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March 17 in Physics History

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birthdays & deaths

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physics Events

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March 17 in Physics History - Births – Physicists born on March 17

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March 17 in Physics History - Deaths – Physicists died on March 17

Christian Doppler (29 Nov 1803 - 17 Mar 1853)

He was an Austrian physicist who first described how the observed frequency of light and sound waves is affected by the relative motion of the source and the detector, known as the Doppler Effect. To test his hypothesis, he used two sets of trumpeters: one set stationary at a train station and one set moving on an open train call, all holding the same note. As the train moved, it was obvious that the frequency of the notes from the two groups didn’t match. Sound waves would have a lower frequency if the source was moving away from the observer and a higher frequency if the source was moving toward the observer. Edwin Hubble used the Doppler effect of light from distant stars to determine that the universe is expanding.

Irène Joliot-Curie (12 Sep 1897 - 17 Mar 1956)

She was a French physicist and physical chemist who shared the Noble Prize for chemistry “in recognition of their synthesis of new radioactive elements” in 1935. In her joint research with her husband Frédéric Joliot-Curie, they discovered that aluminum atoms exposed to alpha rays transmuted to radioactive phosphorus atoms. She was the daughter of Noble prize winners Pierre and Marie Curie. She was the director of the Radium Institute, Paris, founded by her mother. She died of leukemia, like her mother.

Daniel Bernoulli (8 Feb 1700 - 17 Mar 1782)

He was a French mathematician who was the most distinguished in the second generation of the Bernoulli family of mathematicians. His talents were broad, including medicine, physiology, mechanics, physics, astronomy, biology, and oceanography. He also derived Bernoulli’s theorem that relates the pressure and velocity of a fluid, in the effect of the application of the conservation of energy. He also won several prizes on diverse subjects, including the tides, optimal shape of hourglasses, and reducing pitch. He established mathematical physics.

Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (22 Jul 1784 - 17 Mar 1846)

He was a German physicist who spent his entire career from the age of 26 as director of Frederick William III of Prussia’s new Königsberg Observatory and professor of astronomy. His task was determining the positions and proper motions for about 50,000 stars, which allowed the first accurate determination of interstellar distances. His work in determining the constants of nutation, aberration, and precession won him further honors. He was the first to measure the distance of a star by parallax.

George Parker (1697 - 17 Mar 1764)

He was an English astronomer who was instrumental in changing the computation of current chronology, subsequently enacted as the British Calender Act of 1751. The new calendar of Pope Gregory XIII had been used in most of Europe since 1582. The new calendar was rejected in England. The old calendar became 11 days out of sequence by 1750 due to a lack of leap years. He was assisted in these calculations by his friend James Bradley, the astronomer royal.

March 17 in Physics History - Events – Physics Events on March 17

Discovery of Phoebe (Moon of Saturn)

The ninth moon of Saturn, Phoebe was observed by William Henry Pickering as a very faint object on a photographic plate taken on 13 Aug 1898. The image was captured on a plate 14 x 17 inches exposed for two hours in the Bruce photographic telescope at the Harvard station near Arequipa, Peru.

The First US Solar-Powered Satellite

The US launched the Vanguard I satellite in 1958, from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The 3-lb satellite was the first to be solar-powered, carried a radio transmitter, and orbited every 107.9 minutes. It was launched during the international geophysical year and remains the oldest satellite still in orbit. For Vanguard I, the US in only 2 years, 6 months, and 8 days had developed from scratch a complete high-performance three-stage launching, an adequate launching facility, and range instrumentation.

Discovery of Californium

A new element, element 98, named “californium” was announced by scientists at the University of California at Berkeley in 1950. The scientists Kenneth Street, Albert Ghiorso, and Glenn T. Seaborg produced it by bombarding curium-242 with helium-ions in the 60-inch cyclotron. Since then, longer-lived isotopes have been created, including Californium-251 with an 800-year half-life. Californium-252 is used as a neutron emitter and to analyze the sulfur content of petroleum and to measure the moisture content of the soil.

April 12 in Physics History

Physics history will help you to develop a better understanding of the physics world!

birthdays & deaths

Explore all birthdays & deaths of physicists occurred on this day with their short biography!

physics Events

Know all important discoveries made by physicists & events happened on this day with complete information!

April 12 in Physics History - Births – Physicists born on April 12

Edward Walter Maunder (12 Apr 1851 - 21 Mar 1928)

He was an English astronomer who first started the British Civil Services Commission examination for the post of photographic and spectroscopic assistant at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. He worked at the observatory for the next forty years measuring the sunspots and checking historic records. He found a lack of reports on sunspots from 1645 to 1715. Instead of questioning this, he started researching and found that there are indeed decades-long times when the sun has very few sunspots. Now we call these periods as Maunder minima.

Ferdinand von Lindemann (12 Apr 1852 - 6 Mar 1939)

He was a German mathematician who proved that π is not a solution to any algebraic equation with a rational coefficient. This explained the insoluble natural or classical Greek mathematical problem of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle using a ruler and compasses alone. He discussed Hermite’s methods that he used to prove that ‘e’ is transcendental. He extended Hermite’s results in 1882 to show that π was also transcendental.

April 12 in Physics History - Deaths – Physicists died on April 12

Charles Messier (26 Jun 1730 - 12 Apr 1817)

He was a French astronomer who first compiled a systematic catalog of “M objects” and discovered 15 comets. His catalog contained nebulae, 103-star clusters, and galaxies. He concluded the alphanumeric names for objects like M1, M2, etc.

Geoffrey F. Chew (5 Jun 1924 - 12 Apr 2019)

He was an American physicist who led the group of S-matrix theorists researching the strong interaction and the bootstrap principle. He was a graduate student of Enrico Fermi. His group calculated the interactions of bound-states without assuming that there is a point-particle field theory underneath.

Igor Tamm (8 Jul 1895 - 12 Apr 1971)

He was a Soviet physicist who shared the Noble Prize with Pavel A  Cherenkov, and Ilya M. Frank for physics for his works in explaining Cherenkov radiation. He developed the theoretical interpretation of the Cherenkov effect which states that the radiation of electrons moves faster than the speed of light through matter. He also developed a method for studying the interaction of nuclear particles and contributed towards the methods for the control of thermonuclear reactions.

April 12 in Physics History - Events – Physics Events of April 12

First Man To Orbit The Earth

On this day, Yuri Gagarin became the first man to orbit the Earth in 1961. The control of the spacecraft was locked to prevent him from taking control of the ship. It had a radio, television, and life-supporting equipment. He ejected and made a planned descent landing with his parachute but the Soviet Union denied this to save its reputation. After 7 years, he died in a plane crash.

The First Yo-Yo Toy In Space

The first yo-yo toy was taken into space in the Space Shuttle Discovery mission 51-D in 1985. With this yellow plastic Duncan Imperial yo-yo, other toys were exhibited during a time in orbit. Astronauts did the tricks with toys but the yo-yo sleeper trick couldn’t work without normal gravity. While spinning, the gyroscope showed exceptional stability. The flywheel slowed without normal gravity.

Space Shuttle Columbia Was Launched

Columbia, the American Space Shuttle was launched into space in 1981. John W. Young was the mission commander.