Some GK for XAT
Inventions
Adrenaline:
(isolation of) John Jacob Abel,
Aerosol can:
Erik Rotheim,
Air brake:
George Westinghouse,
Air conditioning:
Willis Carrier,
Airship:
(non-rigid) Henri Giffard,
Aluminum manufacture:
(by electrolytic action) Charles M. Hall,
Anatomy, human:
(De fabrica corporis humani, an illustrated systematic study of the human body) Andreas Vesalius,
Anesthetic:
(first use of anesthetic—ether—on humans) Crawford W. Long,
Antibiotics:
(first demonstration of antibiotic effect) Louis Pasteur, Jules-François Joubert, France, 1887; (discovery of penicillin, first modern antibiotic) Alexander Fleming,
Antiseptic:
(surgery) Joseph Lister,
Antitoxin, diphtheria:
Emil von Behring,
Appliances, electric:
(fan) Schuyler Wheeler,
Aqualung:
Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Emile Gagnan, France, 1943.
Aspirin:
Dr. Felix Hoffman,
Astronomical calculator:
The Antikythera device,
Atom:
(nuclear model of) Ernest Rutherford,
Atomic structure:
(formulated nuclear model of atom,
Atomic theory:
(ancient) Leucippus, Democritus,
Automobile:
(first with internal combustion engine, 250 rpm) Karl Benz,
Autopilot:
(for aircraft) Elmer A. Sperry,
Avogadro's law:
(equal volumes of all gases at the same temperature and pressure contain equal number of molecules) Amedeo Avogadro, Italy, 1811.
Bacteria:
Anton van Leeuwenhoek, The Netherlands, 1683.
Balloon, hot-air:
Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier, France, 1783.
Barbed wire:
(most popular) Joseph E. Glidden,
Bar codes (computer-scanned binary signal code):
(retail trade use) Monarch
Barometer:
Evangelista Torricelli,
Bicycle:
Karl D. von Sauerbronn,
Big Bang theory:
(the universe originated with a huge explosion) George LeMaitre,
Blood, circulation of:
William Harvey,
Boyle's law:
(relation between pressure and volume in gases) Robert Boyle,
Braille:
Louis Braille, France, 1829.
Bridges:
(suspension, iron chains) James Finley,
Bullet:
(conical) Claude Minié, France, 1849.
Calculating machine:
(logarithms: made multiplying easier and thus calculators practical) John Napier, Scotland, 1614; (slide rule) William Oughtred, England, 1632; (digital calculator) Blaise Pascal, 1642; (multiplication machine) Gottfried Leibniz, Germany, 1671; (important 19th-century contributors to modern machine) Frank S. Baldwin, Jay R. Monroe, Dorr E. Felt, W. T. Ohdner, William Burroughs, all U.S.; (“analytical engine” design, included concepts of programming, taping) Charles Babbage, England, 1835.
Calculus:
Isaac Newton,
Camera:
(hand-held) George Eastman,
“Canals” of Mars:
Giovanni Schiaparelli,
Carpet sweeper:
Melville R. Bissell,
Car radio:
William Lear, Elmer Wavering,
Cells:
(word used to describe microscopic examination of cork) Robert Hooke,
Cement,
Joseph Aspdin,
Chewing gum:
(spruce-based) John Curtis,
Cholera bacterium:
Robert Koch,
Circuit, integrated:
(theoretical) G.W.A.
Classification of plants:
(first modern, based on comparative study of forms) Andrea Cesalpino,
Clock, pendulum:
Christian Huygens, The
Coca-Cola:
John Pemberton,
Combustion:
(nature of) Antoine Lavoisier, France, 1777.
Compact disk:
Computers:
(first design of analytical engine) Charles Babbage, 1830s; (ENIAC, Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator, first all-electronic, completed) John Presper Eckert, Jr., John Mauchly,
Concrete:
(reinforced) Joseph Monier, France, 1877.
Condensed milk:
Gail Borden,
Conditioned reflex:
Ivan Pavlov,
Conservation of electric charge:
(the total electric charge of the universe or any closed system is constant) Benjamin Franklin,
Contagion theory:
(infectious diseases caused by living agent transmitted from person to person) Girolamo Fracastoro,
Continental drift theory:
(geographer who pieced together continents into a single landmass on maps) Antonio Snider-Pellegrini,
Contraceptive, oral:
Gregory Pincus, Min Chuch Chang, John Rock, Carl Djerassi,
Converter, Bessemer:
William Kelly,
Cosmetics:
Cosmic string theory:
(first postulated) Thomas Kibble,
Cotton gin:
Eli Whitney,
Crossbow:
Cyclotron:
Ernest O. Lawrence,
Defibrillator:
Dr. William Bennett Kouwenhoven, U.S., 1932; (implantable) M. Stephen Heilman, MD, Dr. Alois Langer, Morton Mower, MD, Michel Mirowski, MD, 1980.
