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 PHYSICS ACROSS THE CENTURIES This page gives an impression of how physics has
evolved over time to its present state of knowledge. It may help us understand
our modern infatuation with new technology in our profession careers, as well as
our personal affairs.
 
 
 TIMELINE TO 1699 -585: Thales of Miletus, prediction
			of an eclipse
 -580: Thales of Miletus, birth of scientific thought
 -580: Thales of Miletus, water as the basic element
 -580: Thales of Miletus, magnets and attraction to rubbed amber
 -560: Thales of Miletus, first cosmologies
 -550: Anaximenes, flat Earth
 -525: Pythagoras, understanding the world and mathematics
  -520: Anaximander, Earth surface is curved (cylinder)
 -515: Parmenides, paradoxes of change and motion
 -500: Pythagoreans, Earth is a sphere
 -480: Oenopides, finds angle of Earth's tilt to ecliptic
 -480: Protagoras, reality comes from the senses
 -480: Heraclitus, fire as primary substance
 -480: Heraclitus, change is the essence of being
 -475: Parmenides, Earth is a sphere
 -470: Anaxagoras, materials are made of "seeds" (atoms)
 -470: Anaxagoras, sun, moon and stars are made of same material as
			Earth
 -470: Anaxagoras, sun as a hot glowing rock
 -460: Eudoxus, Celestial spheres
 -460: Empedocles, Four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water
 -455: Philolaus, Earth Rotates
 -450: Zeno, paradoxes of discrete or continuous space and time
 -445: Leucippus, indivisble atoms
 -425: Democritus, Atomic theory
 -390: Plato, theory of knowledge
 -390: Plato, ether as a fifth element
 -385: Democritus, Milky Way is composed of many stars
 -370: Aristotle, Free falling bodies accelerate but heavier bodies
			fall faster
 -360: Heracleides, Venus and Mercury orbit the sun
 -352: Chinese, recorded observation of a supernova
 -350: Heracleides, Rotation of the Earth
 -340: Aristotle, Earth is a sphere
 -340: Aristotle, Space is continuous and always filled with matter
 -335: Kiddinu, precession of equinoxes
 -335: Strato, experiments with falling bodies and levers
 -330: Aristotle, physics and metaphysics
 -330: Aristotle, geocentric cosmology
 -325: Pytheas, tides are caused by moon
 -306: Epicurus, support for atomic theory
 -295: Euclid, elements of mathematics
 -265: Zou Yan, five elements: water, metal, wood, fire and earth
 -260: Aristarchus of Samos, ratio of Earth-Sun distance to
			Earth-Moon distance from angle at half moon
 -260: Aristarchus of Samos, distance and size of moon from Earth's
			shadow during lunar eclipse
 -260: Aristarchus of Samos, heliocentric cosmology
 -250: Chinese, free bodies move at constant velocity
 -240: Archimedes, Principle of levers and compound pulley
 -240: Archimedes, Archimedes' principle of hydrostatics
 -235: Eratosthenes, Measurement of Earth's circumference
 -190: Seleucus, further support for heliocentric theory
 -170: Chinese, record of sun spots
 -150: Hipparchus, precession of the equinoxes
 -130: Hipparchus, size of moon from parallax of eclipse
 83: Chinese, lodestone compass
 100: Bhaskara, diameter of the Sun
 100: Hero of Alexandria, expansion of air with heat
 100: Hero of Alexandria, laws of light reflection
 130: Ptolemy, geocentric cosmology of epicycles
 180: Egypt, alchemy
 550: Johannas Philoponus, impetus keeps a body moving
 721: Abu Hayyan, preparation of chemicals such as nitric acid
 890: Al-Razi, atomic of matter and space
 890: Al-Razi, Andromeda galaxy
 1000: Ali Al-hazen, reflection, refraction and lenses
 1000: Ali Al-hazen, pinhole camera to demonstrate that light travels
			in straight lines to the eye
 1054: China and Arabia Supernova of Crab Nebula recorded
 1121: Al-khazini gravity acts towards centre of Earth
 1155: Bhaskara first description of a perpetual motion machine
 1225: Jordanus Nemorarius, mechanics of lever and composition of
			motion
 1250: Albertus Magnus, isolation of arsenic
 1260: Roger Bacon, empiricism
 1267: Roger Bacon, magnifying lens
 1269: Pierre de Maricourt, experiments with magnets and compass
 1304: Theodoric of Freibourg, experiments to investigate rainbows
 1320: William of Occam, Occam's Razor
 1355: Jean Buridan, physics of impetus
 1440: Nicolas Cusanus, Earth is in motion
 1440: Nicolas Cusanus, infinite universe
 1450: Johann Gutenberg, first printing press in Europe
 1472: Johannes Regiomontanus, observation of Halley's comet
 1480: Leonardo de Vinci, description of parachute
 1480: Leonardo de Vinci, compares reflection of light to reflection
			of sound waves
 1490: Leonardo de Vinci, capillary action
 1492: Leonardo de Vinci, foresees flying machines
 1494: Leonardo de Vinci, foresees pendulum clock
 1514: Nicolaus Copernicus, writes about heliocentric theory but does
			not yet publish
 1515: Leonardo Da Vinci, progress in mechanics, aerodynamics and
			hydraulics
 1537: Niccolo Tartaglia, trajectory of a bullet
 1551: Girolamo Cardano, studies of falling bodies
 1553: Giambattista Benedetti, proposed equality of fall rates
 1543: Nicolaus Copernicus, heliocentric theory published
 1546: Gerardus Mercator, Magnetic pole of Earth
 1572: Tycho Brahe, witnesses a supernova and cites it as evidence
			that the heavens are not changeless
 1574: Tycho Brahe, Observes that a comet is beyond the moon
 1576: Tycho Brahe, constructs a planetary observatory
 1576: Thomas Digges, illustration of an infinite universe
			surrounding a Copernican solar system
 1577: Tycho Brahe, observes that a comet passes through the orbits
			of other planets
 1581: Galileo Galilei, constancy of period of pendulum
 1581: Robert Norman, dip of compass shows that Earth is a magnet
 1584: Giordano Bruno, suggests that stars are suns with other
			Earth's in orbit
 1585: Giovanni Benedetti, impetus theory is better than Aristotle's
			physics
 1585: Simon Stevin, law of equilibrium
 1586: Simon Stevin, pressure in column of liquid
 1586: Simon Stevin, verification of equality of fall rates
 1589: Galileo Galilei, showed that objects fall at the same rate
			independent of mass
 1592: Galileo Galilei, suggests that physical laws of the heavens
			are the same as those on Earth
 1592: Galileo Galilei, primitive thermometer
 1593: Johannes Kepler, related planets to platonic solids
 1596: David Fabricius, observes a variable star, (Mira Ceta)
 1600: Galileo Galilei, study of sound and vibrating strings
 1600: William Gilbert, static electricity and magnetism
 1604: Johannes Kepler, mirrors, lenses and vision
 1604: Galileo Galilei, distance for falling object increases as
			square of time
 1608: Hans Lippershey, optical telescope
 1609: Lippershey and Janssen, the compound microscope
 
  1609: Johannes Kepler, 1st and 2nd laws of planetary motion 1609: Thomas Harriot, maps moon using a telescope
 1609: Johannes Kepler, notion of energy
 1609: Galileo Galilei, builds a telescope
  1610: Galileo Galilei, observes the phases of Venus
 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes moons of Jupiter
 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes craters on the moon
 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes stars in the Milky Way
 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes structures around Saturn
 1611: Fabricius, Galileo, Harriot, Scheiner, sunspots
 1611: Marco de Dominis, explanation of rainbows
 1611: Johannes Kepler, principles of the astronomical telescope
 1612: Simon Marius, Andromeda galaxy
 1612: Galileo Galilei, hydrostatics
 1613: Galileo Galilei, principle of inertia
 1615: S. de Caus, forces and work
 1618: Francesco Grimaldi, interference and diffraction of light
 1619: Johannes Kepler, 3rd law of planetary motion
 1619: Johannes Kepler, explains why a comets tail points away from
			the Sun
 1619: Rene Descartes, vision of rationalism
 1620: Francis Bacon, the empirical scientific method
 1620: Francis Bacon, heat is motion
 1620: Jan Baptista van Helmont, introduces the word "gas"
 1621: Willebrod Snell, the sine law of refraction
 1624: Galileo Galilei, theory of tides
 1626: Godfried Wendilin, verification of Kepler's laws for moons of
			Jupiter
 1630: Cabaeus, attraction and repulsion of electric charges
 1631: Pierre Gassendi, observes a transit of Mercury
 1632: Galileo Galilei, Galilean relativity
 1632: Galileo Galilei, support for Copernicus' heliocentric theory
 1632: John Ray, water thermometer
 1636: G. Pers de Roberval, gravitational forces are mutual
			attraction
 1636: Marin Mersenne, speed of sound
 1637: Rene Descartes, inertia, mechanistic physics
 1637: Rene Descartes, refraction, rainbow and clouds
 1638: Galileo Galilei, motion and friction
 1639: Jeremiah Horrocks, observes a transit of Venus
 1640: Evangelista Torricelli, theory of hydrodynamics
 1641: Ferdinand II, sealed thermometer
 1642: Blaise Pascal, mechanical calculator
 1644: Evangelista Torricelli, mercury barometer and artificial
			vacuum
 1645: Ismael Boulliau, inverse square law for central force acting
			on planets
 1648: Blaise Pascal, explains barometer as a result of atmospheric
			pressure
 1650: Otto von Guericke, demonstration of the power of vacuum using
