1937 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1937 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Contents
Astronomy
- June 8 – First total solar eclipse to exceed 7 minutes of totality in over 800 years; visible in the Pacific and Peru.
Biology
- September 27 – Last Bali tiger dies.[citation needed]
- Jay Laurence Lush publishes the influential textbook Animal Breeding Plans in the United States.[1]
Chemistry
- Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segrè at the University of Palermo confirm discovery of the chemical element which will become known as Technetium.[2][3][4]
- The opioid Methadone is synthesized in Germany by scientists working at Hoechst AG.[5]
Computer science
- Claude Shannon's Master's thesis at MIT demonstrates that electronic application of Boolean algebra could construct and resolve any logical numerical relationship.[6]
- Konrad Zuse submits patents in Germany based on his Z1 computer design anticipating von Neumann architecture.
Exploration
- British Graham Land Expedition (1934–1937) concludes its work, having determined that Graham Land is an integral part of the Antarctic Peninsula and not an independent archipelago.[7]
Mathematics
- Bruno de Finetti publishes "La Prévision: ses lois logiques, ses sources subjectives" in Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré, his most influential treatment of his theorem on exchangeable sequences of random variables.[8]
- Hans Freudenthal proves the Freudenthal suspension theorem in homotopy.[9]
Medicine
- Italian psychiatrist Amarro Fiamberti is the first to document a transorbital approach to the brain, which becomes the basis for the controversial medical procedure of transorbital lobotomy.
- Publication in the United Kingdom of Dr A. J. Cronin's novel The Citadel, promoting the cause of socialised medicine.[10]
Physics
- Eugene Wigner introduces the term isospin.[11]
Technology
- April 12 – Frank Whittle ground-tests the first jet engine designed to power an aircraft, at Rugby, England.
- June 5 – Alan Blumlein is granted a patent for an ultra-linear amplifier.[12]
- Alec Reeves invents pulse-code modulation.
Awards
Births
- May 9 – Alison Jolly (died 2014), American primatologist.
- June 11 – David Mumford, American mathematician.
- June 23 – Nicholas Shackleton (died 2006), English Quaternary geologist and paleoclimatologist, recipient of the Vetlesen Prize
- June 26 – Robert Coleman Richardson (died 2013), American experimental physicist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics.
- July 19 – Bibb Latané, American social psychologist.
Deaths
- January 28 – Arthur Pollen (born 1866), English inventor.
- January 29 – Aleen Cust (born 1868), Irish veterinary surgeon.
- May 28 – Alfred Adler (born 1870), Austrian psychotherapist.
- June 11 – R. J. Mitchell (born 1895), English aeronautical engineer.
- July 20 – Guglielmo Marconi (born 1874), Italian inventor.
- October 16 – William Sealy Gosset (born 1876), English statistician.
- November 23 – Jagadish Chandra Bose (born 1858), Bengali physicist.
References
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- ↑ U.K. Patent No. 496,883.