Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/1954-in-science

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1954 in science

none


none

The year 1954 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Astronomy

  • November 30 – In Sylacauga, Alabama, an 8.5 pound sulfide meteorite crashes through a roof and hits Mrs. Elizabeth Hodges in her living room after bouncing off her radio, giving her a bad bruise; the first known modern case of a human being hit by a space rock.

Biology

  • January 10 – Last confirmed specimen of a Caspian tiger is killed, in the valley of the Sumbar River in the Kopet Dag Mountains of Turkmenistan.
  • Daniel I. Arnon demonstrates in the laboratory the chemical function of photosynthesis in chloroplasts.
  • Heinz Sielmann makes the pioneering nature documentary about woodpeckers, Zimmerleute des Waldes ("Carpenters of the forest").
  • Eduard Paul Tratz and Heinz Heck propose the species name bonobo for what was previously known as the pygmy chimpanzee.

Chemistry

  • Publication of the first analysis of the three-dimensional molecular structure of vitamin B12 by a group including Dorothy Hodgkin, and utilising computer analysis provided by Kenneth Nyitray Trueblood.
  • Strychnine total synthesis is first achieved in the laboratory by Robert Burns Woodward's team at Harvard.
  • The Wittig reaction is discovered by German chemist Georg Wittig.

Computer science

  • January – The TRADIC Phase One computer is completed at Bell Labs in the United States, a candidate to be regarded as the first transistor computer.
  • January 7 – Georgetown–IBM experiment: the first public demonstration of a machine translation system held in New York at the head office of IBM.

Geology

  • December 31 – The first specimens of the mineral benstonite are collected by Orlando J. Benston in the Magnet Cove igneous complex of Arkansas.

History of science

  • Joseph Needham begins publication of Science and Civilisation in China (Cambridge University Press).
  • A History of Technology, edited by Charles Singer, E. J. Holmyard and A. R. Hall, begins publication (Oxford University Press).

Mathematics

  • January 6 – The Luhn algorithm, devised by IBM information scientist Hans Peter Luhn, is described in a United States patent.
  • Klaus Roth publishes a paper laying the foundations for modern discrepancy theory.
  • Leonard Jimmie Savage publishes Foundations of Statistics, promoting Bayesian statistics.

Medicine

  • February 23 – The first mass vaccination of children against polio begins, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
  • August 10 – British epidemiologist Richard Doll submits a study on the risk to workers in asbestos manufacture of mortality from lung cancer.
  • The first organ transplants are done in Boston and Paris.
    • December 23 – Joseph Murray at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston carries out the first successful kidney transplant, between identical twins.
  • The first of the anti-psychotic phenothiazine drugs, Chlorpromazine, starts being sold under the trade names Thorazine (U.S.) and Largactil (U.K.)
  • The sucrose gap is introduced by Robert Stämpfli for the reliable measurement of action potential in nerve fibers.

Metrology

  • 10th General Conference on Weights and Measures proposes the six original SI base units.
  • Alexander Macmillan publishes the "Macmillan correction" to account for errors in the calculation of velocity of an object moving along a gradient due to viscous effects and wall proximity.

Physics

  • January 2 – Harold Hopkins and Narinder Singh Kapany at Imperial College London report achieving low-loss light transmission through a 75 cm long optical fiber bundle.
  • March 1 – Castle Bravo: United States carries out a thermonuclear weapon test on Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean.
  • September 29 – CERN is founded by twelve European states.
  • First tokamak built, in the Soviet Union.

Psychology

  • Summer – Robbers Cave Experiment carried out by Muzafer and Carolyn Sherif.
  • Man Meets Dog is published by Konrad Lorenz.

Technology

  • June 26 – Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant, the first civilian nuclear power station, is commissioned in the Soviet Union.
  • June 29 – Buckminster Fuller is granted a United States patent for his development of the geodesic dome.
  • September 30 – The submarine , the first atomic-powered vessel, is commissioned by the United States Navy.
  • October 18 – Texas Instruments announces development of the first commercial transistor radio, the Regency TR-1, manufactured in Indianapolis; it goes on sale the following month.
  • December 16 – The first synthetic diamond is produced.
  • New Zealand engineer Sir William Hamilton develops the first pump-jet engine (the "Hamilton Jet") capable of propelling a jetboat.
  • The first electric drip brew coffeemaker is patented in Germany and named the Wigomat after its inventor Gottlob Widmann.
  • Staley T. McBrayer invents the Vanguard web offset press for newspaper printing in Fort Worth, Texas.
  • The angle grinder is invented by German company Ackermann + Schmitt (Flex-Elektrowerkzeuge).

