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The year 1946 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Astronomy[edit]

Biology[edit]

  • November 10 – Peter Scott opens the Slimbridge Wetland Reserve in England.
  • December 2 – The International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling is signed in Washington, D.C. to "provide for the proper conservation of whale stocks and thus make possible the orderly development of the whaling industry" through establishment of the International Whaling Commission.
  • Karl von Frisch publishes "Die Tänze der Bienen" ("The dances of the bees").[2]
  • Edmund Jaeger discovers and later documents, in The Condor,[3] a state of extended torpor, approaching hibernation, in a bird, the common poorwill.[4]

Cartography[edit]

  • The Chamberlin trimetric projection is developed in 1946 by Wellman Chamberlin for the National Geographic Society.[5]

Computer science[edit]

  • February 14–15 – ENIAC, the first non-classified all-electronic Turing complete computer, built under the direction of J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly, is announced and dedicated at the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical Engineering.[6] It is programmable by plugboard and uses conditional branching.
  • December 11 – Frederick Williams receives a patent for a random-access memory device.[7]

Earth sciences[edit]

  • Arthur Holmes estimates the age of the Earth, using uranium–lead dating.

Medicine[edit]

  • July 14 – Dr. Benjamin Spock's The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care is first published in New York; it becomes one of the biggest best-sellers of all time.[8]
  • Harold Gillies begins to perform sex reassignment surgery on Michael Dillon, including the first phalloplasty for a trans man.[9]
  • Chance Brothers of Smethwick, England, produce the first all-glass syringe with interchangeable barrel and plunger, allowing easy mass-sterilisation of components.
  • Alfred Gilman, with Frederick S. Philips, first publish the results of trials of anti-cancer chemotherapy, using mechlorethamine, carried out with Louis S. Goodman.[10][11]

Physics[edit]

  • January 1 – Atomic Energy Research Establishment established at Harwell, Oxfordshire under John Cockcroft.
  • May 21 – Manhattan Project physicist Louis Slotin accidentally triggers a fission reaction at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and gives himself a lethal dose of hard radiation, making him the second victim of a criticality accident in history.
  • The BBGKY hierarchy of equations for s-particle distribution functions is applied to the derivation of kinetic equations by Nikolay Bogolyubov in a paper received in July 1945 and published in 1946 in Russian[12] and in English.[13] The related kinetic transport theory is considered by John Gamble Kirkwood in a paper[14] received in October 1945 and published in March 1946. The first paper by Max Born and Herbert S. Green considering a general kinetic theory of liquids is received in February 1946 and published on 31 December 1946.[15]

Awards[edit]

  • Nobel Prizes[16]
    • Physics – Percy Williams Bridgman
    • Chemistry – James B. Sumner, John Howard Northrop, Wendell Meredith Stanley
    • Medicine – Hermann Joseph Muller

Births[edit]

  • February 26 – Ahmed Zewail (died 2016), Egyptian-born "father of femtochemistry", recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • May 11 – Robert Jarvik, American co-inventor of the Jarvik-7 artificial heart
  • June 13 – Paul L. Modrich, American biochemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • June 24 – Ellison Onizuka (killed 1986), American astronaut
  • July 2 – Richard Axel, American physiologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • August 2 – Nigel Hitchin, English mathematician
  • August 5 – Shirley Ann Jackson, African American physicist
  • August 11 – Marilyn vos Savant, American polymath
  • September 7 – Francisco Varela (died 2001), Chilean-born biologist and philosopher
  • September 8 – Aziz Sancar, Turkish biochemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
  • September 28 – Morinobu Endo, Japanese chemist
  • October 14 – Kay Redfield Jamison, American clinical psychologist
  • October 17 – Carol Dweck, American social psychologist
  • December 31 – Roy Porter (died 2002), English medical historian
  • Faiza Al-Kharafi, Kuwaiti electrochemist

Deaths[edit]