			two large hemispheres and 8 horses
 1650: Giovani Riccioli, discovers first binary star
 1654: Ferdinand II, sealed thermometer
 1655: Christiaan Huygens, rings and moons of Saturn
 1657: Christiaan Huygens, pendulum clock
 1657: Pierre Fermat, Fermat's principle in optics
 1659: Christiaan Huygens, surface features on Mars
 1660: Otto von Guericke, electrostatic machine
 1660: Robert Boyle, sound will not travel in a vacuum
 1661: Robert Boyle, corpuscular theory of matter
 1661: Robert Boyle, chemical elements, acids and alkalis
 1662: Robert Boyle, Boyle's law for ideal gases relating volume to
			pressure
 1663: Blaise Pascal, isotropy of pressure
 1663: James Gregory, describes a reflecting telescope
 1663: Huygens, Wallace and Wren, laws of elastic collisions
 1664: Robert Hooke, the great red spot of Jupiter
 1664: Rene Descartes, published support for Copernican theory
 1665: Isaac Newton, studies the
			principles of mechanics and gravity, mass and force
 1665: Giovanni Cassini, rotation periods of Jupiter, Mars and Venus
 1665: Francesco Grimaldi, his wave theory of light is published
 1665: Hooke, Huygens, colours of oil film explained by wave theory
			of light and interference
 1665: Robert Hooke, studies with a microscope
 1665: Robert Boyle, air is necessary for candles to burn
 1666: Giovanni Cassini, sees mars northern ice cap
 1666: Robert Boyle, fluid experiments
 1666: Isaac Newton, studies spectrum of light
 1666: Isaac Newton, begins work on laws of mechanics and gravitation
 1667: Jean Picard, observes anomalies in star positions which are
			later explained as aberration
 1668: John Wallis, conservation of momentum
 1668: Isaac Newton, reflecting telescope
 1669: Erasmus Bartholin, describes double refraction caused by
			polarisation effects of Iceland feldspar
 1669: Hennig Brand, element phosphorus
 1669: Gottfreid Leibniz, first concepts of action
 1670: Robert Boyle, produces hydrogen by reacting metals with acid
 1671: Giovanni Cassini, accurate measurement of distance to Mars and
			scale of solar system
 1671: Giovanni Cassini, finds Iapetus
 1672: Giovanni Cassini, finds Rhea
 1672: Jean Richer, the period of a pendulum varies with latitude
 1672: Isaac Newton, variation of pendulum is due to equatorial bulge
 1673: Ignace Pardies, wave explanation for refraction of light
 1673: Christiaan Huygens, laws of centripetal force
 1674: Robert Hooke, attempt to explain planetary motion as a balance
			of centfifugal force and gravitational attraction
 1675: Ole Romer, rough estimate of speed of light
 1675: Isaac Newton, delivers his theory of light
 1676: Giovanni Cassini, Saturn has separated rings which must be
			composed of small objects
 1676: Olaus Roemer, measured the speed of light by observing
			Jupiter's moons
 1676: Robert Hooke, law of elasticity and springs
 1676: Edme Mariotte, pressure is inversely proportional to volume
			(Boyle's law) and height of atmosphere
 1678: Robert Hooke, inverse square law of gravity
 1678: Christiaan Huygens, writes about wave theory of light
 1679: Christiaan Huygens, polarisation of light
 1680: Isaac Newton, demonstrates that inverse square law implies
			eliptical orbits
 1684: Giovanni Cassini, finds Dione and Tethys
 1684: Isaac Newton, inverse square law and mass dependence of
			gravity
 1684: Gottfreid Leibniz, differential calculus
 1687: Isaac Newton, publishes laws of motion and gravitation
 1687: Isaac Newton, publishes analysis of sound propagation
 1688: P. Varignon, addition of forces
 1690: Christiaan Huygens, principle of Huygens, secondary waves
 1690: John Locke, knowledge comes only from experience and
			sensations
 1692: Richard Bentley, why do stars not fall together under
			gravitation?
 
			  TIMELINE 1700 TO 1799 1702: Francis Hauksbee, rarified air glows during electrical
			discharge
 1704: Isaac Newton, publishes corpuscular theory of light and colour
 1705: Edmund Halley, tracked comets, predicts a return in 1758
  1709: Gabriel Fahrenheit, alcohol thermometer
 1710: George Berkeley, idealist philosophy against materialist
 1714: Gottfreid Leibniz, energy conservation
 1714: Gottfreid Leibniz, rejection of absolute space and time
 1714: Gabriel Fahrenheit, mercury thermometer
 1718: Edmund Halley, measures proper motion of stars
 1720: Edmund Halley, early form of Olbers' paradox
 1721: George Berkeley, space exists because of matter in it
 1724: Gabriel Fahrenheit, supercooling of water
 1727: Stephen Hales, makes oxygen
 1728: James Bradley, speed of light and stellar aberration
 1729: Stephen Gray, conduction of electricity
 1731: Rene Reaumur, alcohol/water thermometer
 1733: Charles Du Fay, recognises distinction between positive and
			negative electric charge
 1735: Antonio de Ulloa, element platinum
 1736: Leonhard Euler, differential equations in mechanics
 1738: Daniel Bernoulli, kinetic theory of gas
 1738: Daniel Bernoulli, hydrodynamics
 1739: Georg Brandt, element cobalt
 1740: Pierre Bouguer, gravitational anomalies
 1742: Anders Celsius, reverse centigrade temperature scale
 1743: Jean Christin, Celsius temperature scale
 1743: Jean d'Alembert, energy in Newtonian mechanics
 1744: Pierre de Maupertuis, principle of least action
 1744: Jean d'Alembert, theory of fluid dynamics
 1744: Leonhard Euler, Euler-Lagrange equations
 1744: Mikhail Lomonosov, heat is a form of motion
 1745: von Kleist, van Musschenbroek, Leyden jar for electric charge
			storage
 1746: Andreas Marggraf, rediscovery of element zinc
 1746: Leonhard Euler, wave theory of light refraction and dispersion
 1747: d'Alembert, Euler, solution of equations for vibrating string
 1748: Mikhail Lomonosov, conservation of mass and energy
 1749: Thomas Melvill, early spectrscopy and yellow line of sodium in
			salt
 1750: Benjamin Franklin, theory of electricity and lightning
 1750: John Michell, magnetic induction
 1750: John Michell, inverse square law for magnetic fields
 1750: Thomas Wright, Milky Way could be due to slab like
			distribution of stars
 1751: Benjamin Franklin, electricity can magnetise needles
 1751: Frederik Cronstedt, element nickel
 1752: Jean d'Alembert, viscosity
 1754: Joseph Black, discovery of carbon dioxide showing that there
			are gases other than air
 1755: Immanuel Kant, theory that the universe formed from a spinning
			nebula in an infinite hierarchy
 1756: William Cullen, evaporation causes cooling
 1761: Mikhail Lomonosov, Venus has an atmosphere
 1761: Joseph Black, discovery and measurements of latent and
			specific heats
 1761: John Harrison, portable chronometer
 1764: Charles Messier, finds first nebula Dumbell
 1765: Leonhard Euler, rigid body motions
 1766: Joseph Priestley, inverse square law for electric charge
 1766: Henry Cavendish, hydrogen is an element
 1771: Luigi Galvani, electricity in animals
 1772: Carl Scheele, saw air as two gases one of which encouraged
			combustion
 1772: Daniel Rutherford, nitrogen
 1772: Antoine Lavoisier, conservation of mass in chemical reactions
 1772: Joseph Lagrange, theory of Lagrange points
 1774: Priestley, Scheele, element oxygen
 1774: Nevil Maskelyne, gravitational deflection of plumb line by a
			mountain
 1774: Carl Scheele, element chlorine
 1774: Johann Gahn, element manganese
 1775: Alessandro Volta, electrical condenser
 1776: Pierre-Simon Laplace, deterministic causality
 1777: Antoine Lavoisier, composition of air and burning as a
			chemical reaction
 1779: Charles Augustin de Coulomb, Coulomb's law of friction
 1781: Immanuel Kant, Critique of pure reason
 1781: William Herschel, discovery of Uranus
 1781: Carl Scheele, element molybdenum in ore
 1781: Charles Messier, catalogue of nebulae
 1781: Heinrich Olbers, Uranus is a planet, not a comet
 1782: Jacob Hjelm, isolation of element molybdenum
 1782: Franz von Reichstein, element tellurium in ores
 1782: William Herschel, catalog of double stars
 1782: William Herschel, sun's motion through space
 1783: John Michell, Newtonian black hole
 1783: Fausto and Juan José de Elhuyar, element tungsten
 1783: Rene Hauy, nature of crystals
 1784: Henry Cavendish, water is a compound of oxygen and hydrogen
 1784: Pierre Laplace, electrostatic potential
 1784: John Goodricke, furst variable star1785: Charles Augustin de Coulomb, electric force proportional to
			product of charges and inverse square of distance
 1786: Antoine Lavoisier, distinction between elements and compounds
 1787: Antoine Lavoisier, system for naming chemicals
 1787: Jacques-Alexander Charles, law of gas expansion with
			temperature
 1788: Joseph Lagrange, Lagrangian mechanics
 1788: John Hunter, Diffusion of heat
 1782: William Herschel, finds Mimas and Enceladus
 1789: Antoine Lavoisier, Conservation of mass in chemical reactions
 1789: Martin Klaproth, elements zirconium and uranium in compounds
 1790: Definition of metric system in France
 1790: Adair Crawford, element strontium in compounds
 1791: William Gregor, element titanium in compounds
 1794: Johann Gadolin, element yttrium in compounds
 1794: Pierre Laplace, analysis of Newtonian black hole
 1796: Alessandro Volta, chemical batteries and voltage
