Template:Selected anniversaries/April 25: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
File:Signaling by Napoleonic semaphore line.jpg|link=Semaphore telegraph (nonfiction)|1848: [[Semaphore telegraph (nonfiction)|Semaphore telegraph]] system becomes infected with self-perpetuating error code, probably released by the [[Forbidden Ratio]]. Self-perpetuating error codes will later be recognized as an early form of computer virus. | File:Signaling by Napoleonic semaphore line.jpg|link=Semaphore telegraph (nonfiction)|1848: [[Semaphore telegraph (nonfiction)|Semaphore telegraph]] system becomes infected with self-perpetuating error code, probably released by the [[Forbidden Ratio]]. Self-perpetuating error codes will later be recognized as an early form of computer virus. | ||
||1849: Felix Klein born ... mathematician and academic ... work in group theory, complex analysis, non-Euclidean geometry, and on the connections between geometry and group theory. His 1872 Erlangen Program, classifying geometries by their underlying symmetry groups, was a highly influential synthesis of much of the mathematics of the day. | ||1849: Felix Klein born ... mathematician and academic ... work in group theory, complex analysis, non-Euclidean geometry, and on the connections between geometry and group theory. His 1872 Erlangen Program, classifying geometries by their underlying symmetry groups, was a highly influential synthesis of much of the mathematics of the day. Pic. | ||
||1854: Charles Sumner Tainter born ... engineer and inventor. | ||1854: Charles Sumner Tainter born ... engineer and inventor ... scientific instrument maker, engineer and inventor, best known for his collaborations with Alexander Graham Bell, Chichester Bell, Alexander's father-in-law Gardiner Hubbard, and for his significant improvements to Thomas Edison's phonograph, resulting in the Graphophone, one version of which was the first Dictaphone. Pic. | ||
||1859: British and French engineers break ground for the Suez Canal. | ||1859: British and French engineers break ground for the Suez Canal. |
Revision as of 08:15, 31 March 2019
1599: Oliver Cromwell born. He will become a military and political leader and later Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland.
1600: Mathematician, detective, and alleged time-traveller Niles Cartouchian publicly accuses the House of Malevecchio of committing shape theft and other crimes against mathematical constants.
1770: Priest and physicist Jean-Antoine Nollet dies. In 1746 he gathered about two hundred monks into a circle about a mile (1.6 km) in circumference, with pieces of iron wire connecting them. He then discharged a battery of Leyden jars through the human chain and observed that each man reacted at substantially the same time to the electric shock, showing that the speed of electricity's propagation was very high.
1817: Printer, bookseller, and inventor Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville born. He will invent the phonoautograph, which records an audio signal as a photographic image.
1840: Mathematician and physicist Siméon Denis Poisson dies. His memoirs on the theory of electricity and magnetism constitute a new branch of mathematical physics.
1848: Semaphore telegraph system becomes infected with self-perpetuating error code, probably released by the Forbidden Ratio. Self-perpetuating error codes will later be recognized as an early form of computer virus.
1874: Businessman and inventor Guglielmo Marconi born. He will share the 1909 Nobel Prize in Physics with Karl Ferdinand Braun "in recognition of their contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy".
1902: Army research laboratories convert modern plowshares into ancient swords. Military contractors call technique "Astonishing breakthrough."
1903: Mathematician and academic Andrey Kolmogorov born. He will make significant contributions to the mathematics of probability theory, topology, intuitionistic logic, turbulence, classical mechanics, algorithmic information theory and computational complexity.
1904: Mathematician, theorist, and crime-fighter Srinivasa Ramanujan uses the the Ramanujan theta function to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1960: Mathematician, art critic, and alleged time-traveller The Eel stops aquatic cryptid and alleged supervillain Neptune Slaughter from destroying the United States Navy submarine USS Triton.
1960: The United States Navy submarine USS Triton completes Operation Sandblast, the first submerged circumnavigation of the globe.
1984: Synthetic organism Ultravore consumes two hundred and fifty terabytes of the transdimensional drug Clandestiphrine with no apparent ill effect.
1983: Pioneer 10 travels beyond Pluto's orbit.
2018: Signed first edition of Red Spiral 2 stolen from Hermitage in Saint Petersburg, Russia by the notorious criminal mathematical function Gnotilus.