Inventions & Discoveries
Inventions & Discoveries
Inventions & Discoveries
Airship : Henri Giffard, France, 1852; Ferdinand von Zeppelin, Germany, 1900.
Atomic Structure : Ernest Rutherford, England, 1911; Niels Bohr, Denmark, 1913.
Boyle’s Law : (relation between pressure and volume in gases) Robert Boyle, Ireland, 1662.
Braille : Louis Braille, France, 1829.
Bridges : (suspension, iron chains) James Finley, Pa., 1800; (wire suspension) Marc Seguin,
Lyons, 1825; (truss) Ithiel Town, U.S.A., 1820.
Calculating Machine : (logarithms) John Napierm Scotland, 1614; (digital calculator) Blaise
Pascal, 1642
Circuit, Integrated : (theoretical) G.W.A. Dummer, England, 1952; Jack S. Kilby, Texas
Instruments, U.S.A., 1959.
Compact Disk (CD) : Philips Electronics, The Netherlands; Sony Corp., Japan, 1980.
Computed Tomography (CT scan, CAT scan) : Godfrey Hounsfield, Allan Cormack, U.K. U.S.A.,
1972
D
DDT : Othmar Zeidler, Germany, 1874.
Electric Generator (dynamo) : (laboratory model) Michael Faraday, England, 1832; Joseph
Henry, U.S.A., c.1832; (hand-driven model) Hippolyte Pixii, France, 1833; (alternating-current
generator) Nikola Tesla, U.S.A., 1892.
Evolution : : (organic) Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, France, 1809; (by natural selection) Charles
Darwin, England, 1859.
Helicopter : (double rotor) Heinrich Focke, Germany, 1936; (single rotor) Igor Silorsky, U.S.A.,
1939.
Home Videotape Systems (VCR) : (Betamax) Sony, Japan, (1975); (VHS) Matsushita, Japan,
1975.
Insulin : (first isolated) Sir Frederick G. Banting and Charles H. Best, Canada, 1921; (discovery
first published) Banting and Best, 1922; (Nobel Prize awarded for purification for use in humans)
John Macleod and Banting, 1923; (first synthesized), China, 1966.
Internet : Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) at the Dept. of Defense, U.S.A., 1969.
Jet Propulsion : (engine) Sir Frank Whittle, England, Hans von Ohain, Germany, 1936; (aircraft)
Heinkel He 178, 1939.
Laser : (theoretical work on) Charles H. Townes, Arthur L. Schawlow, U.S.A. Basov, A.
Prokhorov, U.S.S.R., 1958; (first working model) T. H. Maiman, U.S.A., 1960.
Light, Speed of : (theory that light has finite velocity) Olaus Roemer, Denmark, 1675.
Locomotive : (steam powered) Richard Trevithick, England, 1804; (first practical, due to
multiple-fire-tube boiler) George Stephenson, England, 1829; (largest steam-powered) Union
Pacific’s “Big Boy”, U.S.A., 1941.
Machine Gun : (multibarrel) Richard J. Gatling, U.S.A., 1862; (single barrel, belt-fed) Hiram S.
Maxim, Anglo-American, 1884.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) : Raymond Damadian, Paul Lauterbur, U.S.A., early 1970s.
Motion Pictures, Sound : Product of various inventions. First picture with synchronized musical
score : Don Juan, 1926; with spoken diologue : The Jazz Singer, 1927; both Warner Bros.
Motor, Electric : Michael Faraday, England, 1822; (alternating-current) Nikola Tesla, U.S.A.,
1892.
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Neutron : James Chadwick, England, 1932.
Pen : (fountain) Lewis E. Waterman, U.S.A., 1884; (ball-point) John H. Loud, U.S.A., 1888; Lazlo
Biro, Argentina, 1944.
Photography : (first paper negative, first photograph, on metal) Joseph Nicephore Niepce,
France, 1816-1827; (discovery of fixative powers of hyposulfite of soda) Sir John Herschel,
England, 1819; (first direct positive image on silver plate) Louis Dagauerre, based on work with
Niepce, France, 1839; (first paper negative from which a number of positive prints could be
made) William Talbot, England, 1841. Work of these four men, taken together, forms basis for all
modern photography. (First color images) Alexandre Becquerel, Claude Niepce de Saint-Victor,
France, 1848-1860; (commercial color film with three emulsion layers, Kodachrome) U.S.A.
1935.
Photovoltaic Effect : (light falling on certain materials can produce electricity) Edmund
Becquerel, France, 1839.
Planetary Motion, Laws of : Johannes Kepler, Germany, 1609, 1619.
Polio, Vaccine : (experimentally safe dead-virus vaccine) Jonas E. Salk, U.S.A., 1952; (effective
large-scale field trials) 1954; (officially approved) 1955; (safe oral live-virus vaccine developed)
Albert B. Sabin, U.S.A. 1954; (available in the U.S.A.) 1960.