Deuterium:
(heavy hydrogen) Harold Urey,
Disease:
(chemicals in treatment of) crusaded by Philippus Paracelsus, 1527–1541; (germ theory) Louis Pasteur,
DNA:
(deoxyribonucleic acid)
Dye:
(aniline, start of synthetic dye industry) William H. Perkin,
Dynamite:
Alfred Nobel,
Electric cooking utensil:
(first) patented by St. George Lane-Fox,
Electric generator (dynamo):
(laboratory model) Michael Faraday,
Electric lamp:
(arc lamp) Sir Humphrey Davy, England, 1801; (fluorescent lamp) A.E. Becquerel, France, 1867; (incandescent lamp) Sir Joseph Swann, England, Thomas A. Edison, U.S., contemporaneously, 1870s; (carbon arc street lamp) Charles F. Brush, U.S., 1879; (first widely marketed incandescent lamp) Thomas A. Edison, U.S., 1879; (mercury vapor lamp) Peter Cooper Hewitt, U.S., 1903; (neon lamp) Georges Claude, France, 1911; (tungsten filament) Irving Langmuir, U.S., 1915.
Electrocardiography:
Demonstrated by Augustus
Electromagnet:
William Sturgeon,
Electron:
Sir Joseph J. Thompson,
Electronic mail:
Ray
Elevator, passenger:
(safety device permitting use by passengers) Elisha G. Otis,
E = mc2:
(equivalence of mass and energy) Albert Einstein,
Engine, internal combustion:
No single inventor. Fundamental theory established by Sadi Carnot, France, 1824; (two-stroke) Etienne Lenoir, France, 1860; (ideal operating cycle for four-stroke) Alphonse Beau de Roche, France, 1862; (operating four-stroke) Nikolaus Otto, Germany, 1876; (diesel) Rudolf Diesel, Germany, 1892; (rotary) Felix Wankel, Germany, 1956.
Evolution:
(organic) Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, France, 1809; (by natural selection) Charles Darwin,
Exclusion principle:
(no two electrons in an atom can occupy the same energy level) Wolfgang Pauli,
Expanding universe theory:
(first proposed) George LeMaitre,
Falling bodies, law of:
Galileo Galilei,
Fermentation:
(microorganisms as cause of) Louis Pasteur, France, c.1860.
Fiber optics:
Fibers, man-made:
(nitrocellulose fibers treated to change flammable nitrocellulose to harmless cellulose, precursor of rayon) Sir Joseph Swann, England, 1883; (rayon) Count Hilaire de Chardonnet, France, 1889; (Celanese) Henry and Camille Dreyfuss, U.S., England, 1921; (research on polyesters and polyamides, basis for modern man-made fibers) U.S., England, Germany, 1930s; (nylon) Wallace H. Carothers, U.S., 1935.
Frozen food:
Clarence Birdseye,
Gene transfer:
(recombinant DNA organism) Herbert Boyer, Stanley Cohen,
Geometry, elements of:
Euclid,
Gravitation, law of:
Sir Isaac Newton,
Gunpowder:
Gyrocompass:
Elmer A. Sperry,
Gyroscope:
Jean Léon Foucault,
Halley's Comet:
Edmund Halley,
Heart implanted in human, permanent artificial:
Dr. Robert Jarvik,
Heart, temporary artificial:
Helicopter:
(double rotor)
Helium first observed on sun:
Sir Joseph Lockyer,
Heredity, laws of:
Gregor Mendel,
Holograph:
Dennis Gabor,
Home videotape systems (VCR):
(Betamax)
Ice age theory:
Louis Agassiz, Swiss-American, 1840.
Induction, electric:
Joseph Henry,
Insulin:
(first isolated) Sir Frederick G. Banting and Charles H. Best,
Intelligence testing:
Alfred Binet, Theodore Simon, France, 1905.
Interferon:
Isotopes:
(concept of) Frederick Soddy,
Jet propulsion:
(engine) Sir Frank Whittle,
Kinetic theory of gases:
(molecules of a gas are in a state of rapid motion) Daniel Bernoulli,
Laser:
(theoretical work on) Charles H. Townes, Arthur L. Schawlow, U.S., N. Basov, A. Prokhorov, U.S.S.R., 1958; (first working model) T. H. Maiman, U.S., 1960.
