![]() | TODAY IN SCIENCE HISTORY NEWSLETTER - 2 JANUARY |
Feature for Today |
![]() A special Commission opened at York, England on 2 Jan 1813, to put on trial 66 persons for offenses connected with Luddism. Within days, seventeen of them had been executed on the scaffold. Taking their name from (perhaps mythical) Ned Ludd, Luddites vowed to destroy the factory mechanization they blamed for their unemployment. Riots began in 1812, and spread north from Nottingham where half of the population were receiving parish relief. Falling prices for goods, bad harvest increasing prices for food, wages at starvation level, costs of war and lost foreign markets contributed to the economic distress of the working class. One thousand looms were broken up in Nottingham, and a law was passed making destruction of machinery a capital offence. Did you know that participation in machinery riots brought a death sentence? |
Book of the Day | ||
|
Quotations for Today | |
![]() | A neat and orderly laboratory is unlikely. It is, after all, so much a place of false starts and multiple attempts. |
What are they doing, examining last month's costs with a microscope when they should be surveying the horizon with a telescope? [Acerbic comment about directors of Brunner Mond, where he worked.] | |
![]() | If our tongues were as sensitive as these radiation detectors, we could easily taste one drop of vermouth in five carloads of gin. |
Quiz | |
Before you look at today's web page, see if you can answer some of these questions about the events that happened on this day. Some of the names are very familiar. Others will likely stump you. Tickle your curiosity with these questions, then check your answers on today's web page. | |
Births | |
![]() | On 2 Jan 1920, Isaac Asimov was born. As a writer of science fiction, he coined the term “robotics,” and was also a prolific author of science non-fiction books for the layperson. Born in Petrovichi, Russia, he emigrated with his family to New York City at age three. As a trained scientist, he taught at Boston University.![]() |
![]() | Charles Hatchett, born 2 Jan 1765, was an English manufacturer, chemist, and discoverer in 1801 of a new element, which he called columbium. Forty years later another chemist, Heinrich Rose of Germany, rediscovered the metal and gave it the name by which it is now known. It is used in arc-welding rods for stabilized grades of stainless steel.![]() |
Deaths | |
![]() | Sir George Biddell Airy (1801-1892) was the seventh British Astronomer Royal. In his life he studied interference fringes in optics, made a mathematical study of the rainbow, and computed the density of the Earth (with experimental measurements made at the top and bottom of a deep mine.)![]() |
![]() | L�on-Philippe Teisserenc de Bort (1855-1913) was the French meteorologist who discovered one of the layers of the atmosphere. Using unmanned, instrumented balloons, He found that above an altitude of 7 miles (11 km) temperature ceased to fall and sometimes increased slightly. ![]() |
Events | |
On 2 Jan of a certain year, the first lunar space shot to escape the Earth's gravitational pull, the unmanned Luna I, was launched by the Soviet Union. It passed to within 4,600 miles of the moon before moving on to a solar orbit.![]() | |
On 2 Jan 1870, construction began on the Brooklyn Bridge to cross the East River, New York City, USA, with a single span, a breadth of 1,600 feet navigable water. The 13 year project was designed by the father of the engineer who finished the project. The father, a German-American, is known for establishing the first U.S. steel-wire cable factory. (He died from injuries while supervising preliminary construction operations for the Brooklyn Bridge.) ![]() |
Answers |
When you have your answers ready to all the questions above, you'll find all the information to check them, and more, on the January 2 web page of Today in Science History. Or, try this link first for just the brief answers. Fast answers for the previous newsletter for January 1: bosons • the patient is injected with slightly radioactive material containing tagged molecules that behave like glucose and are consumed within cancerous tissue which the PET scanner can then detect • rear admiral • Heinrich Hertz • decade including the year 1966 • ENIAC. |
Feedback |
![]() Your click on a StumbleUpon, Google+ or Facebook social button on the site webpages is also a welcome sign of appreciation. Thank you for using them. |
Copyright |
To find citations for quotations go to the corresponding webpage by clicking on the “quotes” balloon icon. Sources for the thumbnails appear on today's webpage with the corresponding item. � This newsletter is copyright 2013 by todayinsci.com. Please respect the Webmaster's wishes and do not put copies online of the Newsletter � or any Today in Science History webpage. (If you already have done so, please remove them. Thank you.) Offline use in education is encouraged such as a printout on a bulletin board, or projected for classroom viewing. Online, descriptive links to our pages are welcomed, as these will provide a reader with the most recent revisions, additions and/or corrections of a webpage. For any other copyright questions, please contact the Webmaster by using your mail reader Reply button. |
--
If you do not want to receive any more newsletters, Unsubscribe
To update your preferences and to unsubscribe visit this link
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου