1903 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1903 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Contents
Aeronautics
- June 27 – 19-year-old American socialite Aida de Acosta becomes the first woman to fly a powered aircraft solo when she pilots Santos-Dumont's motorized dirigible, "No. 9", from Paris to Château de Bagatelle in France.[1]
- December 17 – First documented, successful, controlled, powered flight of a heavier-than-air aircraft with a petrol engine by Orville Wright in the Wright Flyer at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina.
- Konstantin Tsiolkovsky begins a series of papers discussing the use of liquid fuel rockets to reach outer space, space suits, and colonization of the solar system.
Biology
- The type specimen of the vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis) is described by Carl Chun.
- Fauna and Flora International is founded as the Society for the Preservation of the Wild Fauna of the Empire by a group of British naturalists and American statesmen in Africa.
- Formal opening of the Johnston Laboratories at the University of Liverpool, Liverpool, England.
Chemistry
- Peter Cooper Hewitt demonstrates the mercury-vapour lamp.
- Mikhail Semyonovich Tsvet invents chromatography, an important analytic technique.
- The International Committee of Atomic Weights publishes the inaugural atomic weights report.
Mathematics
- October – Frank Nelson Cole demonstrates that the Mersenne number 267-1, or M67, is composite by factoring it as 193,707,721 * 761,838,257,287.[2]
- Fast Fourier Transform algorithm presented by Carle David Tolmé Runge.[citation needed]
- Edmund Georg Hermann Landau gives considerably simpler proof of the prime number theorem.
Medicine
- March–April – David Bruce identifies the parasitic Trypanosoma protist as the source of African trypanosomiasis ("sleeping sickness").[3]
- May 10 – Antoni Leśniowski publishes the first article implicating what will later be known as Crohn's disease, in the Polish weekly medical newspaper Medycyna.[4]
- Ernest Fourneau synthesizes and patents Amylocaine, the first synthetic local anesthetic, under the name Stovaine at the Pasteur Institute.[5]
- Willem Einthoven discovers electrocardiography (ECG/EKG)
- The 12th and final edition of Dr Richard von Krafft-Ebing's Psychopathia Sexualis: eine Klinisch-Forensische Studie ("Sexual Psychopathy: a Clinical-Forensic Study") published during the author's lifetime introduces the term paedophilia erotica.
Physics
- George Darwin and John Joly claim that radioactivity is partially responsible for the Earth's heat.
- Prosper-René Blondlot claims to have detected N rays.
Technology
- The first diesel-powered ships are launched, both for inland waters: Petite-Pierre in France, powered by Dyckhoff-built diesels, and the tanker Vandal in Russia, powered by Swedish-built diesels with an electrical transmission.
- Norwegian engineer Ægidius Elling builds the first gas turbine to generate power, using a centrifugal compressor.[6]
- Laminated glass is invented by Edouard Benedictus.
- Baker valve gear for steam locomotives is first patented in the United States.[7]
- The Lune Valley boiler is patented by John G. A. Kitchen and Ludlow Perkins.[8]
Awards
Births
- January 22 – Fritz Houtermans (died 1966), physicist.
- January 27 – John Carew Eccles (died 1997), psychologist.
- January 28 – Kathleen Lonsdale, née Yardley (died 1971), Irish-born crystallographer.
- February 2 – Bartel Leendert van der Waerden (died 1996), mathematician.
- February 22 – Frank P. Ramsey (died 1930), mathematician.
- April 6 – Doc Edgerton, (died 1990), professor electrical engineer.
- April 9 – Gregory Goodwin Pincus (died 1967), American biologist who co-invented the combined oral contraceptive pill.
- April 25 – Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov (died 1987), mathematician.
- May 2 – Benjamin Spock (died 1998), pediatrician, writer.
- June 14 – Alonzo Church (died 1995), American mathematician.
- August 7 – Louis Leakey (died 1972), British East African paleoanthropologist.
- October 4 – Cyril Stanley Smith (died 1992), English-born metallurgist.
- October 5 – M. King Hubbert (died 1989), geophysicist.
- October 10 – Bei Shizhang (died 2009), Chinese biologist and founder of the Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
- November 7 – Konrad Lorenz (died 1989), zoologist.
- November 27 – Lars Onsager (died 1976), chemist.
- December 19 – George Davis Snell (died 1996), American mouse geneticist and basic transplant immunologist.
- December 28 – John von Neumann (died 1957), mathematician.
Deaths
- February 1 – George Gabriel Stokes (born 1819), mathematician and physicist.
- March 28 – Emile Baudot (born 1845), telegraph engineer.
- April 28 – Willard Gibbs (born 1839), physical chemist.
- July 21 – Henri Alexis Brialmont (born 1821), military engineer.
- August 2 – Edmond Nocard (born 1850), French veterinarian and microbiologist.
References
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- ↑ "Stovaïne, anesthésique local". Bull. Sc. pharmacolog. 10 (1904): 141.
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