ... geographer, geologist, and ethnologist ... Native Americans. Pic.
 
||1868: The first traffic lights are installed, outside the Palace of Westminster in London. Resembling railway signals, they use semaphore arms and are illuminated at night by red and green gas lamps.


||1850 – François Sulpice Beudant, French mineralogist and geologist (b. 1787)
||1874: Dr. Walter Guyton Cady born ... physicist and electrical engineer. He was a pioneer in piezoelectricity, and in 1921 developed the first quartz crystal oscillator. Pic: https://ieee-uffc.org/about-us/history/walter-guyton-cady-memorial-page/


||Margaret Eliza Maltby (b. 10 December 1860) was an American physicist notable for measurement of high electrolytic resistances and conductivity of very dilute solutions.  
||1896: Alfred Nobel dies ... chemist and engineer, invented Dynamite and founded the Nobel Prize. Pic.


||1868 – The first traffic lights are installed, outside the Palace of Westminster in London. Resembling railway signals, they use semaphore arms and are illuminated at night by red and green gas lamps.
||1901: The first Nobel Prizes are awarded.


||1896 – Alfred Nobel, Swedish chemist and engineer, invented Dynamite and founded the Nobel Prize (b. 1833)
||1906: Walter Henry Zinn born ... nuclear physicist who was the first director of the Argonne National Laboratory from 1946 to 1956. He worked at the Manhattan Project's Metallurgical Laboratory during World War II, and supervised the construction of Chicago Pile-1, the world’s first nuclear reactor, which went critical on December 2, 1942, at the University of Chicago. At Argonne he designed and built several new reactors, including Experimental Breeder Reactor I, the first nuclear reactor to produce electric power, which went live on December 20, 1951. Pic.


||1901 – The first Nobel Prizes are awarded.
||1907: The worst night of the Brown Dog riots in London, when 1,000 medical students clash with 400 police officers over the existence of a memorial for animals that have been vivisected. Pic: statues.


||Walter Henry Zinn (b. December 10, 1906) was a nuclear physicist who was the first director of the Argonne National Laboratory from 1946 to 1956. He worked at the Manhattan Project's Metallurgical Laboratory during World War II, and supervised the construction of Chicago Pile-1, the world’s first nuclear reactor, which went critical on December 2, 1942, at the University of Chicago. At Argonne he designed and built several new reactors, including Experimental Breeder Reactor I, the first nuclear reactor to produce electric power, which went live on December 20, 1951. Pic.
||1920: Mathematician Alfred William Goldie born. He will work in ring theory where he introduced the notion of the uniform dimension of a module, and the reduced rank of a module. He is well known for Goldie's theorem, which characterizes right Goldie rings. Indeed, his Independent obituary described him as the "Lord of the Rings". Pic: http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Goldie_Alfred.html


||1907 – The worst night of the Brown Dog riots in London, when 1,000 medical students clash with 400 police officers over the existence of a memorial for animals that have been vivisected.
||1934: Howard Martin Temin born ... geneticist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


||1934 – Howard Martin Temin, American geneticist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1994)
File:Chrome Plover early publicity photo.jpg|link=Chrome Plover|1959: [[Chrome Plover]], the famed [[musical electroplating ensemble]], gives first public performance of ''Ada'', their tribute to [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]].


File:Chrome Plover early publicity photo.jpg|link=Chrome Plover|1959: [[Chrome Plover]], the famous [[musical electroplating ensemble]], demonstrates new controller units.
||1961: Oded Schramm born ... mathematician known for the invention of the Schramm–Loewner evolution (SLE) and for working at the intersection of conformal field theory and probability theory. Pic.


||Oded Schramm (b. December 10, 1961) was an Israeli-American mathematician known for the invention of the Schramm–Loewner evolution (SLE) and for working at the intersection of conformal field theory and probability theory. Pic.
||1961: Nuclear weapon test Gnome is detonated, with a yield of 3.1 kilotons. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Gnome


