Template:Selected anniversaries/April 24: Difference between revisions
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File:Jean-Antoine Nollet.jpg|link=Jean-Antoine Nollet (nonfiction)|1746: Priest and physicist [[Jean-Antoine Nollet (nonfiction)|Jean-Antoine Nollet]] discharges a battery of Leyden jars through a human chain, exposing a [[math criminal]] was posing as a priest. | File:Jean-Antoine Nollet.jpg|link=Jean-Antoine Nollet (nonfiction)|1746: Priest and physicist [[Jean-Antoine Nollet (nonfiction)|Jean-Antoine Nollet]] discharges a battery of Leyden jars through a human chain, exposing a [[math criminal]] was posing as a priest. | ||
File: | File:Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville.jpg|link=Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville (nonfiction)|1863: Printer, inventor, and crime-fighter [[Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville (nonfiction)|Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville]] patents new type of phonoautograph, which records [[crimes against mathematical constants]] as photographic images. | ||
File:The Custodian.jpg|link=The Custodian|1870:[[The Custodian]] cleans up paradoxes caused by [[Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|Grigori Rasputin]]'s experiments in [[Time travel (nonfiction)|time travel device]]. | |File:Grigori Rasputin 1916.jpg|link=Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|1870: Mystic and faith healer [[Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|Grigori Rasputin]] uses [[Time travel (nonfiction)|time travel device]] to commit [[crimes against mathematical constants]]. | ||
|File:The Custodian.jpg|link=The Custodian|1870:[[The Custodian]] cleans up paradoxes caused by [[Grigori Rasputin (nonfiction)|Grigori Rasputin]]'s experiments in [[Time travel (nonfiction)|time travel device]]. | |||
||1880 – Gideon Sundback, Swedish-American engineer and businessman, developed the zipper (d. 1954) | ||1880 – Gideon Sundback, Swedish-American engineer and businessman, developed the zipper (d. 1954) |
Revision as of 08:32, 15 November 2017
1656: Mathematician and physicist Thomas Fincke dies. He introduced the modern names of the trigonometric functions tangent and secant.
1746: Priest and physicist Jean-Antoine Nollet discharges a battery of Leyden jars through a human chain, exposing a math criminal was posing as a priest.
1863: Printer, inventor, and crime-fighter Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville patents new type of phonoautograph, which records crimes against mathematical constants as photographic images.
1914: The Franck–Hertz experiment, a pillar of quantum mechanics, is presented to the German Physical Society.
1915: Miniaturized version of John Ambrose Fleming delivers lecture from within Fleming tube.
1967: Cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov dies in Soyuz 1 when its parachute fails to open. He is the first human to die during a space mission.