Template:Selected anniversaries/March 7: Difference between revisions
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||1954: Otto Diels dies ... chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. | ||1954: Otto Diels dies ... chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate. | ||
||1954: Ludwik Hirszfeld dies ... microbiologist and serologist. He is considered a co-discoverer of the inheritance of ABO blood types. Pic. | |||
||1958: John Ronald Womersley dies ... mathematician and computer scientist who made important contributions to computer development, and hemodynamics. Nowadays he is principally remembered for his contribution to blood flow, fluid dynamics and the eponymous Womersley number, a dimensionless parameter characterising unsteady flow. | ||1958: John Ronald Womersley dies ... mathematician and computer scientist who made important contributions to computer development, and hemodynamics. Nowadays he is principally remembered for his contribution to blood flow, fluid dynamics and the eponymous Womersley number, a dimensionless parameter characterising unsteady flow. |
Revision as of 18:36, 25 August 2018
1765: Inventor Nicéphore Niépce born. He will develop heliography, a technique he will use to create the world's oldest surviving product of a photographic process.
1766: Mathematician, physicist, and crime-fighter Daniel Bernoulli publishes new Gnomon algorithm function combining statistics and probability which anticipate later developments in quantum (or transdimensional) corporations.
1788: Physicist and academic Antoine César Becquerel born. He will pioneer the study of electric and luminescent phenomena.
1875: Flying bison (Bison pterobonasus) sighted near Roswell, New Mexico.
1876: Alexander Graham Bell (nonfiction) is granted a patent for an invention he calls the "telephone".
1875: Gambling Den Fight wins Royal Society award for most exciting new illustration of the year.
1886: Mathematician and physicist G. I. Taylor born. He will make major contributions to fluid dynamics and wave theory.
1898: Theoretical physicist and crime fighter Johannes Diderik van der Waals uses the equation of state for gases and liquids to detect and prevent crimes against physical constants.
1950: Cold War: The Soviet Union issues a statement denying that Klaus Fuchs served as a Soviet spy.