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The year 1966 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Astronomy and space exploration

  • February 3 – The unmanned Soviet Luna 9 spacecraft makes the first controlled rocket-assisted landing on the Moon.
  • March 1 – Venera 3 Soviet space probe crashes on Venus becoming the first spacecraft to land on another planet's surface.
  • March 16 – NASA spacecraft Gemini 8 (David Scott, Neil Armstrong) conducts the first docking in space, with an Agena target vehicle.
  • March 17 – Soviet Vostok-2 rocket serial U15001-09 carrying reconnaissance satellite Kosmos 112 is the first orbital launch from Plesetsk Cosmodrome.
  • March 31 – The Soviet Union launches Luna 10 which later becomes the first spacecraft to enter orbit around the Moon.
  • April 3 – Luna 10 is the first manmade object to enter lunar orbit.
  • May 25 – Explorer program: Satellite Explorer 32 (Atmosphere Explorer-B) is launched from the United States.
  • July 18 – Gemini 10 (John Young, Michael Collins) is launched from the United States. After docking with an Agena target vehicle, the astronauts then set a world altitude record of 474 miles (763&nbsp;km).
  • August 10 – Lunar Orbiter 1, the first U.S. spacecraft to orbit the Moon, is launched.
  • November 17 – Notable display of the Leonids over the Americas.
  • December 15 – Janus, one of the moons of Saturn, is identified by Audouin Dollfus (it had been first photographed on October 29).
  • December 18 – Epimetheus, another of the moons of Saturn, is discovered, but mistaken for Janus which shares its orbit and they are not distinguished until 1978.
  • Mullard Space Science Laboratory established in England.

Biology

  • The first live specimen of a mountain pygmy possum (Burramys parvus), Australia's only truly hibernating marsupial, previously known only from the fossil record, is discovered.
  • German entomologist Willi Hennig's Phylogenetic Systematics is published in English, advancing the study of cladistics.

Computer science

  • September 1 – While waiting at a bus stop Ralph H. Baer, an inventor with Sanders Associates in the United States, writes a four-page document that lays out the basic principles for creating a video game to be played on a television: the beginning of a multibillion-dollar industry.
  • Martin Richards designs the BCPL programming language.
  • Roger MacGowan and Frederick Ordway first suggest the concept of machine superorganisms in Intelligence in the Universe.

Earth science

  • Walter C. Pitman and James Heirtzler present the "magic" Eltanin marine magnetic anomaly profile that confirms the hypothesis of seafloor spreading at mid-ocean ridges.

Mathematics

  • The Fabius function is published.
  • Chen Jingrun publishes Chen's theorem: every sufficiently large even number can be written as the sum of a prime and a semiprime.
  • David Mumford introduces Mumford–Tate groups.
  • Euler's sum of powers conjecture is disproven by L. J. Lander and T. R. Parkin when, through a direct computer search on a CDC 6600, they have found the counterexample 27<sup>5</sup> + 84<sup>5</sup> + 110<sup>5</sup> + 133<sup>5</sup> = 144<sup>5</sup>. Their paper announcing the result is one of the shortest published scientific articles ever published.

Pharmacology

  • Gynecologist John McLean Morris and biologist Gertrude Van Wagenen at the Yale School of Medicine report the successful use of oral high-dose estrogen pills for post-coital contraception in women and rhesus macaque monkeys respectively.
  • Salbutamol, a bronchodilator, is discovered by a team led by David Jack at the Allen & Hanburys laboratory in the UK; it is launched in 1969 under the trade name Ventolin.

Physiology and medicine

  • April 21 – An artificial heart is installed in the chest of Marcel DeRudder in a Houston, Texas, hospital.
  • Victor A. McKusick publishes the first edition of his catalogue of all known genes and genetic disorders, Mendelian Inheritance in Man.
  • Long-term potentiation (LTP), the putative cellular mechanism of learning and memory, is first observed by Terje Lømo in Oslo, Norway.
  • Andreas Rett first describes Rett syndrome.

Psychology

  • Human Sexual Response is published by Masters and Johnson.
  • On Aggression and Behind the Mirror are published by Konrad Lorenz.

Technology

  • January – First proposals for optical fiber communication presented by Charles K. Kao with George Hockham.
  • May 2 – Scottish inventor James Goodfellow obtains a UK patent for an automated teller machine using a plastic card and PIN.
  • October 16 – The "Caspian Sea Monster" ground-effect vehicle first flies in the Soviet Union.
  • Marie Van Brittan Brown originates the home security system in the United States.

Awards

  • Fermi Prize – Lise Meitner and Otto Hahn
  • Fields Medal in mathematics – Michael Atiyah, Paul Cohen, Alexander Grothendieck and Stephen Smale
  • Nobel Prizes
  • Physics – Alfred Kastler
  • Chemistry – Robert S. Mulliken
  • Medicine – Peyton Rous, Charles Brenton Huggins
  • Turing Award – Alan Perlis

Births

  • February 23 – Didier Queloz, Swiss astronomer.
  • April 14 – Polina Bayvel, Ukrainian-born optical communications engineer.
  • April 21 – Chris Whitty, English epidemiologist, Chief Medical Officer for England.
  • May 17 – Adrian Owen, English neuroscientist.
  • June 13 – Grigori Perelman, Russian mathematician.
  • July 8 – Ralf Altmeyer, German virologist.
  • August 7 – Jimmy Wales, American internet entrepreneur.
  • September 10 – Carolyn Bertozzi, American winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
  • September 30 – Shankar Balasubramanian, Indian-born British biochemist.
  • October 30 – Irene Tracey, English neuroscientist and academic administrator.
  • Undated – Victor Vescovo, American explorer.

Deaths

  • January 15 – Sergei Korolev (born 1907), Soviet space scientist.
  • March 1 – Fritz Houtermans (born 1903), Prussian-born Dutch physicist.
  • March 12 – Sydney Camm (born 1893), English aircraft designer.
  • March 26 – Anna Johnson Pell Wheeler (born 1883), American mathematician.
  • June 20 – Monsignor Georges Lemaître (born 1894), Belgian physicist.
  • July 7 – George de Hevesy (born 1885), Hungarian winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
  • August 10 – Felix Andries Vening Meinesz (born 1887), Dutch geophysicist.
  • October 1 – Mary Logan Reddick (born 1914), African American neuroembryologist.
  • October 3 – Rolf Maximilian Sievert (born 1896), Swedish physicist.

References