File:Gasbuggy Nuclear device.jpg|link=Project Gasbuggy (nonfiction)|1967: [[Project Gasbuggy (nonfiction)|Project Gasbuggy]] underground nuclear test detonation in rural northern New Mexico. Its purpose was to determine if nuclear explosions could be useful in fracturing rock formations for natural gas extraction.
File:Gasbuggy Nuclear device.jpg|link=Project Gasbuggy (nonfiction)|1967: [[Project Gasbuggy (nonfiction)|Project Gasbuggy]] underground nuclear test detonation in rural northern New Mexico. Its purpose was to determine if nuclear explosions could be useful in fracturing rock formations for natural gas extraction.


||1968 Japan's biggest heist, the still-unsolved "300 million yen robbery", is carried out in Tokyo.
||1968: Japan's biggest heist, the still-unsolved "300 million yen robbery", is carried out in Tokyo. Pic: aerial photo.
 
||1973: Wolf V. Vishniac dies ... microbiologist and academic. Mars. Pic search.
 
||1979:  Robert Elderfield dies ... chemist. He established the fundamental relationship between the cardiac aglycones and the sterols and bile acids, developed improved techniques for synthesizing primaquine and other antimalarials, and researched new anticancer agents. Pic.


||1973 – Wolf V. Vishniac, German-American microbiologist and academic (b. 1922)
|File:Lorenz_attractor_trajectory-through-phase-space.gif|link=Lorenz system (nonfiction)|1989: Animated [[Lorenz system (nonfiction)|Lorenz system]] diagram celebrates the life and work of [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]].


File:Lorenz_attractor_trajectory-through-phase-space.gif|link=Lorenz system (nonfiction)|1989: Animated [[Lorenz system (nonfiction)|Lorenz system]] diagram celebrates the life and work of [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]].
||1995: Sarvadaman D. S. Chowla dies ... mathematician, specializing in number theory. Among his contributions are a number of results which bear his name: the Bruck–Ryser–Chowla theorem, the Ankeny–Artin–Chowla congruence, the Chowla–Mordell theorem, and the Chowla–Selberg formula, and the Mian–Chowla sequence. Pic: http://www3.canisius.edu/~huard/chowla.html


||2009 – Vladimir Teplyakov, Russian soldier and physicist (b. 1925)
||1998: Wang Ganchang dies ... nuclear physicist. He was one of the founding fathers of Chinese nuclear physics, cosmic rays and particle physics. Pic.


||2010 – John Fenn, American chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1917)
||2009: Vladimir Teplyakov dies ... experimental physicist known for his work on particle accelerators. Together with I.M. Kapchinsky, he invented the principle of the radio-frequency quadrupole (RFQ), which revolutionized the acceleration of low-energy charged particle beams. Pic.


||Ernst Paul Specker (d. 10 December 2011) was a Swiss mathematician. Much of his most influential work was on Quine’s New Foundations, a set theory with a universal set, but he is most famous for the Kochen–Specker theorem in quantum mechanics, showing that certain types of hidden variable theories are impossible.
||2010: John Fenn dies ... chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.


File:The Eel receives news from informants.jpg|link=The Eel's henchmen|2014: The Eel receives [[The Eel's henchmen|news from informants]].
||2011: Ernst Paul Specker dies ... mathematician. Much of his most influential work was on Quine’s New Foundations, a set theory with a universal set, but he is most famous for the Kochen–Specker theorem in quantum mechanics, showing that certain types of hidden variable theories are impossible. Pic.


|File:Egg Tooth Neighborhood Association logo.jpg|link=Egg Tooth (neighborhood)|2016: [[Egg Tooth (neighborhood)|Egg Tooth Neighborhood Association]] celebrates life and work of [[Ada Lovelace (nonfiction)|Ada Lovelace]].
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Latest revision as of 18:10, 7 February 2022