Lawn mower:
Edwin Budding, John Ferrabee,
LCD (liquid crystal display):
Hoffmann-La
Lens, bifocal:
Benjamin Franklin,
Leyden jar:
(prototype electrical condenser) Canon E. G. von Kleist of Kamin, Pomerania, 1745; independently evolved by Cunaeus and P. van Musschenbroek, University of Leyden, Holland, 1746, from where name originated.
Light, nature of:
(wave theory) Christian Huygens, The Netherlands, 1678; (electromagnetic theory) James Clerk Maxwell,
Light, speed of:
(theory that light has finite velocity) Olaus Roemer,
Lightning rod:
Benjamin Franklin,
Lock, cylinder:
Linus Yale,
Locomotive:
(steam powered) Richard Trevithick,
Loom:
(horizontal, two-beamed)
Machine gun:
(hand-cranked multibarrel) Richard J. Gatling,
Magnet, Earth is:
William Gilbert,
Match:
(phosphorus)
Measles vaccine:
John F. Enders, Thomas Peebles,
Metric system:
revolutionary government of
Microphone:
Charles Wheatstone,
Microscope:
(compound) Zacharias Janssen, The Netherlands, 1590; (electron) Vladimir Zworykin et al.,
Microwave oven:
Percy Spencer,
Motion, laws of:
Isaac Newton,
Motion pictures:
Thomas A. Edison,
Motion pictures, sound:
Product of various inventions. First picture with synchronized musical score: Don Juan, 1926; with spoken dialogue: The Jazz Singer, 1927; both Warner Bros.
Motor, electric:
Michael Faraday,
Motorcycle:
(motor tricycle) Edward Butler, England, 1884; (gasoline-engine motorcycle) Gottlieb Daimler,
Moving assembly line:
Henry Ford,
(discovery of) Johann Galle,
Neptunium:
(first transuranic element, synthesis of) Edward M. McMillan, Philip H. Abelson,
Neutron:
James Chadwick,
Neutron-induced radiation:
Enrico Fermi et al.,
Nitroglycerin:
Nuclear fission:
Otto Hahn, Fritz Strassmann,
Nuclear reactor:
Enrico Fermi,
Ohm's law:
(relationship between strength of electric current, electromotive force, and circuit resistance) Georg S. Ohm,
Oil well:
Edwin L. Drake,
Oxygen:
(isolation of) Joseph Priestley,
Ozone:
Christian Schönbein,
Pacemaker:
(internal) Clarence W. Lillehie, Earl Bakk,
Paper:
Parachute:
Louis S. Lenormand, France, 1783.
Pen:
(fountain)Lewis E. Waterman,
Periodic law:
(that properties of elements are functions of their atomic weights) Dmitri Mendeleev,
Periodic table:
(arrangement of chemical elements based on periodic law) Dmitri Mendeleev,
Phonograph:
Thomas A. Edison,
Photography:
(first paper negative, first photograph, on metal) Joseph Nicéphore Niepce, France, 1816–1827; (discovery of fixative powers of hyposulfite of soda) Sir John Herschel, England, 1819; (first direct positive image on silver plate, the daguerreotype) Louis Daguerre, 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
Photovoltaic effect:
(light falling on certain materials can produce electricity) Edmund Becquerel,
Piano:
(Hammerklavier) Bartolommeo Cristofori,
Planetary motion, laws of:
Johannes Kepler,
Plant respiration and photosynthesis:
Jan Ingenhousz,
Plastics:
(first material, nitrocellulose softened by vegetable oil, camphor, precursor to Celluloid) Alexander Parkes, England, 1855; (Celluloid, involving recognition of vital effect of camphor) John W. Hyatt, U.S., 1869; (Bakelite, first completely synthetic plastic) Leo H. Baekeland, U.S., 1910; (theoretical background of macromolecules and process of polymerization on which modern plastics industry rests) Hermann Staudinger, Germany, 1922; (polypropylene and low-pressure method for producing high-density polyethylene) Robert Banks, Paul Hogan, U.S., 1958.
Plate tectonics:
Alfred Wegener, Germany, 1912–1915.
Plow, forked:
Plutonium, synthesis of:
Glenn T. Seaborg, Edwin M. McMillan, Arthur C. Wahl, Joseph W.