Quantum Theory : (general) Max Planck, Germany, 1900; (sub-atomic) Niels Bohr, Denmark,
1913; (quantum mechanics) Werner Heisenberg, Erwin Schrodinger, Germany, 1925.
Radar : (limited range) Christian Hulsmeyer, Germany, 1904; (pulse modulation, used for
measuring height of ionosphere) Gregory Breit, Merle Tuve, U.S.A., 1925; (first practical radar
radio detection and ranging) Sir Robert Watson-Watt, England, 1934-1935.
Radio : (electromagnetism theory of) James Clerk Maxwell, England, 1873; (spark coil, generator
of electromagnetic waves) Heinrich Hertz, Germany, 1886; (first practical system of wireless
telegraphy) Guglielmo Marconi, Italy, 1895; (first long-distance telegraphic radio signal sent
across the Atlantic) Macroni, 1901; (vacuum electron tube, basis for radio telephony) Sir John
Fleming, England, 1904; (regenerative circuit, allowing long-distance sound reception) Edwin H.
Armstrong, U.S.A., 1912; (frequency modulation-FM) Edwin H. Armstrong, U.S.A., 1933.
Radiocarbon Dating, Carbon-14 Method : (discovered) Willard F. Libby, U.S.A., 1947; (first
demonstrated) U.S.A., 1950.
Razor : (safety) King Gillette, U.S.A., 1901; (electric) Jacob Schick, U.S.A., 1928, 1931.
Refrigerator : Alexander Twining, U.S.A., James Harrison, Australia, 1850; (first with a
compressor) the Domelse, Chicago, U.S.A., 1913.
Sewing Machine : Elias Howe, U.S.A., 1846; (continuous stitch) Isaac Singer, U.S.A., 1851.
Steam Engine : Thomas Savery, England, 1639; (atmospheric steam engine) Thomas Newcomen,
England, 1705; (steam engine for pumping water from collieries) Savery, Newcomen, 1725;
(modern condensing, double acting) James Watt, England, 1782; (high-pressure) Oliver Evans,
U.S.A., 1804.
Telescope : Hans Lippershey, The Netherlands, 1608; (astronomical) Galileo Galilei, Italy, 1609;
(reflecting) Isaac Newton, England, 1668.
Television : Vladimir Zworykin, U.S.A., 1923, and also kinescope (cathode ray tube) 1928;
(mechanical disk-scanning method) successfully demaonstrated by J. L. Baird, Scotland, C. F.
Jenkins, U.S.A., 1926; (first all-electric television image) Philo T. Famsworth, U.S.A., 1927;
(color, mechanical disk) Baird, 1928; (color, compatible with black and white) George
Valensi, France, 1938; (color, sequential rotating filter) Peter Goldmark, U.S.A., first introduced,
1951; (color, compatible with black and white) commercially introduced in U.S.A., National
Television Systems committee, 1953.
Thermodynamics : (first law : energy cannot be created or destroyed, only converted from one
from to another) Julius Von Mayer, Germany, 1842; James Joule, England, 1843; (second law :
heat cannot itself pass from a colder to a warmer body) Rudolph Clausius, Germany, 1850; (third
law : the entropy of ordered solids reaches zero at the absolute zero of temperature) Walter
Nernstm Germany, 1918.
Thermometer : (open-column) Galileo Galilei, c.1593; (clinical) Santorio Santorio, Padua, c.1615;
(mercury, also Fahrenheit scale) Gabriel D. Fahrenheit, Germany, 1714; (centigrade scale)
Anders Celsius, Sweden, 1742; (absolute-temperature, or Kelvin, scale) William Thompson, Lord
Kelvin, England, 1848.
Tire, Pneumatic : Robert W. Thompson, England, 1845; (bicycle tire) John B. Dunlop, Northern
Ireland, 1888.
Vitamins : (hypothesis of disease deficiency) Sir F. G. Hopkins, Casimir Funk, England, 1912;
(vitamin A) Elmer V. McCollum, M. Davis, U.S.A., 1912-1914; (vitamin B) McCollum, U.S.A.,
1915-1916; (thiamin B1) Casimir Funk, England, 1912; ( riboflavin, B2) D. T. Smith, E. G.
Hendrick, U.S.A., 1926; (niacin) Conrad Elvehjem, U.S.A., 1937; (B6) Paul Gyorgy, U.S.A., 1934;
(vitamin C) C. A. Hoist, T. Froelich, Norway, 1912; (vitamin D) McCollum, U.S.A., 1922; (folic acid)
Lucy Wills, England, 1933.
World Wide Web : (developed while working at CERN) Tim Berners-Lee, England, 1989;
(development of Mosaic browser makes WWW available for general use) Marc Andreeson,
U.S.A., 1993.
Zero : India, c.600; (absolute zero temperature, cessation of all molecular energy) William
Thompson, Lord Kelvin, England, 1848.