Template:Selected anniversaries/January 19: Difference between revisions

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File:Johannes Kepler 1610.jpg|link=Johannes Kepler (nonfiction)|1618: [[Johannes Kepler (nonfiction)|Johannes Kepler]] uses [[Gnomon algorithm functions]] to prevent [[Crimes against mathematical constants|crimes against laws of planetary motion]].


||1719: Joachim Tielke dies ... instrument maker. Pic search instruments: https://www.google.com/search?q=joachim+tielke
||1719: Joachim Tielke dies ... instrument maker. Pic search instruments: https://www.google.com/search?q=joachim+tielke
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||1813: Henry Bessemer born ... engineer and businessman ... his steel-making process would become the most important technique for making steel in the nineteenth century for almost one hundred years. Pic.
||1813: Henry Bessemer born ... engineer and businessman ... his steel-making process would become the most important technique for making steel in the nineteenth century for almost one hundred years. Pic.


File:Alfred Clebsch.jpg|link=Alfred Clebsch (nonfiction)|1833: Mathematician and academic [[Alfred Clebsch (nonfiction)|Alfred Clebsch]] born.  He will make important contributions to algebraic geometry and invariant theory.
File:Alfred Clebsch.jpg|link=Alfred Clebsch (nonfiction)|1833: Mathematician and academic [[Alfred Clebsch (nonfiction)|Alfred Clebsch]] born.  Clebsch will make important contributions to algebraic geometry and invariant theory.


||1835: Auguste Kerckhoffs born ... linguist and cryptographer who was professor of languages at the École des Hautes Études Commerciales in Paris in the late 19th century. Pic.
||1835: Auguste Kerckhoffs born ... linguist and cryptographer who was professor of languages at the École des Hautes Études Commerciales in Paris in the late 19th century. Pic.
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File:Thomas Edison.jpg|link=Thomas Edison (nonfiction)|1883: The first electric lighting system employing overhead wires, built by [[Thomas Edison (nonfiction)|Thomas Edison]], begins service at Roselle, New Jersey.
File:Thomas Edison.jpg|link=Thomas Edison (nonfiction)|1883: The first electric lighting system employing overhead wires, built by [[Thomas Edison (nonfiction)|Thomas Edison]], begins service at Roselle, New Jersey.


File:Zénobe Gramme 1893.jpg|link=Zénobe Gramme (nonfiction)|1884: Electrical engineer and crime-fighter [[Zénobe Gramme (nonfiction)|Zénobe Gramme]] uses what will later be called the Gramme Device to detect and prevent [[crimes against mathematical constants]].
||1908: Aleksandr Gennadievich Kurosh born ... mathematician and theorist. Pic search: https://www.google.com/search?q=Aleksandr+Gennadievich+Kurosh
 
||1908: Aleksandr Gennadievich Kurosh born ... mathematician and theorist.


||1911: Garrett Birkhoff born ... mathematician. He is best known for his work in lattice theory. The mathematician George Birkhoff (1884–1944) was his father. Pic.
||1911: Garrett Birkhoff born ... mathematician. He is best known for his work in lattice theory. The mathematician George Birkhoff (1884–1944) was his father. Pic.
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||1915: World War I: German zeppelins bomb the towns of Great Yarmouth and King's Lynn in the United Kingdom killing at least 20 people, in the first major aerial bombardment of a civilian target.
||1915: World War I: German zeppelins bomb the towns of Great Yarmouth and King's Lynn in the United Kingdom killing at least 20 people, in the first major aerial bombardment of a civilian target.


||1917: Graham Higman dies ... mathematician known for his contributions to group theory. During the Second World War he was a conscientious objector, working at the Meteorological Office in Northern Ireland and Gibraltar. Pic.
File:Graham Higman.jpg|link=Graham Higman (nonfiction)|1917: Mathematician [[Graham Higman (nonfiction)|Graham Higman]] born. In mathematics, Higman will contribute to group theory. During the Second World War hill be a conscientious objector, working at the Meteorological Office in Northern Ireland and Gibraltar.


||1917: Seventy-three people are killed and 400 injured in an explosion in a munitions plant in London.
||1917: Seventy-three people are killed and 400 injured in an explosion in a munitions plant in London.
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||1925: John David Jackson born ...physics professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley and a faculty senior scientist emeritus at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. A theoretical physicist, he was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and is well known for numerous publications and summer-school lectures in nuclear and particle physics, as well as his widely-used graduate text on classical electrodynamics. The book is notorious for the difficulty of its problems, and its tendency to treat non-obvious conclusions as self-evident. Pic.
||1925: John David Jackson born ...physics professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley and a faculty senior scientist emeritus at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. A theoretical physicist, he was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and is well known for numerous publications and summer-school lectures in nuclear and particle physics, as well as his widely-used graduate text on classical electrodynamics. The book is notorious for the difficulty of its problems, and its tendency to treat non-obvious conclusions as self-evident. Pic.
||1925: Chemist Norman Greenwood born. Greenwood will co-author the innovative textbook ''Chemistry of the Elements'', make contributions to the chemistry of boron hydrides and other main-group element compounds, and pioneer the application of Mössbauer spectroscopy to problems in chemistry. Pic.


||1930: Frank P. Ramsey dies ... mathematician, philosopher and economist. Pic.
||1930: Frank P. Ramsey dies ... mathematician, philosopher and economist. Pic.
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||1954: Theodor Kaluza dies ... mathematician and physicist. Pic search good: https://www.google.com/search?q=theodor+kaluza
||1954: Theodor Kaluza dies ... mathematician and physicist. Pic search good: https://www.google.com/search?q=theodor+kaluza
File:The Man From K.E.S.S.E.L.jpg|link=The Man From K.E.S.S.E.L.|1966: Debut of '''''[[The Man From K.E.S.S.E.L.]]''''', an American science fiction buddy television series about a pair of space pilots (Robert Vaughn and David McCallum) who work for K.E.S.S.E.L., a secret interplanetary smuggling ring.


||1976: Hidetsugu Yagi, Japanese engineer and academic dies ... he wrote articles that introduced a new antenna designed by his colleague Shintaro Uda to the English-speaking world. Pic.
||1976: Hidetsugu Yagi, Japanese engineer and academic dies ... he wrote articles that introduced a new antenna designed by his colleague Shintaro Uda to the English-speaking world. Pic.
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||1977: President Gerald Ford pardons Iva Toguri D'Aquino (a.k.a. "Tokyo Rose").
||1977: President Gerald Ford pardons Iva Toguri D'Aquino (a.k.a. "Tokyo Rose").