  • March 8 – Frederick W. Lanchester (born 1868), English automotive engineer.
  • March 23 – Gilbert N. Lewis (born 1875), American chemist; first to isolate deuterium.
  • March 26 – Gerhard Heilman (born 1859), Danish paleo-ornithologist.
  • May 2 – Simon Flexner (born 1863), American pathologist and bacteriologist.
  • June 14 – John Logie Baird (born 1888), Scottish-born inventor.
  • August 13 – H. G. Wells (born 1866), English novelist and scientific populariser.
  • September 16 – James Jeans (born 1877), English mathematician and scientist.
  • October 2 – Ignacy Mościcki (born 1867), chemist and President of Poland.
  • October 4 – Barney Oldfield (born 1878), American automobile racer.
  • December 2 – Hilda Lyon (born 1896), English aeronautical engineer.
  • Israel Aharoni (born 1882), Russian-born Jewish zoologist.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Daly, Reginald A. (1946). "Origin of the Moon and Its Topography". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 90 (2): 104–19. JSTOR 3301051.
  2. ^ Österreichische Zoologische Zeitschrift 1: pp. 1–48.
  3. ^ Jaeger, Edmund C. (May–June 1949). "Further Observations on the Hibernation of the Poor-will". The Condor. 3. 51 (3): 105–109. doi:10.2307/1365104. ISSN 0010-5422. JSTOR 1365104. OCLC 478309773. Earlier I gave an account (Condor, 50, 1948:45) of the behavior of a Poor-will (Phalaenoptilus nuttallinii) which I found in a state of profound torpidity in the winter of 1946–47 in the Chuckawalla Mountains of the Colorado Desert, California. (photographs by Kenneth Middleham)
  4. ^ Hiltner, Nita (2011-02-20). "A Look Back". The Press-Enterprise. Riverside, California: Enterprise Media. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  5. ^ Chamberlin, Wellman (1947). The Round Earth on Flat Paper: Map Projections Used by Cartographers. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society. ASIN B000WTCPXE.
  6. ^ "1946." Britannica.
  7. ^ "Computing timeline". The Centre for Computing History. Retrieved 2012-01-29.
  8. ^ Meisol, Patricia (17 March 1998). "Echoes from the baby boom appreciation: for 50 years, parents turned to the book by Dr. Benjamin Spock for the most common-sense advice about raising children". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  9. ^ Roach, Mary (2007-03-18). "Girls Will Be Boys". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012. Retrieved 2007-03-25.
  10. ^ Gilman, Alfred; Philips, Frederick S. (5 April 1946). "The Biological Actions and Therapeutic Applications of the Β-Chloroethyl Amines and Sulfides". Science. 103 (2675): 409–15, 436. Bibcode:1946Sci...103..409G. doi:10.1126/science.103.2675.409. JSTOR 1673195. PMID 17751251.
  11. ^ Gilman, Alfred (1963). "The Initial Clinical Trial of Nitrogen Mustard". American Journal of Surgery. 105 (5): 574–578. doi:10.1016/0002-9610(63)90232-0. PMID 13947966.
  12. ^ Bogoliubov, N. N. (1946). "Kinetic Equations". Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Physics. 16 (8): 691–702.
  13. ^ Bogoliubov, N. N. (1946). "Kinetic Equations". Journal of Physics USSR. 10 (3): 265–274.
  14. ^ Kirkwood, John G. (March 1946). "The Statistical Mechanical Theory of Transport Processes I. General Theory". Journal of Chemical Physics. 14 (3): 180. Bibcode:1946JChPh..14..180K. doi:10.1063/1.1724117.
  15. ^ Born, M.; Green, H. S. (31 December 1946). "A General Kinetic Theory of Liquids I. The Molecular Distribution Functions". Proceedings of the Royal Society A. 188: 10–18. Bibcode:1946RSPSA.188...10B. doi:10.1098/rspa.1946.0093.
  16. ^ "Nobel Laureates 1946." Archived 2010-01-09 at the Wayback Machine Nobelprize.