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The year 1952 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Biology

  • August 1 – Around 9 o'clock AM Pacific Time Zone, the San Benedicto rock wren goes extinct as its island home is smothered in a massive volcanic eruption.
  • August 14 – Alan Turing's paper "The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis" is published, putting forward a reaction–diffusion hypothesis of pattern formation, considered a seminal piece of work in morphogenesis.
  • August 28 – Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley publish the Hodgkin–Huxley model of action potentials in neurons of the squid giant axon.
  • September 20 – Publication of the paper on the Hershey–Chase experiment showing conclusively that DNA, not protein, is the genetic material of bacteriophages.
  • October – Danish virologist Preben von Magnus publishes his observation of the von Magnus phenomenon producing defective interfering particles.
  • Biochemists Jack Gross and Rosalind Pitt-Rivers discover the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine.
  • The Braeburn apple cultivar is discovered as a chance seedling in New Zealand.
  • Last confirmed sighting of the Caribbean monk seal, at Serranilla Bank, between Jamaica and Nicaragua.

Chemistry

  • Soviet scientists L. V. Radushkevich and V. M. Lukyanovich publish images of carbon nanotubes.

Computer science

  • The first autocode and its compiler are developed by Alick Glennie for the Manchester Mark 1 computer, considered as the first working high-level compiled programming language.

History of science

  • Discovery by Derek J. de Solla Price of a lost medieval scientific work entitled Equatorie of the Planetis, initially attributed to Geoffrey Chaucer.

Mathematics

  • John Forbes Nash Jr. produces groundbreaking work in the area of real algebraic geometry.
  • The Bradley–Terry model in probability theory is presented.

Medicine

  • February 6 – A mechanical heart is used for the first time in a human patient, in the United States.
  • March 1 – The British Psychological Society is founded.
  • April 26 – The link between coeliac disease and the gluten element of wheat is published by a team at the University of Birmingham (England).
  • September 2 – The first successful operation to correct a cardiac shunt ("hole in the heart") is performed by Drs F. John Lewis and C. Walton Lillehei on a 5-year-old girl in the United States utilising the induced hypothermia technique developed by Wilfred Gordon "Bill" Bigelow.
  • November – Royal College of General Practitioners established in the United Kingdom.
  • November 20 – The first successful sex reassignment surgery is performed in Copenhagen, making George Jorgensen Jr. become Christine Jorgensen.
  • December 14 – The first successful surgical separation of conjoined twins is conducted in Mount Sinai Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio.
  • December – Robert Gwyn Macfarlane and colleagues publish the first identification of Haemophilia B.
  • American obstetrical anesthesiologist Dr. Virginia Apgar devises the Apgar score as a simple replicable method of quickly and summarily assessing the health of babies immediately after childbirth.
  • American orthopedic surgeon Armin Klein publishes Klein's line as a diagnostic tool.
  • Jean Delay, head of psychiatry at Sainte-Anne Hospital, Paris, with Jean-François Buisson, reports the antidepressant effect of isoniazid.

Physics

  • November 1 – Nuclear testing: Operation Ivy – The United States successfully detonates the first hydrogen device, codenamed "Ivy Mike" ["m" for megaton], at Eniwetok island in the Bikini Atoll located in the Pacific Ocean. The elements einsteinium and fermium are discovered in the fallout.
  • Geoffrey Dummer proposes the integrated circuit.

Technology

  • September 30 – The Cinerama widescreen film system, developed by Fred Waller, debuts with the movie This Is Cinerama at the Broadway Theatre in New York City.
  • October 7 – The barcode is patented in the United States by Norman J. Woodland and Bernard Silver, though it does not make its first appearance in an American shop until 1974.

Awards

  • Nobel Prizes
  • Physics – Felix Bloch, Edward Mills Purcell
  • Chemistry – Archer John Porter Martin, Richard Laurence Millington Synge
  • Medicine – Selman Abraham Waksman

Births

  • February 2 – Ralph Merkle, American computer scientist, co-inventor of public-key cryptography.
  • February 15 – Frances Ashcroft, English geneticist.
  • February 19 – Marcia McNutt, American geophysicist, science editor, and president of the National Academy of Sciences.
  • February 28 – Simon P. Norton (died 2019), English mathematician, co-discoverer of 'monstrous moonshine'.
  • March 24 – Reinhard Genzel, German astrophysicist, Nobel Prize in Physics, co-discovererer of black holes.
  • March 26 – Gary Ruvkun, American molecular biologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
  • July 15 – Ann Dowling, English mechanical engineer.
  • August 14 – Peter Fonagy, Hungarian-born British psychoanalyst and clinical psychologist.
  • August 25 – Charles M. Rice, American virologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, co-discovererer of the hepatitis C virus.
  • Venki Ramakrishnan, Indian-born American-British structural biologist.

Deaths

  • March 5 – Sir Charles Sherrington (born 1857), English neurophysiologist and bacteriologist, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1932.
  • April 2 – Bernard Lyot (born 1897), French astronomer.
  • April 8 – Tadeusz Estreicher (born 1871), Polish chemist.
  • June 17 – Jack Parsons (born 1914), American rocket engineer and occultist.
  • September 5 – Hermann Stieve (born 1886), German anatomist and histologist.
  • November 2 – Chaim Weizmann (born 1874), Belarusian-born chemist, first President of Israel.
  • November 24 – André Rochon-Duvigneaud (born 1863), French ophthalmologist.
  • December 4 – Karen Horney (born 1885), German American psychoanalyst.
  • December 19 – Colonel Sir Charles Arden-Close (born 1865), British cartographer.

Notes