Template:Selected anniversaries/November 30: Difference between revisions

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File:Bernoulli_wappen.png|link=Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Advances in [[Cellular automaton (nonfiction)|dynastic cellular automata theory]] reveal new members of [[Bernoulli family (nonfiction)|Bernoulli family]].
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File:Wizard Jan Kochanowski.jpg|link=Jan_Kochanowski|Poet and wizard [[Jan Kochanowski]] adapts [[Nebra sky disk (nonfiction)|Nebra sky disk]] for use as [[scrying engine]].
 
File:Confiserie_orientale_berlin_lokum_cream_lemon,_lokum.jpg|link=Forbidden Ratio and Gnotilus (crime team)|[[Turkish delight (nonfiction)|Turkish delight]] found at scene of [[crime against mathematical constants]], crime team of [[Forbidden Ratio and Gnotilus (crime team)|Forbidden Ratio and Gnotilus]] suspected.
File:Petroglyph_-_Loughcrew_Cairn_L_Megalithic_Monument.jpg|link=Eclipse (nonfiction)|3340 B.C.: The [[Eclipse (nonfiction)|Solar eclipse]] of 3340 B.C. occurs.  Geometric designs on a stone in Ireland may depict the eclipse; if so, the stone is the earliest known record of an eclipse.
 
||1549: Henry Savile born ... scholar and mathematician, Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and Provost of Eton. He endowed the Savilian chairs of Astronomy and of Geometry at Oxford University, and was one of the scholars who translated the New Testament from Greek into English.  It is interesting to read Savile's comments in these lectures on why he felt that mathematics at that time was not flourishing. Students did not understand the importance of the subject, Savile wrote, there were no teachers to explain the difficult points, the texts written by the leading mathematicians of the day were not studied, and no overall approach to the teaching of mathematics had been formulated. Of course, as we shall see below, fifty years later Savile tried to rectify these shortcomings by setting up two chairs at the University of Oxford. *SAU https://pballew.blogspot.com/2019/02/on-this-day-in-math-february-19.html Pic.
 
File:Otto_von_Guericke.jpg|link=Otto von Guericke (nonfiction)|1602: Scientist, inventor, and politician [[Otto von Guericke (nonfiction)|Otto von Guericke]] born. Von Guericke will pioneer the physics of vacuums, and discover an experimental method for demonstrating electrostatic repulsion.
 
||1603: William Gilbert dies ... physician, physicist and natural philosopher. He passionately rejected both the prevailing Aristotelian philosophy and the Scholastic method of university teaching. He is remembered today largely for his book ''De Magnete'' (1600), and is credited as one of the originators of the term "electricity". Pic.
 
||1647: Bonaventura Cavalieri dies ... mathematician and astronomer. No DOB. Pic.
 
||1689: Mathematician Joseph Raphson made a Fellow of the Royal Society, after being proposed for membership by Edmund Halley. No DOB, No DOD. Pic: document.
 
||1756: Ernst Chladni born ... physicist and author. Pic.
 
||1761: John Dollond dies ... optician, known for his successful optics business and his patenting and commercialization of achromatic doublets. Pic.
 
||1765: George Glas dies ... merchant and explorer. No DOB. Pic search book cover.
 
||1768: Jędrzej Śniadecki born ...  writer, physician, chemist and biologist. His achievements include the creation of modern Polish terminology in the field of chemistry. Pic.
 
||1781: Alexander Berry born ... surgeon, merchant, and explorer. Pic.
 
File:Ernst Chladni.jpg|link=Ernst Chladni (nonfiction)|1827: Physicist, musician, and academic [[Ernst Chladni (nonfiction)|Ernst Chladni]] dies. He has been called both the father of acoustics and the father of meteoritics.
 
||1830: Johann Tobias Mayer dies ... physicist. He was mainly well known for his mathematics and natural science textbooks.  Reflecting circle. Pic.
 
||1831: Sir William Henry Flower born ... surgeon, museum curator and comparative anatomist, who became a leading authority on mammals and especially on the primate brain. Pic.
 