Awards

  • Fields Prize in Mathematics: Kunihiko Kodaira and Jean-Pierre Serre, the latter being the youngest-ever winner, at age 27
  • Nobel Prizes
    • Physics – Max Born and Walther Bothe
    • Chemistry – Linus Pauling
    • Medicine – John Franklin Enders, Thomas Huckle Weller and Frederick Chapman Robbins

Births

  • January 16 – Morten P. Meldal, Danish Nobel Chemistry laureate, 2022.
  • February 9 – Kevin Warwick, English scientist, author of March of the Machines.
  • March – Clare Marx, English surgeon.
  • May 14 – Peter J. Ratcliffe, English cellular biologist, Nobel Medicine laureate, 2019.
  • June 20 – Ilan Ramon (died 2003), Israeli astronaut.
  • July 11 – Julia King, English materials engineer.
  • July 17 – Angela Kasner, German physical chemist and Chancellor.
  • August 28 – George M. Church, American geneticist, molecular engineer and chemist.
  • September 5 – Myeong-Hee Yu, South Korean microbiologist.
  • November 1 – Graham Colditz, Australian-born epidemiologist.
  • November 7 – Vijay Kumar, Indian molecular biologist.
  • Pat Hanrahan, American computer scientist.
  • George McGavin, Scottish entomologist.
  • Huda Zoghbi, Lebanese-born geneticist.

Deaths

  • January 17 – Leonard Eugene Dickson (born 1874), American mathematician.
  • March 7
    • Otto Diels (born 1876), German Nobel Chemistry laureate, 1950.
    • Ludwik Hirszfeld (born 1884), Polish microbiologist and serologist.
  • April 10 – Auguste Lumière (born 1862), French inventor, film pioneer.
  • April 21 – Emil Post (born 1897), American mathematician and logician.
  • June 7 – Alan Turing (born 1912), English mathematician and computer scientist (probable suicide).
  • July 11 – Henry Valentine Knaggs (born 1859), English practitioner of naturopathic medicine.
  • October 3 – Vera Gaze (born 1899), Soviet Russian astronomer.
  • October 8 – Dimitrie Pompeiu (born 1873), Romanian mathematician.
  • November 29 – Enrico Fermi (born 1901), Italian American physicist.

References

References

  1. Dement'yev and Rustamov. (1985). "The Red Data Book of Turkmenistan". Turkmenistan Publishing House.
  2. (1954). "Photosynthesis by Isolated Chloroplasts". [[Nature (journal).
  3. Laurence, William L.. (December 30, 1954). "Sun is Harnessed to Create Food: Science Team on the Coast Duplicates Photosynthesis Outside Plants' Cells". The New York Times.
  4. (2002). "Tree of Origin: What Primate Behavior Can Tell Us About Human Social Evolution". Harvard University Press.
  5. (December 25, 1954). "X-ray Crystallographic Evidence on the Structure of Vitamin B12". [[Nature (journal).
  6. Glusker, Jenny P.. (1994). "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994)". [[Protein Science]].
  7. Nicolaou, K. C.; Sorensen, E. J. (1996). ''Classics in Total Synthesis: Targets, Strategies, Methods''. Wiley. {{ISBN. 978-3-527-29231-8.
  8. Nicolaou, K. C.; Vourloumis, Dionisios; Winssinger, Nicolas; Baran, Phil S.. (2000). "The Art and Science of Total Synthesis at the Dawn of the Twenty-First Century". [[Angewandte Chemie International Edition]].
  9. (2000). "Synthesis of Strychnine". [[Chemical Reviews]].
  10. Proudfoot, John R.. (2013). "Reaction Schemes Visualized in Network Form: The Syntheses of Strychnine as an Example". Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling.
  11. Irvine, M. M.. (2001). "Early Digital Computers at Bell Telephone Laboratories". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing.
  12. "Benstonite". Mindat.
  13. [https://patents.google.com/patent/US2950048A/ No. 2,950,048.]
  14. Roth, K. F.. (1954). "On irregularities of distribution". [[Mathematika]].
  15. Doll, Richard. (1955). "Mortality from lung cancer in asbestos workers". British Journal of Industrial Medicine.
  16. (December 29, 2010). "Donor Of First Successful Organ Transplant Dies 56 Years Later". [[The Huffington Post]].
  17. Stämpfli, R.. (1954). "A new method for measuring membrane potentials with external electrodes". [[Experientia]].
  18. Akert, K.. (August 1996). "Swiss Contributions to the Neurosciences in Four Hundred Years: From the Renaissance to the Present". Verlag der Fachvereine Hochschulverlag AG an der ETH Zurich.
  19. (1954). "A flexible fibrescope, using static scanning". [[Nature (journal).
  20. (2008). "1954: foundations for European science". CERN.
  21. Reshetov, V.. (2013-11-13). "An ocean of energy".
  22. Sherif, M.. (1961). "Intergroup Conflict and Cooperation: The Robbers Cave Experiment". University Book Exchange.
  23. (December 2011). "Nuclear Power in Russia". [[World Nuclear Association]].
  24. [https://www.google.com/search?q=2682235&tbm=pts U.S. patent 2,682,235.]
  25. (1955). "Man-made diamonds". Nature.
  26. (2007). "Sir William Hamilton OBE". HamiltonJet.
  27. "Sixty years of the Federal Republic of Germany – a retrospective of everyday life".
  28. (2002-04-18). "Staley McBrayer, 92; Inventor of Offset Press for Newspaper Printing". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  29. (2022-10-05). "Press release: The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2022". The Nobel Prize.
  30. "Alan Turing {{!}} Biography, Facts, & Education".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1954 in science — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report