Template:Selected anniversaries/July 25: Difference between revisions
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File:Dominique Jean Larrey.jpg|link=Dominique Jean Larrey (nonfiction)|1842: Physician and surgeon [[Dominique Jean Larrey (nonfiction)|Dominique Jean Larrey]] dies. He was an important innovator in battlefield medicine and triage, and is often considered the first modern military surgeon. | File:Dominique Jean Larrey.jpg|link=Dominique Jean Larrey (nonfiction)|1842: Physician and surgeon [[Dominique Jean Larrey (nonfiction)|Dominique Jean Larrey]] dies. He was an important innovator in battlefield medicine and triage, and is often considered the first modern military surgeon. | ||
||1843: Charles Macintosh dies ... chemist and engineer. | ||1843: Charles Macintosh dies ... chemist and engineer. Pic. | ||
||1847: Paul Langerhans born ... pathologist, physiologist and biologist. | ||1847: Paul Langerhans born ... pathologist, physiologist and biologist. | ||
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||1920: The first trans-Atlantic two-way radio broadcast was made. Source needed. | ||1920: The first trans-Atlantic two-way radio broadcast was made. Source needed. | ||
||2013: Dennis Lindley dies ... statistician, decision theorist, and academic. Lindley was a leading advocate of Bayesian statistics. Pic search yes: https://www.google.com/search?q=dennis+lindley | |||
||1923: Edgar Gilbert born ... mathematician and theorist. Pic: https://alchetron.com/Edgar-Gilbert | ||1923: Edgar Gilbert born ... mathematician and theorist. Pic: https://alchetron.com/Edgar-Gilbert |
Revision as of 18:41, 25 March 2019
1616: Physician, alchemist and chemist Andreas Libavius dies. He accepted the Paracelsian principle of using occult properties to explain phenomena with no apparent cause, but rejected the conclusion that a thing possessing these properties must have an astral connection to the divine.
1617: Astronomer, mathematician, and crime-fighter Paul Guldin uses the Guldinus theorem to track down and apprehend math criminals.
1748: Astronomer Charles Messier's interest in astronomy is stimulated by an annular solar eclipse visible from his hometown.
1808: Mathematician Johann Benedict Listing born. He will introduce the term "topology" in a famous article published in 1847, having already used the term in correspondence some years earlier.
1836: New steganographic analysis of famed illustration Niles Cartouchian and Egon Rhodomunde Confront Gnotilus reveals several terabytes of encrypted data.
1837: The first commercial use of an electrical telegraph is successfully demonstrated in London by William Cooke and Charles Wheatstone.
1842: Physician and surgeon Dominique Jean Larrey dies. He was an important innovator in battlefield medicine and triage, and is often considered the first modern military surgeon.
1864: The well-known illustration Asclepius Myrmidon Prepares for Emergency Field Surgery "is a reasonably accurate depiction of events as I experienced them," Judge Havelock tells interviewer.
1920: Chemist and X-ray crystallographer Rosalind Franklin born. She will make contributions to the discovery of the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid).
1963: Mathematician and physicist Nicholas Metropolis publishes new class of Gnomon algorithm functions which he derived using the Monte Carlo method. He will soon use these new functions to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
2016: Signed first edition of Lend a Hand used in high-energy literature experiment unexpectedly generates "at least a dozen, perhaps as many as fifteen" organic golems.
2017: Dennis Paulson of Mars observes a minute of silence in memory of the Viking 2 orbiter, which was turned off forty-one years ago, after returning almost 16,000 images in about 700–706 orbits around Mars.