Template:Selected anniversaries/July 1: Difference between revisions

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||Christophe Plantin (d. 1 July 1589) was an influential Renaissance humanist and book printer and publisher. Pic.
||1589: Christophe Plantin dies ... Renaissance humanist and book printer and publisher. Pic.


File:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.jpg|link=Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (nonfiction)|1646: Mathematician and philosopher [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (nonfiction)|Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] born. He will develop differential and integral calculus independently of Isaac Newton, and design and build mechanical calculators.
File:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.jpg|link=Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (nonfiction)|1646: Mathematician and philosopher [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (nonfiction)|Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] born. He will develop differential and integral calculus independently of Isaac Newton, and design and build mechanical calculators.


||Johann Baptist Homann (d. 1 July 1724) was a German geographer and cartographer, who also made maps of the Americas.
||1676: Anthony Collins born ... philosopher, author, and deist. His central passion is the autonomy of reason particularly with respect to religion; Collins was strongly motivated by an aversion to religious persecution, and issues around religious freedom run through all of his writing.  Pic.


||Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (b. 1742) was a German scientist, satirist, and Anglophile. As a scientist, he was the first to hold a professorship explicitly dedicated to experimental physics in Germany.  
||1724: Johann Homann dies ... geographer and cartographer, who also made maps of the Americas. Pic.


||John Cuthbertson (bapt. 1 July 1743) was an English instrument maker and inventor.
||1742: Georg Christoph Lichtenberg born ... scientist, satirist, and Anglophile. As a scientist, he was the first to hold a professorship explicitly dedicated to experimental physics in Germany. Pic.


||1770 – Lexell's Comet passes closer to the Earth than any other comet in recorded history, approaching to a distance of 0.0146 a.u.
||1743: John Cuthbertson baptized ... instrument maker and inventor. Pic: generator.


||1788 – Jean-Victor Poncelet, French mathematician and engineer (d. 1867)
||1770: Lexell's Comet passes closer to the Earth than any other comet in recorded history, approaching to a distance of 0.0146 a.u.


||Major-General William Roy FRS, AS (d. 1 July 1790) was a Scottish military engineer, surveyor, and antiquarian. He was an innovator who applied new scientific discoveries and newly emerging technologies to the accurate geodetic mapping of Great Britain.
||1788: Jean-Victor Poncelet born ... mathematician and engineer. Pic.


|File:Wizard Jan Kochanowski.jpg|link=Jan_Kochanowski|1818: Mathematician and astronomer [[Jan Kochanowski]] uses the [[Nebra sky disk (nonfiction)|Nebra sky disk]] to preview the [[Great Comet of 1819 (nonfiction)|Great Comet of 1819]].
||1790: William Roy dies ... military engineer, surveyor, and antiquarian. He was an innovator who applied new scientific discoveries and newly emerging technologies to the accurate geodetic mapping of Great Britain. Pic: map, plaque.


File:Great Comet of 1819 by Kendall.jpg|link=Great Comet of 1819 (nonfiction)|1819: Johann Georg Tralles discovers the [[Great Comet of 1819 (nonfiction)|Great Comet of 1819]] (C/1819 N1). It was the first comet analyzed using polarimetry, by François Arago.
File:Great Comet of 1819 by Kendall.jpg|link=Great Comet of 1819 (nonfiction)|1819: Johann Georg Tralles discovers the [[Great Comet of 1819 (nonfiction)|Great Comet of 1819]] (C/1819 N1). It was the first comet analyzed using polarimetry, by François Arago.


||Emil Weyr (b. July 1, 1848) was an Austrian mathematician, known for his numerous publications on geometry.
||1840: Robert Stawell Ball born ... astronomer who founded screw theory, the algebra and calculus of pairs of vectors, such as forces and moments and angular and linear velocity, that arise in the kinematics and dynamics of rigid bodies. Pic.


||1860 – Charles Goodyear, American chemist and engineer (b. 1800)
||1848: Emil Weyr born ... mathematician, known for his numerous publications on geometry. Pic.


||1872 – Louis Blériot, French pilot and engineer (d. 1936)
||1860: Charles Goodyear dies ... chemist and engineer. Pic.


||1872 – William Duddell, English physicist and engineer (d. 1917)
||1864: Alexander Crichton Mitchell born ... physicist with a special interest in geomagnetics who worked for many years in India as a professor and head of a meteorological observatory before returning to Scotland. He then worked with the Royal Navy to devise a system, known as an anti-submarine indicator loop, for detecting submarines by detecting currents induced in a loop of wire on the sea floor. Pic: http://indicatorloops.com/mitchell.htm


||1874 – The Sholes and Glidden typewriter, the first commercially successful typewriter, goes on sale.
||1872: Louis Blériot born ... pilot and engineer.


||1881: Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville dies.
||1872: William Duddell born ... physicist and engineer.


||1881 – The world's first international telephone call is made between St. Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada, and Calais, Maine, United States.
||1874: The Sholes and Glidden typewriter, the first commercially successful typewriter, goes on sale.


||1884 – Allan Pinkerton, Scottish-American detective and spy (b. 1819)
||1881: Chemist Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville dies. Pic.