 1797: Henry Cavendish, measured the gravitational constant with a
			torsion balance
 1797: Nicholas Vauquelin, element berylium identified in gem stones
 1797: Nicholas Vauquelin, element chromium
 1798: Benjamin Thompson, heat generated equals work done
 1798: M. Klaproth, isolation of element tellurium
 1798: Humphry Davy, Transmission of heat through vacuum
 1798: Benjamin Rumford, experimental relation between work done and
			heat generated
 
				
				
				 TIMELINE 1800 TO 1899 1800: William Herschel, infrared rays from the Sun
 1801: Johann Ritter, Ultraviolet rays
 1801: Johann von Soldner, predicted Newtonian bending of light by
			sun
 1801: Giuseppe Piazzi, first asteroid Ceres
 1801: Humphry Davy, Electric arc
 1801: Andres Manuel del Rio, compounds of element vanadium
 1801: Charles Hatchett, element niobium in ores
 1802: Heinrich Olbers, second asteroid Pallas
 1802: Anders Ekeberg, element tantalum
 1802: William Wollaston, dark lines in solar spectrum
 1802: William Herschel, double stars are bodies in mutual orbit
 1802: Thomas Young, interference and wave description of light
 1802: Humphry Davy, electrochemistry
 1802: Joseph Gay-Lussac, relation of volume to temperature of gases
			at fixed pressure
 1803: William Wollaston, elements rhodium and palladium
 1803: Smithson Tennant, elements osmium and iridium
 1804: John Dalton, Law of partial pressures, Dalton's law
 1807: Humphry Davy, isolation of elements sodium and potassium
 1808: Humphry Davy, isolation of elements magnesium, strontium,
			barium and calcium
 1808: Davy, Gay-Lussac and Thenard, isolation of element boron
 1808: Joseph Gay-Lussac, Law of gas volumes in chemical reactions
 1808: John Dalton, atomic theory of chemical reactions
 1808: Etienne Malus, polarization of reflected light
 1809: Simeon-Denis Poisson, Poisson brackets in mechanics
 1811: Amedeo Avogadro, molecular theory of gases and Avogadro's law
 1811: Jean-Baptiste Fourier, harmonic analysis
 1811: Bernard Courtois, element iodine
 1812: David Brewster, behaviour of polarized light
 1814: Joseph von Fraunhofer, spectroscope
 1815: William Prout, atomic weights of elements are multiples of
			that for hydrogen
 1815: Augustin Fresnel, theory of light diffraction
 1816: Joseph von Fraunhofer, absorption lines in sun's spectrum
 1817: Young and Fresnel, transverse nature of light
 1817: Johan Arfvedson, element lithium
 1817: Friedrich Strohmeyer, element cadmium
 1817: Jöautns Berzelius, element selenium
 1818: Augustin Fresnel, ether as absolute rest frame
 1819: Dulong and Petit, relation of specific heats to atomic weight
			in 12 solid elements
 1820: Andre Ampere, force on an electric current in a magnetic field
 1820: Hans Christian Oersted, an electric current deflects a
			magnetized needle
 1820: Biot and Savart, force law between an electric current and a
			magnetic field
 1821: Thomas Seebeck, thermocouple and thermoelectricity
 1821: Joseph von Fraunhofer, diffraction grating
 1821: Michael Faraday, plotted the
			magnetic field around a conductor
 1821: Michael Faraday, first electric motor
 1822: Andre Ampere, two wires with electric currents attract
 1822: Charles Babbage, a prototype calculating machine
 1822: Mary Mantell, first dinosaur fossil
 1823: Michael Faraday, liquifies chlorine
 1823: John William Herschel, suggests identification of chemical
			composition from spectrum
 1823: William Sturgeon, electromagnets
 1823: Heinrich Olbers, why is the sky dark?
 1823: Johann Schweigger, galvanometer
 1824: Sadi Carnot, heat transfer goes from hot body to cold body
 1824: Jöautns Berzelius , element silicon
 
  1824: Jöautns Berzelius , isolation of element zirconium 1825: Hans Christian Oersted, isolation of element aluminum
 1826: Antoine-J. Balard, element bromine
 1827: Georg Ohm, electrical resistance and Ohm's law
  1827: Robert Brown, Brownian motion
 1828: Friedrich Wohler, isolation of element yttrium
 1829: Johann Wolfgang, triads of chemical elements
 1829: Thomas Graham, gas diffusion law
 1829: Jons Berzelius, element thorium
 1830: Charles Lyell, proposition that Earth is several million years
			old
 1830: Nils Sefstrom, rediscovery and naming of vanadium
 1831: Michael Faraday, a moving magnet induces an electric current
 1831: Michael Faraday, magnetic lines of force
 1831: Michael Faraday, the electric dynamo
 1831: Michael Faraday, the electric transformer
 1833: Michael Faraday, laws of electrolysis
 1833: Joseph Henry, self inductance
 1834: Emile Clapeyron, entropy
 1834: John Scott Russell, observed solitary waves in a canal
 1834: William Hamilton, principle of least action and Hamiltonian
			mechanics
 1834: Heinrich Lenz, Law of electromagnetic forces
 1835: Gustav-Gaspard Coriolis, Coriolis force
 1838: Bessel, Henderson, Struve, first measurements of distance to a
			star by parallax
 1839: Karl Mosander Lanthanum
 1840: Rive Marcet, anomolous specific heat of diamond
 1840: Joule and Helmholtz, electricity is a form of energy
 1840: Auguste Comte, suggests that nature and composition of stars
			will never be known
 1841: Eugene-Melchoir Peligot, isolation of element uranium
 1842: Christian Doppler, theory of Doppler Effect for sound and light
 1842: Justin von Mayer, conservation of heat and mechanical energy
 1843: James Joule, mechanical and electrical equivalent of heat
 1843: Howard Aiken, first mechanical programmable calculator
 1844: Kark Klaus, element 44, ruthenium
 1845: Michael Faraday, rotation of polarized light by magnetism
 1845: Christopher Buys-Ballet, confirmation of Doppler effect for
			sound using trumpeters on a train
 1845: William Parsons: sees first spiral galaxy
 1846: Adams, Le Verrier, predicted position of Neptune
 1846: Gustav Kirchhoff, Kirchoff's laws of electrical networks
 1846: William Thomson (Kelvin), incorrectly estimates Earth to be
			100 million years old by heat
 1846: Jahanne Galle, Neptune
 1846: William Lassell, finds Titan
 1847: Hermann von Helmholtz, conservation of energy in Newtonian
			mechanics and gravity
 1848: William Thomson (Kelvin), absolute temperature scale
 1848: James Joule, average velocity of gas molecules from kinetic
			theory
 1849: Armand Fizeau, first accurate measurement of the velocity of
			light in the laboratory using a toothed wheel
 1850: Rudolf Clausius, generalized second law of thermodynamics
 1850: Jean Foucault, light travels slower in water than in air
 1850: Michael Faraday, experiments to find link between gravity and
			electromagnetism fail
 1851: William Thomson (Lord Kelvin), dynamical theory of heat
 1851: William Thomson (Lord Kelvin), absolute zero temperature
 1851: Armand Fizeau, velocity of light in moving medium
 1851: Franz Neumann, laws of electric-magnetic induction
 1851: Jean Foucault, demonstrates rotation of Earth with a pendulum
 1852: Jean Foucault, first gyroscope
 1852: Joule, Thomson, an expanding gas cools
 1853: Anders Angstrom, measured hydrogen spectral lines
 1854: Hermann von Helmholtz, heat death of the universe
 
  1854: Bernhard Riemann, possibility of space curvature on small or
			large scales 1854: George Airy, estimate of Earth mass from underground gravity
 1855: William Parsons, spiral galaxies
 1855: James Clerk Maxwell, mathematics of Faraday's lines of force
  1857: James Clerk Maxwell, nature of Saturn's rings
 1858: Wallace and Darwin, natural selection of species
 1858: Balfour Stewart, conjecture equivalent to Kirchoff's law
 1859:Richard Carrington, sees first solar flare
 1859: Hittorf and Plucker, cathode rays
 1859: Bunsen and Kirchhoff, measurement of spectral line frequencies
 1859: Urbain Le Verrier, anomalous perihelion shift of Mercury
 1860: Gustav Kirchhoff, Kirchoff's Law and black body problem
 1860: Maxwell and Waterston, equipartition theorem of statistical
			mechanics
 1861: von Bunsen, Kirchhoff, elements caesium and rubidium found in
			spectra
 1861: William Crookes, element thallium found by its spectra
 1861: Johann Madler, Olbers's paradox would be resolved if the
			universe had a finite age
 1862: Anders Angstrom, observed hydrogen in the sun
 1863: William Huggins, stellar spectra indicate that stars are made
			of same elements as found on Earth
 1863: Reich, Richter, element indium from its spectra
 1864: John Newlands, chemical law of octaves
 1864: James Clerk Maxwell, equations of electromagnetic wave
			propagation in the ether
 1865: Rudolf Clausius, introduction of the term entropy
 1867: James Clerk Maxwell, statistical physics and thermal
			equilibrium
 1867: Henry Roscoe, isolation of element vanadium
 1868: Pierre-Jules Janssen, lines of helium observed in the sun's
			spectrum
 1868: Norman Lockyer, William Crookes, element helium recognized and named
 1868: William Huggins, Doppler shifts of stellar spectra
 1869: Dmitri Mendeleyev, periodic table of elements
 1871: Dmitri Mendeleyev, prediction of new elements such as
			scandium, germanium, technetium, francium and gallium
 1871: Ludwig Boltzmann, classical explanation of Dulong-Petit
			specific heats
 1871: Tyndall and Rayleigh, light scattering and why the sky is
			blue.