File:Petrozavodsk phenomenon photo copy.jpg|link=Petrozavodsk phenomenon (nonfiction)|1978: Steganographic analysis of the [[Petrozavodsk phenomenon (nonfiction)|Petrozavodsk phenomenon]] reveals "nearly half a megabyte" of top-secret data relating to the alleged "[[ENIAC (SETI)|Empty Noise Into Alien Communication]]" program.
||1981: Iran hostage crisis: United States and Iranian officials sign an agreement to release 52 American hostages after 14 months of captivity.


||1981: Iran hostage crisis: United States and Iranian officials sign an agreement to release 52 American hostages after 14 months of captivity.
||1985: Svein Rosseland dies ... astrophysicist and a pioneer in the field of theoretical astrophysics. Pic.


||1986: The first IBM PC computer virus is released into the wild. A boot sector virus dubbed (c)Brain, it was created by the Farooq Alvi Brothers in Lahore, Pakistan, reportedly to deter unauthorized copying of the software they had written.
||1986: The first IBM PC computer virus is released into the wild. A boot sector virus dubbed (c)Brain, it was created by the Farooq Alvi Brothers in Lahore, Pakistan, reportedly to deter unauthorized copying of the software they had written.


||1991: Marcel Chaput dies ... biochemist and journalist.
||1991: Marcel Chaput dies ... biochemist, journalist, and a militant for the independence of Quebec from Canada. Along with some 20 other people including André D'Allemagne and Jacques Bellemare, he was a founding member of the Rassemblement pour l'indépendance nationale (RIN). Pic search: https://www.google.com/search?q=marcel+chaput


||1995: Daryl Muscott Chapin dies ... physicist, best known for co-inventing solar cells in 1954 during his work at Bell Labs alongside Calvin S. Fuller and Gerald Pearson. Pic.
||1995: Daryl Muscott Chapin dies ... physicist, best known for co-inventing solar cells in 1954 during his work at Bell Labs alongside Calvin S. Fuller and Gerald Pearson. Pic.
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||2004: John Maynard Smith dies ... theoretical and mathematical evolutionary biologist and geneticist. Maynard Smith was instrumental in the application of game theory to evolution and theorised on other problems such as the evolution of sex and signalling theory. Pic.
||2004: John Maynard Smith dies ... theoretical and mathematical evolutionary biologist and geneticist. Maynard Smith was instrumental in the application of game theory to evolution and theorised on other problems such as the evolution of sex and signalling theory. Pic.
||2007: Turkish-Armenian Journalist Hrant Dink is assassinated in front of his newspaper's Istanbul office by 17-year-old Turkish ultra-nationalist Ogün Samast.


||2012: The Hong Kong-based file-sharing website Megaupload is shut down by the FBI.
||2012: The Hong Kong-based file-sharing website Megaupload is shut down by the FBI.
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||2015: Karl H. Pribram dies ... professor of psychology and psychiatry at Stanford University and distinguished professor at Radford University. Board-certified as a neurosurgeon, Pribram did pioneering work on the definition of the limbic system, the relationship of the frontal cortex to the limbic system, the sensory-specific "association" cortex of the parietal and temporal lobes, and the classical motor cortex of the human brain. He worked with Karl Lashley at the Yerkes Primate Center of which he was to become director later. He was professor at Yale University for ten years and at Stanford University for thirty years. To the general public, Pribram is best known for his development of the holonomic brain model of cognitive function and his contribution to ongoing neurological research into memory, emotion, motivation and consciousness. Pic.
||2015: Karl H. Pribram dies ... professor of psychology and psychiatry at Stanford University and distinguished professor at Radford University. Board-certified as a neurosurgeon, Pribram did pioneering work on the definition of the limbic system, the relationship of the frontal cortex to the limbic system, the sensory-specific "association" cortex of the parietal and temporal lobes, and the classical motor cortex of the human brain. He worked with Karl Lashley at the Yerkes Primate Center of which he was to become director later. He was professor at Yale University for ten years and at Stanford University for thirty years. To the general public, Pribram is best known for his development of the holonomic brain model of cognitive function and his contribution to ongoing neurological research into memory, emotion, motivation and consciousness. Pic.


File:800px-Nebra_Schwerter.jpg|link=Weapon (nonfiction)|2016: Army research laboratories [[Weapon (nonfiction)|convert modern plowshares into ancient swords]].  Military contractors call technique "Astonishing breakthrough."
|File:Palomares H-Bomb airships.jpg|link=Carnivorous dirigibles|1959: [[Carnivorous dirigibles]] [[Weapon (nonfiction)|weaponized]], defense industry predicts numerous applications.
|File:Chronography of 354 title and dedication.png|link=Chronography of 354 (nonfiction)|1964: [[Chronography of 354 (nonfiction)|Chronography of 354]] spends tenth week on New York Times Bestseller list.


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Latest revision as of 14:31, 19 January 2022