File:Johann Jakob Balmer.jpg|link=Johann Jakob Balmer (nonfiction)|1888: Mathematician and physicist [[Johann Jakob Balmer (nonfiction)|Johann Jakob Balmer]] develops a [[Gnomon algorithm function]] based on the visible spectral lines of the hydrogen atom which unexpectedly reveals imminent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
File:Rotary dial telephone.jpg|link=Telephone (nonfiction)|1881: The world's first international [[Telephone (nonfiction)|telephone]] call is made between St. Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada, and Calais, Maine, United States.


||1890 – Canada and Bermuda are linked by telegraph cable.
||1884: Allan Pinkerton dies ... detective and spy.


||1906 – Jean Dieudonné, French mathematician and academic (d. 1992)
||1890: Canada and Bermuda are linked by telegraph cable.


||1908 – SOS is adopted as the international distress signal.
||1896: Hans Peter Luhn born ... researcher in the field of computer science, and, Library & Information Science for IBM, and creator of the Luhn algorithm, KWIC (Key Words In Context) indexing, and Selective dissemination of information ("SDI"). Pic search good: https://www.google.com/search?q=hans+peter+luhn


||Dugald Caleb Jackson (d. July 1, 1951) was an American electrical engineer. He received the IEEE Edison Medal for "outstanding and inspiring leadership in engineering education and in the field of generation and distribution of electric power".
||1899: William Henry Flower dies ... surgeon, museum curator and comparative anatomist, who became a leading authority on mammals and especially on the primate brain. Pic.


||1957 – The International Geophysical Year begins.
||1906: Jean Dieudonné born ... mathematician and academic. Pic.


||1963 – ZIP codes are introduced for United States mail.
||1908: SOS is adopted as the international distress signal.


||1968 – The United States Central Intelligence Agency's Phoenix Program is officially established.
||1917: Dorothy Maharam Stone born ... mathematician born in Parkersburg, West Virginia, who made important contributions to measure theory and became the namesake of Maharam's theorem and Maharam algebra. Pic: https://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/stone.htm


||1968 – The Nuclear non-proliferation treaty is signed in Washington, D.C., London and Moscow by sixty-two countries.
||1929: Gerald Edelman born ... biologist and immunologist ... shared the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work with Rodney Robert Porter on the immune system. Edelman's Nobel Prize-winning research concerned discovery of the structure of antibody molecules. In interviews, he has said that the way the components of the immune system evolve over the life of the individual is analogous to the way the components of the brain evolve in a lifetime. Pic.


||Sir William Lawrence Bragg (d. 1 July 1971) was an Australian-born British physicist and X-ray crystallographer, discoverer (1912) of Bragg's law of X-ray diffraction, which is basic for the determination of crystal structure. He was joint winner (with his father, William Henry Bragg) of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1915
||1951: Dugald C. Jackson dies ... electrical engineer. He received the IEEE Edison Medal for "outstanding and inspiring leadership in engineering education and in the field of generation and distribution of electric power". Pic.


||Laurens Hammond (d. July 1, 1973), was an American engineer and inventor. His inventions include, most famously, the Hammond organ, the Hammond clock, and the world's first polyphonic musical synthesizer, the Novachord. Pic.
||1957: The International Geophysical Year begins.


||Moshé Pinchas Feldenkrais (d. 1984) was an Israeli engineer and the founder of the Feldenkrais Method, which is claimed to improve human functioning by increasing self-awareness through movement
||1963: ZIP codes are introduced for United States mail.
 
||1968: The United States Central Intelligence Agency's Phoenix Program is officially established.
 
||1968: The Nuclear non-proliferation treaty is signed in Washington, D.C., London and Moscow by sixty-two countries.
 
||1971: William Lawrence Bragg dies ... physicist and X-ray crystallographer, discoverer (1912) of Bragg's law of X-ray diffraction, which is basic for the determination of crystal structure. He was joint winner (with his father, William Henry Bragg) of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1915. Pic.
 
||1973: Laurens Hammond dies ... engineer and inventor. His inventions include, most famously, the Hammond organ, the Hammond clock, and the world's first polyphonic musical synthesizer, the Novachord. Pic.
 
||1983: Richard Buckminster "Bucky" Fuller dies ... architect, systems theorist, author, designer, inventor and futurist. Pic.
 
||1984: Moshé Feldenkrais dies ... engineer and the founder of the Feldenkrais Method, which is claimed to improve human functioning by increasing self-awareness through movement.  Pic with skeleton.


File:Nikolay Basov.jpg|link=Nikolay Basov (nonfiction)|2001: Physicist and educator [[Nikolay Basov (nonfiction)|Nikolay Basov]] dies. He did fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics.
File:Nikolay Basov.jpg|link=Nikolay Basov (nonfiction)|2001: Physicist and educator [[Nikolay Basov (nonfiction)|Nikolay Basov]] dies. He did fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics.


File:The Custodian.jpg|link=The Custodian|2017: [[The Custodian]] says he is "not planning on retiring any time soon."
File:The Custodian.jpg|link=The Custodian|2019: [[The Custodian]] says he is "not planning on retiring any time soon."


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Latest revision as of 20:10, 6 February 2022