Template:Selected anniversaries/April 22
1592: Minister, scholar, astronomer, mathematician, cartographer, and inventor Wilhelm Schickard born. He will design and build calculating machines, and invent techniques for producing improved maps.
1779: Steganographic analysis of The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters unexpectedly releases the Forbidden Ratio, which immediately begins to recruit a criminal gang made up of degenerate cases.
1833: Engineer and explorer Richard Trevithick dies. He was an early pioneer of steam-powered road and rail transport, developing the first high-pressure steam engine, and building the first full-scale working railway steam locomotive.
1904: American physicist and academic J. Robert Oppenheimer born. His achievements in physics will include the Born–Oppenheimer approximation for molecular wavefunctions, and the first prediction of quantum tunneling. Oppenheimer will be called the "father of the atomic bomb" for his role in the Manhattan Project.
1943: Cryptographer, intelligence officer, and APTO security consultant Edward Travis foils an attempt by the criminal mathematical function Forbidden Ratio to intercept telephone traffic to and from Bletchley Park.
1953: Singer-physicist J. R. Oppenheimer performs his hit song "Destroyer of Worlds" at the Grand Ole Opry, leading to his being summoned before the House Un-American Activities Committee.
1954: Red Scare: Witnesses begin testifying and live television coverage of the Army–McCarthy hearings begins.
1954: Writer and alleged troll Culvert Origenes testifies before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations during the Army–McCarthy hearings. Origenes adamantly refuses to name other "alleged trolls", insisting that "there is nothing 'alleged' about trolls," and denouncing the investigation as "a witch-hunt, and not in a good way."
1970: The first Earth Day is celebrated.
1978: Optical fiber is first used to carry live telephone traffic.
1978: Mathematician, art critic, and alleged time-traveller The Eel escapes from the Nacreum, a high-security transdimensional prison, by transmitting himself over the new optical fiber telephone network.
2006: Computer scientist and academic Henriette Avram dies. She developed the MARC (Machine Readable Cataloging) format, the international data standard for bibliographic and holdings information in libraries.
2015: New study of the Toledo giant red ball incident blames the color red: "Of all the colors of the visible spectrum, red is the most likely to spontaneously generate artificial intelligence, which can quickly manifest itself as breaking away and rolling down the street."
2016: Physicist and academic Denys Wilkinson dies. Wilkinson's work in nuclear physics included investigation of the properties of nuclei with low numbers of nucleons. He was amongst the first to experimentally test rules relating to isospin. He also applied concepts from physics to the study of bird navigation. He invented the Wilkinson Analog-to-Digital Converter in the course of his experimental work.
2018: Signed first edition of Lend a Hand stolen from the Louvre by the Forbidden Ratio in a daring daytime robbery. Lend a Hand, which depicts an organic golem, had been in the Louvre for less than twenty-four hours.