 1872: Ludwig Boltzmann, H-theorem
 1873: James Clerk Maxwell, electromagnetic nature of light and
			prediction of radio waves
 1873: Johannes van der Waals, intermolecular forces in fluids
 1874: George Stoney, estimated the unit of charge and named it the
			electron
 1875: Heinrich Weber, specific heat curves of solids
 1875: James Clerk Maxwell, atoms must have a structure
 1875: Paul-Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran, element gallium
 1877: Johann Loschmidt, questions validity of second law for time
			symmetric dynamics
 1877: Ludwig Boltzmann, Boltzmann's probability equation for entropy
 1877: Asaph Hall, two moons of Mars
 1877: Cailletet and Pictet, liquid oxygen and nitrogen
 1878: Josiah Willard Gibbs, thermodynamics of chemistry and phase
			changes
 1879: Josef Stefan, empirical discovery of total radiation law,
			(Stefan's law)
 1879: Lars Fredrik Nilson, element scandium
 1879: Willaim Crookes, cathode rays may be negatively charged
			particles
 1879: Albert Michelson, improved measurements of the speed of light
 1880: Pierre and Jacques Curie, piezoelectricity
 1880: Oliver Heaviside, coaxial cable
 1881: Albert Michelson, light interferometer and absence of ether
			drift
 1881: Josiah Willard Gibbs, vector algebra
 1883: Ivan Puluy, prior discovery of X-rays
 1883: Thomas Edison, thermionic emission
 1883: George Fitzgerald, theory of radio transmission
 1884: Ludwig Boltzmann, Derivation of Stefan's law for black bodies
 1884: Oliver Heaviside,
			differential equation form of Maxwell's equations
 1885: Oliver Heaviside, electomagnetic propogation in cables and
			telegraper's equations
 1885: Johann Balmer, empirical formula for hydrogen spectral lines
 1885: James Dewar, vacuum flask
 1886: Henri Moissan, fluorine
 1886: Clemens Winkler, element germanium
 1887: Heinrich Hertz, transmission, reception and reflection of
			radio waves
 1887: Michelson and Morley, absence of ether drift
 1887: Michelson and Morley, fine structure of hydrogen spectrum
 1887: Hertz, Hallwachs, photoelectric effect
 1887: Woldemar Voigt, anticipated Lorentz transform to derive
			Doppler shift
 1889: George Fitzgerald, length contraction
 1889: Rolond von Eotvos, torsion balance to test equivalence of
			inertial and gravitational mass
 1890: Johannes Rydberg, empirical formulae for spectral lines and
			Rydberg constant
 1892: Hendrick Lorentz, theory that electricity is due to charged
			particles
 1893: Ernst Mach, influence of all the mass in the universe
			determines what is natural motion
 1893: Wilhelm Wien, derivation of black body displacement law
 1893: Oliver Lodge, ether could not be carried along by matter
 1894: Rayleigh and Ramsey, element argon
 1894: Heinrich Hertz, radio waves travel at speed of light and can
			be refracted and polarized
 1894: James Dewar, liquid oxygen
 1894: Pierre Curie, why are there no magnetic monopoles?
 1895:
			Pierre Curie, isolation of helium from uranium
			ore
 1895: Wilhelm Roentgen, X-rays
 1895: Korteweg and de Vries, explanation of solitary waves
 1895: Jean-Baptiste Perrin, cathode rays are negative particles
 1895: Pierre Curie, loss of magnetism at high temperature, (Curie
			point)
 1895: Hendrick Lorentz, first form of Lorentz transformation
 1895: Hendrick Lorentz, electromagnetic force on a charged particle
 1896: Wilhelm Wien, conjectured exponential black body law
 1896: Pieter Zeeman, spectral line splitting by magnetic field
 1896: Antoine Henri Becquerel, natural radioactivity in uranium ore
 1897: Ludwig Boltzmann, time reversal symmetry of electromagnetism
 1897: Friedrich Paschen, verification of Wien's black body law at
			long wavelengths
 1897: Kaufmann, J.J. Thomson, measurement of electron charge to mass
			ratio by deflection of cathode rays
 1897: Weichert, J.J. Thomson, conjectured existence of light
			electron
 1898: James Dewar, liquid hydrogen
 1898: Guglielmo Marconi, transmission of signals across the English
			channel
 1898: Pierre and Marie Curie, separation of radioactive elements,
			radium and polonium
 1898: Ramsey and Travers, neon, krypton, xenon
 1898: Joseph Larmor, complete form of Lorentz transformation
 1898: Henri Poincare, questions absolute time and simultaniety
 1898: Ernest Rutherford, alpha and beta radiation
 1899: Joseph John Thomson, measurement of the charge and mass of the
			electron
 1899: Andre Debierne, element actinium
 1899: Max Planck, universal scale of measurement from fundamental
			constants
 
			  TIMELINE 1900 TO 1949 1900: Lord Rayleigh, statistical derivation of short wavelength
			black body law
 1900: Ernest Rutherford, first determination of a radioactive
			half-life
 1900: Antoine Henri Becquerel, suggests that beta rays are electrons
 1900: Lummer, Pringsheim, Rubens, Kurlbaum, failure of Wien's black
			body law at short wavelengths
 1900: Max Planck, light quanta in black body radiation, Planck's
			black body law and Planck's constant
 1900: Paul Villard, gamma rays
 1900: Friedrich Dorn, element 86, radon
 1900: Pyotr Lebedev, radiation pressure measured
 1901: Max Planck, determination of Planck's constant, Boltzmann's
			constant, Avogadro's number and the charge on electron
 1901: Guglielmo Marconi, Transmission of Morse signals across the
			Atlantic
 1902: Philipp Lenard, intensity law in photoelectric effect
 1902: Rutherford and Soddy, theory of transmutation by radiation and
			first use of the term "atomic energy"
 1902: Kelvin, Thomson, plum pudding model of the atom
 1902: Heaviside and Kennelly, Ionized layer capable of reflecting
			radio waves
 1903: Ernest Rutherford, alpha particles have a positive charge
 1903: Curie and Laborde, radioactive energy released by radium is
			large
 1903: Johannes Stark, the power of the sun may be due to genesis of
			chemical elements
 1903: Philipp Lenard, model of atom as two separated opposite
			charges1904: Albert Einstein,
			energy-frequency relation of light quanta
 1904: Hendrik Lorentz, the completed Lorentz transformations
 1904: Hantaro Nagaoka, planetary model of the atom
 1904: Ambrose Flemming, diode valve and rectifier
 1904: Henri Poincare, conjectured light speed as physical limit
 1904: Ernest Rutherford, age of Earth by radioactvity dating
 1905: Albert Einstein, explains Brownian motion by kinetic theory
 1905: Albert Einstein, light-quantum theory for photoelectric law
 1905: Albert Einstein, special relativity
 1905: Paul Langevin, atomic theory of paramagnetism
 1905: Percival Lowell, postulates a ninth planet beyond Neptune
 1905: Bragg and Kleeman, alpha-particles have discrete energies
 1905: Hermann Nernst, third law of thermodynamics
 1905: Albert Einstein, equivalence of mass and energy
 1906: Albert Einstein, quantum explanation of specific heat laws for
			solids
 1906: Joseph Thomson, Thomson scattering of X-ray photons and number
			of electrons in an atom
 1906: Ernest Rutherford, alpha particles scatter in air
 1906: Lee de Forest, triode valve
 1907: Albert Einstein, equivalence principle and gravitational
			redshift
 1907: Urbain and von Welsbach, element 71, lutetium