File:Mark Twain by Abdullah Frères, 1867.jpg|link=Mark Twain (nonfiction)|1835: Writer, entrepreneur, publisher and lecturer [[Mark Twain (nonfiction)|Mark Twain]] born.
 
||1836: Pierre-Simon Girard dies ... mathematician and engineer. He contributed to fluid mechanics and beam theory. Pic.
 
||1840: Joseph Johann von Littrow dies ... astronomer. Pic.
 
||1845: Nils Gabriel Sefström dies ... chemist. Sefström was a student of Berzelius and, when studying the brittleness of steel in 1830, he rediscovered a new chemical element, to which he gave the name vanadium. Pic: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nils_Gabriel_Sefstr%C3%B6m_(1787-1845)_3.png
 
||1858: Jagadish Chandra Bose born ... physicist, biologist, botanist, and archaeologist. Pic.
 
||1869: Gustaf Dalén born ... physicist and engineer, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.
 
||1873: Alexander Berry dies ... surgeon, merchant, and explorer. Pic.
 
||1874: Friedrich Hasenöhrl born ... physicist. Pic.
 
File:Ralph Hartley.jpg|link=Ralph Hartley (nonfiction)|1888:  Electronics researcher [[Ralph Hartley (nonfiction)|Ralph Hartley]] born.  He will invent the Hartley oscillator and the Hartley transform, and contribute to the foundations of information theory.
 
||1889: Edgar Douglas Adrian born ... electrophysiologist and recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize for Physiology, won jointly with Sir Charles Sherrington for work on the function of neurons. He provided experimental evidence for the all-or-none law of nerves. Pic.
 
||1915: Henry Taube born ... chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. Pic.
 
||1921: Karl Hermann Amandus Schwarz dies ... mathematician, known for his work in complex analysis. Pic.
 
||1922: André Néron born ... mathematician at the Université de Poitiers who worked on elliptic curves and Abelian varieties. He discovered the Néron minimal model of an elliptic curve or abelian variety, the Néron differential, the Néron–Severi group, the Néron–Ogg–Shafarevich criterion, the local height and Néron–Tate height of rational points on an Abelian variety over a discrete valuation ring or Dedekind domain. Pic: https://ceppp.ca/en/ceppp-andre-neron-1000x1000px/
 
||1930: G. Gordon Liddy born ... lawyer, radio host, television actor, and criminal. Pic.
 
||1934: The LNER Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman becomes the first steam locomotive to be authenticated as reaching 100 mph.
 
||1936: Mathematician and academic Dmitri Anosov born. He will make contributions to dynamical systems theory. Pic.
 
||1936: In London, the Crystal Palace is destroyed by fire.
 
||1937: Praveen Chaudhari born ... physicist and academic. Pic search.
 
File:Ridley Scott.jpg|link=Ridley Scott (nonfiction)|1937: Film director and producer [[Ridley Scott (nonfiction)|Ridley Scott]] born.  
 
File:Sylacauga meteorite, Smithsonian Natural History Museum.jpg|link=Sylacauga (meteorite) (nonfiction)|1954: In Sylacauga, Alabama, United States, the [[Sylacauga (meteorite) (nonfiction)|Hodges meteorite]] crashes through a roof and hits a woman taking an afternoon nap; this is the only documented case in the Western Hemisphere of a human being hit by a rock from space.
 
||1958: Jenő Egerváry commits suicide ... mathematician. Egerváry generalized König's theorem to the case of weighted graphs. This contribution was translated and published in 1955 by Harold W. Kuhn, who also showed how to apply Kőnig's and Egerváry's method to solve the assignment problem; the resulting algorithm has since been known as the "Hungarian method". Pic.
 
||1962: Joseph Lade Pawsey dies ... scientist, radiophysicist and radio astronomer. Pic.
 
||1972: Vietnam War: White House Press Secretary Ron Ziegler tells the press that there will be no more public announcements concerning American troop withdrawals from Vietnam because troop levels are now down to 27,000.
 
|File:Ridley-Scott-researching-Alien.jpg|link=Ridley Scott|1985: [[Ridley Scott]] revisits his documentary film ''[[Alien (documentary)|Alien]]'', tells reporters he is "thinking about" an upgrade version.
 
||1999: Sam Bard Treiman dies ... theoretical physicist who produced research in the fields of cosmic rays, quantum physics, plasma physics and gravity physics. He made contributions to the understanding of the weak interaction and he and his students are credited with developing the so-called standard model of elementary particle physics. Pic: https://history.aip.org/phn/11603017.html
 
||2008: Naomi Datta dies ... geneticist. Working at Hammersmith Hospital in the 1950s and early 1960s, she identified horizontal gene transfer as a source of multi-antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Pic.
 
||2011: Robert "Bob" Osserman dies ... mathematician who worked in geometry. He is specially remembered for his work on the theory of minimal surfaces. Pic.
 
||2014: Anthony Dryden Marshall dies ... American CIA officer and diplomat. Pic search.
 
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Latest revision as of 16:46, 7 February 2022