1939 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1939 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Contents
Events
- November 6 – Sonderaktion Krakau: The Gestapo arrests scientists from the Jagiellonian University and other institutions in Kraków, Poland; on November 27 they are sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
Astronomy
- Robert Oppenheimer jointly predicts two new types of celestial object:
- With George Volkoff he calculates the structure of neutron stars.[1]
- With Hartland Snyder he predicts the existence of what will come to be called black holes.[2]
Biology
- Autumn – DDT's properties as an insecticide are discovered by Paul Müller of Geigy.[3]
Cartography
- Kavrayskiy VII projection devised by Vladimir V. Kavrayskiy.[4]
Chemistry
- April 30 – Nylon fabric is first introduced to the general public at the New York World's Fair.
- July – Edward Adelbert Doisy of Saint Louis University publishes the chemical structure of vitamin K.[5]
- Linus Pauling publishes The Nature of the Chemical Bond, a compilation of a decade's work on chemical bonding, explaining hybridization theory, covalent bonding and ionic bonding as explained through electronegativity, and resonance as a means to explain, among other things, the structure of benzene.[6]
Computer science
- September 4 – Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman report to the United Kingdom Government Code and Cypher School, Bletchley Park.[7]
- October – John V. Atanasoff with Clifford Berry demonstrate the first prototype Atanasoff–Berry Computer at Iowa State University.[8]
- Publication of Vannevar Bush's article "Mechanization and the Record" proposing a proto-hypertext collective memory machine which he soon afterwards calls 'memex'.
History of science and technology
- Cornelis de Waard begins to publish the Journaal of Isaac Beeckman.
- Philosopher and historian Alexandre Koyré originates the term scientific revolution to describe the emergence of modern science during the early modern period, from the late Renaissance to the late 18th century.[9]
- Quarry Bank Mill, an 18th century working (at this time) cotton mill in north west England, is donated to the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty.
Mathematics
- Richard von Mises poses the birthday problem in probability.[10]
Physics
- January–February – Discovery of nuclear fission is announced independently by Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner.[11][12][13]
- August 2 – The Einstein–Szilárd letter is signed, advising President of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt of the potential use of uranium to construct an atomic bomb. It is delivered on October 11.
- October 21 – First meeting of the Advisory Committee on Uranium under Lyman James Briggs, authorised by President Roosevelt to oversee neutron experiments.
Physiology and medicine
- John H. Lawrence uses beams of energized neutrons from a particle accelerator to treat a patient with leukemia.
- Drs Philip Levine and Rufus Stetson published a first case report on the clinical consequences of non-recognized Rh factor, hemolytic transfusion reaction and hemolytic disease of the newborn in its most severe form.[14]
Technology
- January 1 – Hewlett-Packard is founded as an electronics company in Palo Alto, California.
- January 11 – First flight of the Lockheed P-38 Lightning.
- August 27 – Flying the Heinkel He 178, Erich Warsitz makes the first flight entirely on turbojet power (the HeS 3 jet engine).
- November 1–2 – Physicist Hans Ferdinand Mayer writes the Oslo Report on German weapons systems and passes it to the British Secret Intelligence Service.
- December 9 – First flight of the Consolidated XB-24 "Liberator" bomber prototype.
- Kirlian photography is invented by Semyon Kirlian.
- American industrial psychologist Fritz Roethlisberger, with William J. Dickson, publishes Management and the Worker: an account of a research program conducted by the Western Electric Company, Hawthorne works, Chicago.
Awards
- Nobel Prizes
Births
- January 20 – Chandra Wickramasinghe, Ceylonese-born British astronomer.
- May 19 – Dick Scobee (killed 1986), American astronaut.
- June 26 – Julia Polak (died 2014), Argentine-born British pathologist and pioneer of tissue engineering.
- August 12 – David King, South African-born British physical chemist.
- August 19 – Alan Baker, English mathematician.
- October 7 – John Hopcroft, American theoretical computer scientist.
- October 10 – Neil Sloane, Welsh-born American mathematician.
- November 11 – Alf Adams, English physicist.
- November 18 – John O'Keefe, American-born British neuroscientist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Deaths
- February 4 – Edward Sapir (born 1884), American anthropological linguist.
- March 6 – Dorothea Pertz (born 1859), English botanist.
- July 15 – Eugen Bleuler (born 1857), Swiss psychiatrist.
- September 23 – Sigmund Freud (born 1856), Austrian-born psychoanalyst.
- October 7 – Harvey Cushing (born 1869), American neurosurgeon.
References
- ↑ Phys.Rev. 55: pp. 374–381. 1939.
- ↑ Phys.Rev. 56: pp. 455–459. 1939.
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