 1908: Hermann Minkowski, geometric unification of space and time
 1908: Hans Geiger, Geiger counter for detecting radioactivity
 1908: Heike Kammerlingh-Onnes, liquid helium
 1908: Geiger, Royds, Rutherford, identify alpha particles as helium
			nuclei
 1909: Albert Einstein, particle-wave duality of photons
 1909: Johannes Stark, momentum of photons
 1909: Geiger and Marsden, anomolous scattering of alpha particles on
			gold foil
 1909: Robert Millikan, measured the charge on the electron
 1910: Albert Einstein, why the sky is blue
 1910: Matthew Hunter, isolation of element titanium
 1910: Theodor Wulf, excess atmospheric radiation
 1911: Victor Hess, high altitude radiation from space
 1911: Heike Kammerlingh-Onnes, superconductivity
 1911: Ernest Rutherford, Infers the nucleus from the alpha
			scattering result
 1912: Joseph Thomson, mass spectrometry and separation of isotopes
 1912: Henrietta Leavitt, period to luminosity relationship for
			Cepheid variable stars
 1912: Robert Millikan, measurement of Planck's constant
 1912: Peter Debye, derivation of specific heat laws to low
			temperatures
 1912: Charles Wilson, cloud chamber
 1912: Max Von Laue, X-rays are explained as electromagnetic
			radiation by diffraction
 1912: Albert Einstein, curvature of space-time
 1912: Vesto Melvin Slipher, observes blue-shift of andromeda galaxy
 1912: Gustav Mie, non-linear field theories
 1913: Niels Bohr, quantum theory of atomic orbits
 1913: Niels Bohr, radioactivity as nuclear property
 1913: Jean-Baptiste Perrin, theory of size of atoms and molecules
 1913: Fajans and Gohring, element 91, protactinium
 1913: Bragg and Bragg, X-ray diffraction and crystal structure
 1913: Hans Geiger, relation of atomic number to nuclear charge
 1913: Johannes Stark, splitting of hydrogen spectral lines in
			electric field
 1913: Frederick Soddy, the term "isotope"
 1914: James Chadwick, primary beta spectrum is continuous and shows
			an energy anomaly
 1914: Harry Moseley, used X-rays to confirm the correspondence
			between electric charge of nucleus and atomic number
 1914: Ejnar Hertzsprung, measured distance to Large Magellanic Cloud
			using Cepheid variable stars
 1914: Rutherford, da Costa Andrade, gamma rays identified as hard
			photons
 1915: Albert Einstein, general relativity
 1915: David Hilbert, action principle for gravitational field
			equations
 1915: Albert Einstein, prediction of light bending and explanation
			for perihelion shift of Mercury
 1916: Robert Millikan, verification of energy law in photoelectric
			effect
 1916: Albert Einstein, prediction of gravitational waves
 1916: Albert Einstein, conservation of energy-momentum in general
			relativity
 1916: Karl Schwarzschild, singular static solution of gravitational
			field equations which describes a minimal black hole
 1916: Arnold Sommerfeld, further atomic quantum numbers and fine
			structure of spectra, fine structure constant
 1917: Harlow Shapley, estimates the diameter of the galaxy as 100000
			parsecs
 1917: Albert Einstein, introduction of the cosmological constant and
			a steady state model of the universe
 1917: Vesto Melvin Slipher, observes that most galaxies have
			red-shifts
 1917: Albert Einstein, theory of stimulated emission and loss of
			determinism
 1917: Willem de Sitter, describes a model of a static universe with
			no matter
 1917: Arthur Eddington, gravitational energy is insufficient to
			account for the energy output of stars
 1917: Rutherford, Marsden, artificial transmutation, hydrogen and
			oxygen from nitrogen
 1918: Harlow Shapley, measured distance to globular clusters using
			Cepheid variable stars
 1918: Harlow Shapley, determined the size and shape of our galaxy
 1918: Reissner and Nordstrom, solution of Einstein's equations which
			describe a charged black hole
 1918: Emmy Noether, The mathematical relationships between symmetry
			and conservation laws in classical physics
 1918: Francis Aston, mass spectrometer
 1918: Herman Weyl, gauge theory
 1919: Ernest Rutherford, existence of the proton in nucleus
 1919: Oliver Lodge, prediction of gravitational lensing
 1919: Francis Aston, hydrogen fusion to helium will release a lot of
			energy
 1919: Crommelin, Eddington, verification of Einstein's prediction of
			starlight deflection during an eclipse
 1919: Arthur Eddington, predicts the size of red giants using
			stellar models
 1920: Ernest Rutherford, prediction of neutron
 1920: Anderson, Michelson, Pease, size of star Betelgeuse using
			stellar interferometry
 1920: Harkins, Eddington, fusion of hydrogen could be the energy
			source of stars
 1920: Shapley and Curtis, The Great Debate over the scale and
			structure of the universe
 1921: Theodor Kaluza, unification of electromagnetics and gravity by
			introducing an extra dimension
 1921: Bieler and Chadwick, evidence for a strong nuclear interaction
 1921: Stern and Gerlach, measurement of atomic magnetic moments
 1921: Charles Bury, electronic structure of elements from their
			chemistry
 1922: Cornelius Lanczos, transformation of De Sitter universe to an
			expanding form
 1922: Alexsandr Friedmann, a model of an expanding/oscillating
			universe with matter included
 1923: Compton and Debye, theory of Compton effect
 1923: Arthur Compton, verification of Compton effect confirms photon
			as particle
 1923: Louis de Broglie, predicts wave nature of particles
 1923: Davisson and Kunsman, electron diffraction
 1923: Coster and von Hevesy, element 72, hafnium
 1923: Herman Weyl, De Sitter universe would predict a linear
			relation between distance and red-shift
 1924: Edwin Hubble, measured the distance to other galaxies using
			Cepheid variables proving that they lie outside our own
 1924: Edward Appleton, ionosphere
 1924: Satyendra Bose, derivation of Planck's law
 1924: Bose and Einstein, statistics of photons and Bose-Einstein
			condensate
 1924: Albert Einstein, statistical physics of quantum boson
			molecular gas
 1924: Wolfgang Pauli, explanation of Zeeman effect and two-valuedness
			of electron state
 1924: Wolfgang Pauli, the exclusion principle
 1924: Ludwik Siberstein, claims a redshift law for nebulae
 1925: Walter Elsasser, explanation of electron diffraction as wave
			property of matter
 1925: Vesto Melvin Slipher, red-shifts of galaxies suggest a
			distance/velocity relationship
 1925: Robert Millikan, rediscovery of "cosmic rays" in upper
			atmosphere
 1925: Noddack, Tacke, Berg, element 75, rhenium
 1925: Werner Heisenberg, transition amplitude theory of quantum
			mechanics
 1925: Born and Jordan, matrix interpretation of Heisenberg's quantum
			mechanics
 1925: Paul Dirac, q-number theory of general quantum mechanics
 1925: Pascual Jordan, second quantization
 1925: Goudsmit and Uhlenbeck, electron spin
 1925: Enrico Fermi, statistics of electrons
 1926: Gilbert Lewis, first use of the term photon
 1926: Oskar Klein, Kaluza-Klein theory
 1926: Wolfgang Pauli, derivation of spectrum of hydrogen atom by
			matrix methods
 1926: Erwin Schroedinger, the particle wave equation
