Template:Selected anniversaries/April 16: Difference between revisions
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||1894: Jerzy Neyman born ... mathematician and statistician. Pic. | ||1894: Jerzy Neyman born ... mathematician and statistician. Pic. | ||
||1895: Ove Arup born ... engineer and businessman, founded Arup ... Sydney Opera House. | ||1895: Ove Arup born ... engineer and businessman, founded Arup ... Sydney Opera House. Pic. | ||
||1898: Hellmuth Kneser born ... mathematician, who made notable contributions to group theory and topology. His most famous result may be his theorem on the existence of a prime decomposition for 3-manifolds. His proof originated the concept of normal surface, a fundamental cornerstone of the theory of 3-manifolds. Pic. | ||1898: Hellmuth Kneser born ... mathematician, who made notable contributions to group theory and topology. His most famous result may be his theorem on the existence of a prime decomposition for 3-manifolds. His proof originated the concept of normal surface, a fundamental cornerstone of the theory of 3-manifolds. Pic. | ||
||1899: Osman Achmatowicz born ... chemist and academic. | ||1899: Osman Achmatowicz born ... chemist and academic. He devised a new method of degradation using hydrogenolysis of quaternary ammonium salts containing nitrogen in allyl position, in the presence of palladinized charcoal as catalyst. This method became crucial in studies on organic compounds and was subsequently modified by other research workers over rupture of carbon-oxygen bonds. Pic. | ||
||1907: Joseph-Armand Bombardier born ... inventor and businessman, founded Bombardier Inc. | ||1907: Joseph-Armand Bombardier born ... inventor and businessman, founded Bombardier Inc. |
Revision as of 10:23, 15 April 2019
1491: Polymath Leonardo da Vinci designs a mechanical soldier. The first working prototype will take over a decade to complete, after which da Vinci will lose all funding for the project.
1495: Mathematician and astronomer Petrus Apianus born. His works on cosmography, Astronomicum Caesareum (1540) and Cosmographicus liber (1524), will be extremely influential in his time.
1673: Leibniz wrote to Oldenburg about series: "I conjecture that Mr. Collins himself does not speak of these summations of infinite series because he brings forward the example of the series 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6, ... which if it is continued to infinity cannot be summed because the sum is not finite, like the sum of the triangular numbers, but infinite. But now I am cramped by the space of my paper."
1736: Philosopher and crime-fighter Red Eyes prevents gang of math criminals from kidnapping Leibniz and Newton.
1705: Physicist and mathematician Isaac Newton knighted by Queen Anne at Trinity College.
1958: Chemist and X-ray crystallographer Rosalind Franklin dies. She made contributions to the discovery of the molecular structure of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid).
1958: Combat physician and alleged time-traveller Asclepius Myrmidon prevents Colonel Zersetzung from detonating the Tybee Bomb.
1958: The United States military announces that the search for hydrogen bomb known as the Tybee Bomb was unsuccessful.
1962: Brainiac Explains lecture series explains why Colonel Zersetzung failed to detonate the Tybee Bomb.
2008: Mathematician Edward Lorenz dies. He introduced the strange attractor notion, and coined the term butterfly effect.
2008: Lorenz system diagram says it "owes everything to Papa Lorenz."
2017: Math photographer Cantor Parabola attends Minicon 52, taking a series of photographs with temporal superimpositions from Minicons 51 and 53.