1848 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1848 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Contents
Events
- September 20 – The American Association for the Advancement of Science is set up in Pennsylvania by re-formation of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists, with William Charles Redfield as its first president.
Astronomy
- September 16 – William Cranch Bond and William Lassell discover Hyperion, Saturn's moon.
- Lord Rosse studies M1 and names it the Crab Nebula.
- Édouard Roche calculates the Roche limit.[1]
- Rudolf Wolf (in Zurich) devises a way of quantifying sunspot activity, the Wolf number.[2]
Botany
- April 16 – Joseph Dalton Hooker arrives at Darjeeling to begin the first European plant collecting expedition in the Himalayas.
Chemistry
- Edward Frankland, working in Germany, discovers the organometallic compound diethylzinc.
Exploration
- Admiral Nevelskoi demonstrates that the Strait of Tartary is a strait.
Medicine
- September 13 – Vermont railroad worker Phineas Gage survives a 3-foot-plus (1 m) iron rod being driven through his head, providing a demonstration of the effects of damage to the brain's frontal lobe.
- November 1 – The first medical school for women, The Boston Female Medical School, opens in Boston, Massachusetts.
- Alfred Baring Garrod recognises that excess uric acid in the blood is the cause of gout.[3]
- Rudolf Virchow produces a Report on the Typhus Epidemic in Upper Silesia advocating broad social as well as public health measures to counter such outbreaks.[4]
Physics
- Lord Kelvin establishes concept of absolute zero, the temperature at which all molecular motion ceases.[5]
- Nicholas Callan of Maynooth College invents an improved form of battery.[6]
- Hippolyte Fizeau and John Scott Russell present studies of the Doppler effect in electromagnetic and sound waves respectively.[7]
Technology
- The Warren truss is patented by James Warren.
- James Bogardus erects the first free-standing cast-iron architectural façade, the Milhau Pharmacy Building in New York City.
- Completion of palm houses at Kew Gardens, London, and the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin, by Richard Turner of Dublin.
- Joseph-Louis Lambot constructs the first ferrocement boat.
- Linus Yale, Sr., invents the modern pin tumbler lock.[8]
Awards
- Copley Medal: John Couch Adams
- Wollaston Medal for Geology: William Buckland
Births
- May 23 – Otto Lilienthal (died 1896), German aviation pioneer.
- June 22 – William Macewen (died 1924), Scottish surgeon.
- August 14 – Margaret Lindsay (died 1915), Irish astronomer.
- November 8 – Gottlob Frege (died 1925), German mathematician.
- November 27 – Henry A. Rowland (died 1901), American physicist.
Deaths
- January 9 – Caroline Herschel (born 1750), German astronomer.
- January 12 – Christophe-Paulin de La Poix de Fréminville (born 1848), French explorer and naturalist.
- August 7 – Jöns Jakob Berzelius (born 1779), Swedish chemist.
- August 12 – George Stephenson (born 1781), English locomotive engineer.
- December 18 – Bernard Bolzano (born 1781), Bohemian mathematician.
References
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- ↑ Year-book of Facts. 1848.
- ↑ Fizeau, Hippolyte. "Acoustique et optique". Unpublished lecture to Société Philomathique (Paris), 29 December 1848; Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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