 1926: Erwin Schroedinger, derivation of spectrum of hydrogen atom
			using the wave equation
 1926: Eckart, Pauli, Schroedinger, equivalence of wave equation and
			matrix mechanics
 1926: Max Born, probability interpretation of wave function
 1926: Albert Einstein, "God does not play dice"
 1926: Paul Dirac, distinction between bosons and fermions, symmetry
			and anti-symmetry of wave function
 1926: Dirac, Jordan, canonical transformation theory for quantum
			mechanics
 1926: Klein, Fock and Gordon, relativistic wave equation for scalar
			particles
 1926: Ralph Fowler, suggests that white dwarf stars are explained by
			the exclusion principle
 1926: Born, Heisenberg, Jordan, model of a quantized field
 1926: Wolfgang Pauli, momentum and position cannot be known
			simultaneously
 1926: Werner Heisenberg, the uncertainty principle
 1927: Davisson, Germer, Thomson, verification of electron
			diffraction by a crystal
 1927: Jan Oort, observation of galactic rotation and spiral shape of
			our galaxy
 1927: Niels Bohr, principle of complementarity
 1927: Paul Dirac, quantization of electromagnetic field, bosonic
			creation and annihilation operators, virtual particles, zero point
			energy
 1927: Eugene Wigner, conservation of parity
 1927: Friedrich Hund, quantum tunneling
 1927: Heitler and London, quantum theory can explain chemical
			bonding
 1927: Fritz London, electromagnetic gauge is phase of Schroedinger
			equation
 1927: Georges Lemaitre, models of an expanding universe
 1927: Niels Bohr, Copenhagen interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
 1928: Condon, Gamow, Gurney, alpha emission is due to quantum
			tunneling
 1928: Paul Dirac, relativistic equation of the spin-half electron
 1928: Willem Keeson, phase transition in liquid Helium
 1928: Jordan, Pauli, quantum field theory of free fields
 1928: Rolf Wideroe, first prototype high energy accelerator
 1928: Heisenberg, Weyl, group representation theory in quantum
			mechanics
 1929: quartz crystal clock
 1929: Ernest Lawrence, cyclotron
 1929: Robert van de Graaff, Van de Graaff generator
 1929: Heisenberg, Pauli, interacting quantum field theory and
			divergences
 1929: J. Robert Oppenheimer, divergence of electron self-energy
 1929: Paul Dirac, electron sea and hole theory
 1929: Edwin Hubble, first measurement of Hubble's constant leading
			to the conclusion that the Universe is expanding
 1929: Bothe, Kolhorster, cosmic rays are charged particles
 1930: Clyde Tombaugh, finds Pluto
 1930: Becker, Bothe, observed neutral rays later identified as
			neutrons
 1930: Paul Dirac, systematic canonical quantization
 1930: Arthur Eddington, Einstein's static universe is unstable
 1930: Hartree and Fock, multi-particle quantum mechanics
 1931: Dirac, Oppenheimer, Weyl, prediction of anti-matter
 1931: Albert Einstein, discard cosmological constant, oscillating
			cosmology
 1931: Carl Jansky, radio astronomy
 1931: Georges Lemaitre, the primeval atom as origin of the universe
 1931: Isidor Rabi, principle of population inversion
 1931: Wolfgang Pauli, neutrino as explanation for missing energy and
			spin in weak nuclear decay
 1931: Eugene Wigner, symmetry in quantum mechanics
 1931: Paul Dirac, magnetic monopoles can explain quantum of charge
 1932: Raman and Bhagavantam, verification that photon is spin one
 1932: Einstein, De Sitter, flat expanding cosmology
 1932: James Chadwick, identified the neutron
 1932: Knoll and Ruska, electron microscope
 1932: Carl Anderson, positron from cosmic rays
 1932: Cockroft and Walton, linear proton accelerators to 700 keV and
			verification of mass/energy equivalence
 1932: Karl Jansky, first radio astronomy
 1932: Dmitri Iwanenko, neutron as a constituent of nucleus
 1932: Richard Tolman, thermodynamics of oscillating cyclic universe
 1932: Vladimir Fock, Fock space
 1932: Urey, Brickwedde, Murphy, Washburn, deuterium
 1932: Werner Heisenberg, nucleus is composed of protons and neutrons
 1932: Lev Davidovich Landau, proposed existence of neutron stars
 1933: Paul Ehrenfest, theory of second order phase transitions
 1933: Blackett and Occhialini, electron-positron creation and
			annihilation
 1933: Esterman, Frisch and Stern, measurement of proton magnetic
			moment
 1933: Baade and Zwicky, collapse of a white dwarf may set off a
			supernova and leave a neutron star
 1933: Fritz Zwicky, dark matter in galactic clusters
 1933: Arthur Milne, cosmological principle of large scale
			homogeneity
 1933: Harlow Shapley, observation of structure in galaxy
			distribution
 1934: Pavel Cherenkov, Cherenkov radiation
 1934: Chadwick and Goldhaber, precise measurement of neutron mass
 1934: Chadwick and Goldhaber, measurement of nuclear force
 1934: Francis Perrin, neutrino is massless
 1934: Grote Reber, discrete radio source in Cygnus
 1934: Joliot and Curie-Joliot, induced radioactivity
 1934: Enrico Fermi, Fermi theory of weak interaction and beta decay
 1934: Esterman and Stern, magnetic moment of neutron
 1934: Fermi and Hahn, fission observed
 1934: Paul Dirac, polarisation of the vacuum and more divergence in
			QED
 1935: Yukawa, Stueckelberg, theory of strong nuclear force and the
			pi-meson
 1935: J. Robert Oppenheimer, spin statistics
 1935: Enrico Fermi, hypothesis of transuranic elements
 1935: Robertson, Walker, most general homogenious isotropic universe
 1935: Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen, EPR Paradox of non-locality in
			quantum mechanics
 1935: Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, calculation of mass limit for
			stellar collapse of a white dwarf star
 1935: Erwin Schroedinger, quantum cat paradox
 1935: Robert Watson-Watt, radar
 1936: Niels Bohr, compound nucleus
 1936: Anderson and Neddermeyer, muon in cosmic rays
 1936: Leon Brillouin, theory of wave guides
 1936: Breit and Coll, isotopic spin
 1936: Alan Turing, computability
 1937: Pyotr Kapitza, superfluidity of helium II
 1937: Perrier and Segre, element 37, technetium, first element made
			artificially
 1937: Majorana, symmetric theory of electron and positron
 1937: Julian Schwinger, neutron spin is half
 1937: Blau, Wambacher, photographic emulsion as particle detector
 1937: Bloch and Nordsieck, operator normal ordering
 1937: John Wheeler, S-matrix theory
 1938: Oppenheimer and Serber, there is an upper mass limit for
			stability of neutron stars
 1938: Bethe, Critchfield, von Weizsacker, stars are powered by
			nuclear fusion CN-cycle
 1938: Isador Rabi, magnetic resonance
 1938: Hahn, Strassman, fission induced with neutrons
 1938: Oskar Klein, new field equations from higher dimensional
			Kaluza-Klein theory
 1938: Fritz Zwicky, clusters of galaxies
 1938: Ernest Stueckelberg, suggests baryon number conservation
 1938: Hendrick Kramers, mass renormalization
 1938: Frisch and Meitner, theory of uranium fission
 1939: Joliot and Curie-Joliot, Szilard, theory of nuclear chain
			reaction
 1939: Oppenheimer and Snyder, a collapsing neutron star will form a
			black hole.
 1939: Bohr, Wheeler, Khariton, Zel'dovich, theory of U235
			fission and chain reaction.
