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1740 in science
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The year 1740 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Mathematics
- Jean Paul de Gua de Malves publishes his work of analytic geometry, .
Metallurgy
- Benjamin Huntsman develops the technique of crucible steel production at Handsworth, South Yorkshire, England.
Physics
- Jacques-Barthélemy Micheli du Crest creates a spirit thermometer, making use of two fixed points, 0 for "Temperature of earth" based on a cave at Paris Observatory and 100 for the heat of boiling water.
- Émilie du Châtelet publishes Institutions de Physique, including a demonstration that the energy of a moving object is proportional to the square of its velocity (Ek = mv²).
- Louis Bertrand Castel publishes L'Optique des couleurs in Paris, including the observation that the colours of white light split by a prism depend on distance from the prism.
Technology
- Henry Hindley of Yorkshire invents a device to cut the teeth of clock wheels.
Awards
- Copley Medal: Alexander Stuart
Births
- February 17 – Horace Bénédict de Saussure, Genevan pioneer of Alpine studies (died 1799)
- March 28 (bapt.) – James Small, Scottish inventor (died 1793)
- June 27 – John Latham, English physician and naturalist, "grandfather of Australian ornithology" (died 1837)
- July 1 – Franz-Joseph Müller von Reichenstein, Austrian mineralogist and discoverer of tellurium (died 1825)
- August 26 – Joseph Michel Montgolfier, French pioneer balloonist (died 1810)
- September 29 – Thomas Percival, English reforming physician and medical ethicist (died 1804)
- December 24 – Anders Johan Lexell, Finnish-Swedish astronomer and mathematician (died 1784)
- unknown – William Smellie, Scottish naturalist and encyclopedist (died 1795)
Deaths
- March 23 – Olof Rudbeck the Younger, Swedish naturalist (born 1660).
References
References
- Smiles, Samuel. (1879). "Industrial Biography".
- Hutton, Charles. (1815). "A Philosophical and Mathematical Dictionary: Volume 2". S. Hamilton.
- Williams, Hywel. (2005). "Cassell's Chronology of World History". Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
- "Copley Medal {{!}} British scientific award".
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