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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 B<sub>12</sub> 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&nbsp;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.
  • July 28 – Gerd Faltings, German mathematician.
  • 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