 1939: Bloch and Alvarez, measurement of the neutron magnetic moment
 1939: Rossi, Van Norman, Hilbery, Muon decay
 1939: Teller, Szilard, Einstein, warning letter to Roosevelt
 1939: Peierls and Frisch, critical mass and theory of A-Bomb
 1939: Marguerite Perey, element 87, francium
 1940: MacMillan, Abelson, element 93, neptunium, first transuranian
			elements
 1940: Corson, MacKenzie, Segre, element 85, astatine synthesized
 1941: MacMillan, Kennedy, Seaborg, Wahl, element 94, plutonium,
			second transuranian elements
 1941: Lev Davidovich Landau, theory of superfluids
 1941: Rossi and Hall, nuon decay used to verify relativistic time
			dilation
 1941: Mckellar and Adams, Cosmic cyanogen observed to be at
			temperature of CBR, but significance not recognized
 1941: "Manhatten Project" is founded to develop atomic bomb
 1942: Enrico Fermi, the first self sustaining fission reaction
 1942: Grote Reber, radio map of the sky
 1943: Ernest Stueckelberg, renormalization of QED
 1943: Sakata, Inoue, theory of pion decay to muons
 1944: Lars Onsager, general theory of phase transitions
 1944: Seaborg, James, Morgan, Ghiorso, Thompson, elements 95;
			americium, 96; curium
 1944: Leprince-Ringuet and Lheritier, the K+ found in cosmic rays
 
 1944:Gerard Kuiper, atmosphere on Yitan1945: Robert Oppenheimer et al, atomic bomb
 1945: first electronic computer ENIAC
 1946: James Hey Discovery of radio source Cygnus A
 1946: George Gamow Cold big bang model
 1946: Bloch and Purcell nuclear magnetic resonance
 1947: Claude Shannon, information
			theory
 1947: Conversi, Pancini, Piccioni, indication that the muon is not
			the mediator of the strong force
 1947: Hartmut Kallman, scintillation counter
 1947: Denis Gabor, theory of holograms
 1947: Powell, Occhialini, negative pion found
 1947: Willis Lamb, fine structure of hydrogen spectrum, the Lamb
			shift
 1947: Hans Bethe, renormalization of Lamb shift calculation
 1947: Kusch and Folley, measurement of the anomalous magnetic moment
			of the electron
 1947: Hartland Snyder, quantised space-time
 1948: Tomonaga, Schwinger, Feynman, renormalization of QED
 1948: Alpher, Bethe and Gamow, explain nucleosynthesis in hot big
			bang
 1948: Alpher and Herman, prediction of cosmic background radiation
 1948: Bondi, Gold, Hoyle, steady state theory of the universe
 1948: Goldhaber and Goldhaber, experimental proof that beta
			particles are electrons
 1948: Richard Feynman, path integral approach to quantum theory
 1948: Bardeen, Brattain, Shockley, semi-conductors and transistors
 1948: Snell and Miller, decay of the neutron
 1948: Freeman Dyson, Equivalence of Feynman and Schwinger-Tomonaga
			QED
 1948: Hendrik Casimir, Theory of Casimir force
 1949: Leighton, Anderson, Seriff, muon is spin half
 1949: Seaborg, Ghiorso, Thompson, element 97, berkelium
 1949: Haxel, Jensen, Mayer, Suess, nuclear shell model
 1949: Fred Hoyle, first use of the term "big bang"
 
			  TIMELINE 1950 TO 2000 1950: Paul Dirac, first suggestion of
			string theory
 1950: Seaborg, Ghiorso, Street, Thompson, element 98, californium
 1950: Jan Oort, theory of comet origins
  1950: Bjorklund, Crandall, Moyer, York, neutral pion
 1950: Albert Einstein, Einstein's failed unified theory
 1951: Smith and Baade, identify a radio galaxy
 1951: Petermann, Stueckelberg, renormalization group
 1952: Courant, Livingston, Snyder, Strong focusing principle for
			particle accelerators
 1952: Alvarez, Glaser, bubble chamber
 1952: Seaborg et al, elements 99; einsteinium, 100; fermium
 1952: Walter Baade, resolves confusion over two different types of
			Cepheid variable stars
 1952: Edward Teller et al, hydrogen bomb
 1952: Joseph Weber, described the principle of the maser
 1953: Gell-Mann and Nishijima, strangeness
 1953: Gerard de Vaucouleurs, galaxy superclusters and large scale
			inhomogenieties
 1953: Charles Townes, maser
 1953: Alpher, Herman, Follin, first recognition of the horizon
			problem in cosmology
 1954: Yang and Mills, non-abelian gauge theory
 1954: Low and Gell-Mann, renormalization group revisited
 1955: caesium atomic clock
 1955: Martin Ryle, radio telescope interferometry
 1955: John Wheeler, describes the space-time foam at the Planck
			scale
 1955: Ilya Prigogine, thermodynamics of irreversible processes
 1955: Carl von Weizsacker, multiple quantization and ur-theory
 1955: Seaborg et al, element 101, mendelevium
 1955: Chamberlain, Segre and Wiegand, anti-proton
 1956: Reines and Cowan, neutrino detection
 1956: Cork, Lambertson, Piccioni, Wenzel, evidence for anti-neutron
 1956: Block, Lee and Yang, weak interaction could violate parity
 1956: Reines and Cowan, anti-neutrino detection
 1956: Erwin Muller, field ion microscope and first images of
			individual atoms
 1956: Cook, Lambertson, Piconi, Wentzel, anti-neutron
 1968: Abdus Salam, 2-component neutrino
 1957: Burbidge, Burbidge, Hoyle, Fowler, formation of light elements
			in stars
 1957: Friedman, Lederman, Telegdi, Wu, parity violation in weak
			decays
 1957: Bardeen, Cooper, Schrieffer, BCS theory of superconductivity
 1957: nobelium
 1957: Hugh Everett, many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics
 1957: Feynman, Gell-Mann, Marshak, Sudarshan, V-A theory of weak
			interactions
 1957: John Wheeler, pregeometry and space-time foam
 1958: Townes and Schawlow, theory of laser
 1958: Martin Ryle, evidence for evolution of distant cosmological
			radio sources
 1958: Seaborg et al, element 102, nobelium
 1958: Gary Feinberg, predicts that muon neutrino is distinct from
			electron neutrino
 1958: David Finkelstein, resolves the nature of the black hole event
			horizon
 1959: MIT, radar echo from Venus
 1959: Ramsey, Kleppner, Goldenberg, hydrogen maser atomic clock
 1959: Tulio Regge, theory of Regge poles
 1960: Theodore Maiman, ruby laser
 1960: Martin Kruskal, new coordinates to study Schwarzschild black
			hole
 1960: Eugene Wigner, the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics
			in natural science
 1960: Pound and Rebka, measurement of gravitational red-shift
 1960: Matthews and Sandage, optical identification of a quasar
 1961: Sheldon Glashow, introduces neutral intermediate boson of
			electro-weak interactions
 1961: Jeoffrey Goldstone, theory of mass-less particles in
			spontaneous symmetry breaking (Goldstone boson)
 1961: Gell-Mann and Ne'eman, the eightfold way, octet symmetry
			of hadrons
 1961: Robert Dicke, weak anthropic principle
 1961: Robert Hofstadter, necleons have an internal structure
 1961: Ghiorso, Sikkeland, Larsh, Latimer, element 103, lawrencium
 1961: Edward Ohm, prior detection of CMBR, but not identified
 1961: Edward Lorenz, chaos theory
 1961: Yuri Gagarin, first man in space
 1961: Geoffrey Chew, nuclear democracy and the bootstrap model
 1961: Tulio Regge, simplicial lattice general relativity
 1962: Gell-Mann and Ne'eman, prediction of Omega minus particle
 1962: Leith and Upatnieks, first hologram
 1962: Giacconi, Gursky, Paolini, Rossi, detection of cosmic X-rays
 1962: Brian Josephson, theory of Jesephson effect
 1962: Lederman, Steinberger, Schwartz, evidence for more than one
			type of neutrino
 1962: Hogarth, proposes relation between cosmological and
			thermodynamic arrows of time
 1962: Thomas Gold, time-symmetric universe
 1962: Benoit Mandelbrot, fractal images
 1963: Samios et al, Baryon Omega minus found
 1963: Philip Anderson, gauge theories can evade Goldstone theorem
 1963: Roy Kerr, solution for a rotating black hole
 1963: Schmidt, Greensite, Sandage, quasars are distant
 1963: Nicola Cabibbo, weak mixing angle
 1964: Brout, Englert, Higgs, Higgs mechanism of symmetry breaking
 1964: Hoyle, Taylor, Zeldovich, big bang nucleosynthesis of helium
 1964: Steven Weinberg, baryon number is probably not conserved
 1964: Christenson, Cronin, Fitch, Turlay, CP violation in weak
			interactions
 1964: Gell-Mann, Zweig, quark theory of hadrons
 1964: Murray Gell-Mann, current algebra
 1964: Bjorken and Glashow, prediciton of quark flavour symmetry and
			charm
 1964: Roger Penrose, black holes must contain singularities
 1964: Ginzburg, Doroshkevich, Novikov, Zel'dovich, black holes have
			no hair
 1964: Salpeter and Zel'dovich, black holes power quasars and radio
			galaxies
 1964: John Bell, a quantum inequality which limits the possibilities
			for local hidden variable theories
 1964: John Wheeler, foundations of canonical formulism for gravity
 1964: Soviets, element 104, rutherfordium
 1964: Salam, Ward, electro-weak unification
 1965: Thomas Kibble, Higgs mechanism for Yang-Mills theory
 1965: Greenberg, Han, Nambu, quark colour symmetry to explain
			statistics of quark model
 1965: Zabusky and Kruskal, numerical studies of solitons
 1965: Penzias and Wilson, detection of the cosmic background
			radiation
 1965: Dicke, Peebles, Roll, Wilkinson, identification of cosmic
			background radiation
 1965: Rees and Sciama, quasars were more numerable in the past
 1966: X-ray source Cygnus X-1 discovered
 1967: Raymonf Davis, neutrino detector
 1967: Jocelyn Bell, Thomas Gold, pulsars
 1967: Steven Weinberg, electro-weak unification
 1967: Irwin Shapiro, radar measurement of relativistic time delays to
			Mercury
 1967: John Wheeler, introduced the term "black hole"
 1967: Andrei Sakharov, three criteria for cosmological abundance of
			matter over anti-matter
 1967: soviets, element 105, dubnium
 1968: Joseph Weber, first attempt at a gravitational wave detector
 1968: Brandon Carter, strong anthropic principle
 1968: Gabriele Veneziano, dual resonance model for strong
			interaction, beginning of string theory
 1968: James Bjorken, theory of scaling behavior in deep inelastic
			scattering
 1968: Richard Feynman, scaling and parton model of nucleons
 1969: Kendall, Friedman, Taylor, deep inelastic scattering
			experiments find structure inside protons.
