Template:Selected anniversaries/March 29: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(40 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<gallery>
<gallery>
||1561 – Santorio Santorio, Italian biologist (d. 1636)
File:Emanuel Swedenborg.png|link=Emanuel Swedenborg (nonfiction)|1772: Astronomer, philosopher, theologian, and mystic [[Emanuel Swedenborg (nonfiction)|Emanuel Swedenborg]] dies.
File:Laura Bassi.jpg|link=Laura Bassi (nonfiction)|1773: Physicist and academic [[Laura Bassi (nonfiction)|Laura Bassi]] uses [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] to predict and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
File:Jørgen Jørgensen (Eckersberg).jpg|link=Jørgen Jørgensen (nonfiction)|1780: Adventurer [[Jørgen Jørgensen (nonfiction)|Jørgen Jørgensen]] born. He will sail to Iceland, declaring the country independent from Denmark and pronouncing himself its ruler, intending to found a new republic following the United States of America and France.
File:Jørgen Jørgensen (Eckersberg).jpg|link=Jørgen Jørgensen (nonfiction)|1780: Adventurer [[Jørgen Jørgensen (nonfiction)|Jørgen Jørgensen]] born. He will sail to Iceland, declaring the country independent from Denmark and pronouncing himself its ruler, intending to found a new republic following the United States of America and France.


||1824 – Ludwig Büchner, German physiologist, physician, and philosopher (d. 1899)
File:Tullio Levi-civita.jpg|link=Tullio Levi-Civita (nonfiction)|1873: Mathematician and academic [[Tullio Levi-Civita (nonfiction)|Tullio Levi-Civita]] born. Levi-Civita will gain fame for his work on absolute differential calculus (tensor calculus) and its applications to the theory of relativity, and make significant contributions in other areas.
 
||Désiré André (b. March 29, 1840) was a French mathematician, best known for his work on Catalan numbers and alternating permutations.
 
File:Tullio Levi-civita.jpg|link=Tullio Levi-Civita (nonfiction)|1873: Mathematician and academic [[Tullio Levi-Civita (nonfiction)|Tullio Levi-Civita]] born. He will gain fame for his work on absolute differential calculus (tensor calculus) and its applications to the theory of relativity, and make significant contributions in other areas.
 
||1873 – Francesco Zantedeschi, Italian priest and physicist (b. 1797)
 
File:Grigori Rasputin 1916.jpg|link=Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|1873: Mystic, faith healer, and alleged time-traveller [[Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|Grigori Rasputin]] accused of [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
 
||1888 – Enea Bossi, Sr., Italian-American engineer, designed the Budd BB-1 Pioneer and Bossi-Bonomi Pedaliante (d. 1963)
 
||Eduard Rüchardt (b. March 29, 1888) was a German physicist. In modern times Rüchardt is mainly noted for the experiment named after him. However, Rüchardt's chief topic was the study of canal rays.
 
||Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria (b. 29 March 1899) was a Soviet politician of Georgian ethnicity, Marshal of the Soviet Union and state security administrator, chief of the Soviet security and secret police apparatus (NKVD) under Joseph Stalin during World War II.
 
||1895 – Ernst Jünger, German philosopher and author (d. 1998)
 
File:Wilhelm Ackermann.jpg|link=Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|1896: Mathematician [[Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|Wilhelm Ackermann]] born.  He will discover the Ackermann function, an important example in the theory of computation.
 
||1912 – Hanna Reitsch, Polish-German soldier and pilot (d. 1979)
 
||Leonard Isaac Schiff was born in Fall River, Massachusetts on d. March 29, 1915 - He was a physicist best known for his book Quantum Mechanics.
 
||1918 – Lê Văn Thiêm, Vietnamese mathematician and academic (d. 1991)
 
||1927 – John Vane, English pharmacologist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2004)
 
||1944: Mathematician Grace Chisholm Young dies.


File:Dard Hunter, Glyph Warden detail.jpg|link=Niles Cartouchian (1900s)|1952: Actor-cryptographer [[Niles Cartouchian (1900s)|Niles Cartouchian]] premiers new short film about the [[Halting problem (nonfiction)|Halting problem]]. Seen by few at first, it will gain fame over time, influencing a generation of [[Mathematician|mathematical crime-fighters]] .
File:Francesco Zantedeschi.jpg|link=Francesco Zantedeschi (nonfiction)|1873: Physicist and priest [[Francesco Zantedeschi (nonfiction)|Francesco Zantedeschi]] dies. Zantedeschi was among the first to recognize the marked absorption by the atmosphere of red, yellow, and green light. He also thought that he had detected, in 1838, a magnetic action on steel needles by ultraviolet light, anticipating later discoveries connecting light and magnetism.


File:Mariner 10 diagram.jpg|link=Mariner 10 (nonfiction)|1974: NASA's [[Mariner 10 (nonfiction)|Mariner 10]] becomes the first space probe to fly by Mercury.
File:Wilhelm Ackermann.jpg|link=Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|1896: Mathematician [[Wilhelm Ackermann (nonfiction)|Wilhelm Ackermann]] born.  Ackermann will discover the Ackermann function, an important example in the theory of computation.


||2003 Carlo Urbani, Italian physician and microbiologist (b. 1956) died SARS
File:Carlo_Urbani.jpg|link=Carlo Urbani (nonfiction)|2003: Physician and microbiologist [[Carlo Urbani (nonfiction)|Carlo Urbani]] dies of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).  Urbani identifed SARS as a new and dangerously contagious viral disease, and his early warning to the World Health Organization (WHO) triggered a swift and global response credited with saving numerous lives.


</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 08:19, 29 March 2022