 1969: Ellis, Hawking and Penrose, singularity theorems for the big
			bang
 1969: Roger Penrose, conjectures that singularities are hidden by
			cosmic censorship
 1969: Donald Lynden-Bell, black hole at the centre of galactic
			nuclei
 1969: Raymond Davis, solar neutrino detector
 1969: Charles Misner, cosmological horizon problem revisited
 1969: Robert Dicke, cosmological flatness problem
 1969: Neil Armstrong, first man on the moon
 1969: first attempts to verify solar deflection of radio waves from
			quasars
 1969: David Finkelstein, space-time code
 1970: Claude Lovelace, Veneziano amplitude has special properties in
			26 dimensions
 1970: Nambu, Nielsen, Susskind, realization that the dual resonance
			model is string theory
 1970: Goto, Hara, Nambu, action for bosonic string as area of world
			sheet
 1970: Simon Van der Meer, stochastic cooling for particle beams
 1970: Glashow, Iliopoulos, Maiani, GIM mechanism and prediction of
			charm quark
 1970: Stephen Hawking, the surface area of a black hole event
			horizon always increases
 1971: Kenneth Wilson, the operator product expansion and the
			renormalization group for the strong force
 1971: Dimopolous, Fayet, Gol'fand, Lichtman Supersymmetry
 1971: Ramond, Neveu, Schwarz, string theory of bosons and fermions
			with critical dimension 10
 1971: 't Hooft, Veltman, Lee, renormalization of elctro-weak model
 1971: Roger Penrose, spin networks
 1971: Bolton, Murdin, Webster Cygnus X-1 identified as black hole
			candidate
 1972: Jacob Bekenstein, black hole entropy
 1972: Fritsch, Gell-Mann, Bardeen, quantum chromodynamics
 1972: Kirzhnits, Linde, electro-weak phase transition
 1972: Roger Penrose, twistors
 1972: Salam, Pati, unification and proton decay
 1973: Wess and Zumino, space-time supersymmetry
 1973: Ostriker and Peebles, dark matter in galaxies
 1973: CERN, Evidence of weak neutral currents
 1973: 't Hooft, Gross, Politzer, Wilczek, Coleman, theory of
			asymptotic freedom in non-abelian gauge theories
 1973: Klebesadel, Strong, Olson, gamma ray bursts are cosmic
 1973: Edward Tyron, the universe as a quantum fluctuation
 1974: Yoneya, Scherk, Schwarz interpretation of string theory as a
			theory of gravity
 1974: Ting and Richter, found J/psi, charmed quark
 1974: Kenneth Wilson, lattice gauge theory
 1974: Taylor and Hulse, binary pulsar and relativistic effects
 1974: Kobayashi and Maskawa, CKM mixing matrix; CP violation in weak
			interaction requires three generations
 1974: Georgi and Glashow, Grand Unified Theory and
			prediction of proton decay
 1974: Georgi, Weinberg, Quinn, convergence of coupling constants at
			GUT scale
 1974: 't Hooft, Okun, Polyakov, heavy magnetic monopoles exist in
			GUTs.
 1974: Stephen Hawking, black hole
			radiation and thermodynamics
 1974: Soviets and Americans, element 106, seaborgium
 1975: Martin Perl, tau lepton
 1975: Gail Hanson, quark jets
 1975: Chincarini and Rood, lumpiness in galaxy distributions
 1975: Unruh and Davies, acceleration radiation effect
 1975: Mitchell Feigenbaum, universality in chaotic non-linear
			systems
 1975: Belavin, Polyakov, Schwartz, Tyupkin, instantons in Yang-Mills
			theory
 1976: Scherk, Gliozzi, Olive, supersymmetric string theory
 1976: Deser, Freedman, Van Nieuwenhuizen, Ferrara, Zumino, supergravity
 1976: Levine and Vessot, precision test of gravitational time
			dilation on rocket
 1976: Gerard 't Hooft, the instantons solution of the U(1) anomaly
 1976: Soviets element 107, bohrium
 1977: James Elliot, rings of Uranus
 1977: Olive and Montenen, conjecture of elecro-magnetic duality
 1977: Fermilab, bottom quark
 1977: Klaus von Klitzing, quantum Hall effect
 1977: Tifft, Gregory, Joeveer, Einasto, Thompson, clusters chains
			and voids in galaxy distributions
 1977: Berkley, dipole anisotropy on cosmic background radiation
 1977: Leon Lederman, upsilon, bottom quark
 1977: Gunn, Schramm, Steigman, cosmological constraints imply that
			there are only three light neutrinos
 1978: Charon, moon of Pluto
 1978: Taylor and Hulse, evidence for gravitational radiation of
			binary pulsar
 1978: Cremmer, Julia, Nahm, Scherk, 11-dimensional super-gravity
 1978: Prescott, Taylor, elctro-weak effect on electron polarization
 1979: Voyager, rings of Jupiter
 1979: John Preskill, cosmological monopole problem
 1979: Walsh, Carswell, Weymann, quasar doubled by gravitational
			lensing
 1979: DESY, evidence for gluons in hadron jets
 1979: Alexei Starobinsky, inflationary universe
 1980: Frederick Reines, evidence of neutrino oscillations
 1980: DESY, measurement of gluon spin
 1980: Alan Guth, inflationary early universe
 1981: Witten, Schoen, Yau, positive energy theorem in general
			relativity
 1981: Green and Schwarz, Type I superstring theory
 1981: Binnig, Rohrer, scanning tunneling electron microscope
 1981: Witten and Alvarez-Gaume, difficulty of getting standard model
			from 11-D super-gravity because of chiral modes
 1981: Alexander Polyakov Path, integral quantization of strings,
			conformal symmetry and critical dimension
 1981: Linde, Albrecht, Steinhardt, new inflationary universe
 1982: Green and Schwarz, Type II superstring theory
 1982: Alain Aspect, an experiment to confirm non-local aspects of
			quantum theory
 1982: Darnstadt, element 109, meitnerium
 1982: limits on proton lifetime rule out many Grand Unified Theories
 1983: Carlo Rubbia et al, W and Z bosons at CERN
 1983: Andrei Linde, chaotic inflationary universe
 1984: Plate tectonics proved by measurement; 3.6 cm per year between
			Europe and North America
 1984: Green and Schwarz, anomaly cancellations in superstring theory
 1984: Darnstadt element 108, hassium
 1985: Gross, Harvey, Martinec, Rohm, heterotic string theory
 1985: David Deutsch, theory of quantum computing
 1986: Bednorz and Mueller, high temperature superconductivity
 1986: Abhay Ashtekar, new variables for canonical quantum gravity
 1986: Geller, Huchra, Lapparent, bubble structure of galaxy
			distributions
 1987: supernova 1987a visible, neutrinos detected
 1987: Masatoshi Koshibas, detection of neutrinos from a supernova
 1988: Atiyah, Witten, topological quantum field theories
 1988: Smolin and Rovelli, loop representation of quantum gravity
 1989: SLAC, evidence that number of light neutrinos is 3 from Z
			width
 1989: Tim Berners-Lee, The World Wide Web
 1989: Bennett and Brassard, first quantum computer
 1990: John Mather, black body spectrum of cosmic background
			radiation from COBE
 1991: CERN, confirmation that number of light neutrinos is 3
 1991: Connes, Lott, particle models from non-commutative geometry
 1991: BATSE, gamma ray burst distribution is isotropic
 1991: Wolzczan, Frail, exoplanets discovered
 1992: Kuiper Belt objects discovered
 1992: Mather and Smoot, angular fluctuations in cosmic background
			radiation with COBE
 1993: Aspinwall, Morrison, Greene, topology change in string theory
 1994: Philip Gibbs, event-symmetric space-time
 1994: Fermilab, top quark
 1994: 't Hooft, Susskind Holographic principle
 1994: Seiberg and Witten, electro-magnetic duality in supersymmetric
			gauge theory
 1994: Hubble Space Telescope, evidence for black hole at the centre
			of galaxy M87
 1994: Peter Shor, factorization algorithm for a quantum computer
 1994: Hull, Townsend, unity of string dualities
 1994: Darnstadt, element 110
 1995: Witten and Townsend, M-Theory
 1995: Joseph Polchinski, D-Branes
 1995: Cornell, Wieman, Anderson Bose-Einstein condensate of atomic
			gas
 1995: CERN, Creation of Anti-hydrogen atoms
 1995: Mayor and Queloz, first extra-solar planet orbiting an
			ordinary star
 1995: Darnstadt, element 111
 1996: Strominger, Vafa, D-branes and black-holes
 1996: Cumrun Vafa, F-theory
 1996: Steven Lamoreaux, measurement of Casimir force
 1996: Darnstadt, element 112
 1996: Banks, Fischler, Shenker, Susskind, M-theory as a matrix model
 1997: BepoSAX, location of gamma ray bursts demonstrates that they
			are extragalactic
 1997: Juan Maldacena, AdS/CFT duality
 1997: SLAC, photon-photon scattering produces electron-positron
			pairs
 1998: Perlmutter, Garnavich et al, supernovae observations suggest
			that the expansion of the universe is accelerating
 1998: Super-Kamiokande, neutrino oscillation demonstrated
 1998: CERN, Fermilab, time reversal assymetry observed for K meson
			decay
 2000: Fermilab, tau neutrino observed
 2012: CERN demonstrates existence of Higgs bososn
 
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