Polio, vaccine:
(experimentally safe dead-virus vaccine)Jonas E. Salk,
Positron:
Carl D. Anderson,
Pressure cooker:
(early version) Denis Papin, France, 1679.
Printing:
(block)
Probability theory:
René Descartes,
Proton:
Ernest Rutherford,
Prozac:
(antidepressant fluoxetine) Bryan B. Malloy,
Psychoanalysis:
Sigmund Freud,
Pulsars:
Antony Hewish and Jocelyn Bell Burnel,
Quantum theory:
(general) Max Planck,
Quarks:
Jerome Friedman, Henry Kendall, Richard Taylor,
Quasars:
Marten
Rabies immunization:
Louis Pasteur, France, 1885.
Radar:
(limited to one-mile range) Christian Hulsmeyer,
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) Marconi, 1901; (vacuum electron tube, basis for radio telephony) Sir John Fleming, England, 1904; (triode amplifying tube) Lee de Forest, U.S., 1906; (regenerative circuit, allowing long-distance sound reception) Edwin H. Armstrong, U.S., 1912; (frequency modulation—FM) Edwin H. Armstrong, U.S., 1933.
Radioactivity:
(X-rays) Wilhelm K. Roentgen,
Radiocarbon dating, carbon-14 method:
(discovered) Willard F. Libby,
Radio signals, extraterrestrial:
first known radio noise signals were received by
Radio waves:
(cosmic sources, led to radio astronomy) Karl Jansky,
Razor:
(safety, successfully marketed) King Gillette,
Reaper:
Cyrus McCormick,
Refrigerator:
Alexander Twining,
Refrigerator ship:
(first) the Frigorifique, cooling unit designed by Charles Teller,
Relativity:
(special and general theories of) Albert Einstein,
Revolver:
Samuel Colt,
Richter scale:
Charles F. Richter,
Rifle:
(muzzle-loaded) Italy, Germany, c.1475; (breech-loaded) England, France, Germany, U.S., c.1866; (bolt-action) Paul von Mauser, Germany, 1889; (automatic) John Browning, U.S., 1918.
Rocket:
(liquid-fueled) Robert Goddard,
Roller bearing:
(wooden for cartwheel)
Rotation of Earth:
Jean Bernard Foucault, France, 1851.
Royal Observatory,
established in 1675 by Charles II of
Rubber:
(vulcanization process) Charles Goodyear,
Saccharin:
Constantine Fuhlberg, Ira Remsen,
Safety pin:
Walter Hunt,
Saturn, ring around:
Christian Huygens, The
“Scotch” tape:
Richard Drew,
Screw propeller:
Sir Francis P. Smith,
Seat belt:
(three point) Nils Bohlin,
Seismograph:
(first accurate) John Milne,
Sewing machine:
Elias Howe,
Solar energy:
First realistic application of solar energy using parabolic solar reflector to drive caloric engine on steam boiler, John Ericsson, U.S., 1860s.
Solar system, universe:
(Sun-centered universe) Nicolaus Copernicus,
Spectrum:
(heterogeneity of light) Sir Isaac Newton,
Spectrum analysis:
Gustav Kirchhoff, Robert Bunsen,
Spermatozoa:
Anton van Leeuwenhoek, The Netherlands, 1683.
Spinning:
(spinning wheel) India, introduced to Europe in Middle Ages; (Saxony wheel, continuous spinning of wool or cotton yarn) England, c.1500–1600; (spinning jenny) James Hargreaves, England, 1764; (spinning frame) Sir Richard Arkwright, England, 1769; (spinning mule, completed mechanization of spinning, permitting production of yarn to keep up with demands of modern looms) Samuel Crompton, England, 1779.
Star catalog:
(first modern) Tycho Brahe, Denmark, 1572.
Steam engine:
(first commercial version based on principles of French physicist Denis Papin) 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., 1804.
Steamship:
Claude de Jouffroy d'Abbans, France, 1783; James Rumsey, U.S., 1787; John Fitch, U.S., 1790; (high-pressure) Oliver Evans, U.S., 1804. All preceded Robert Fulton, U.S., 1807, credited with launching first commercially successful steamship.
Stethoscope:
René Laënnec, France, 1819.
Sulfa drugs:
(parent compound, para-aminobenzenesulfanomide) Paul Gelmo, Austria, 1908; (antibacterial activity) Gerhard Domagk, Germany, 1935.
Superconductivity:
(theory) John Bardeen, Leon Cooper, John Scheiffer, U.S., 1957.
Symbolic logic:
George Boule, 1854; (modern) Bertrand Russell, Alfred North Whitehead, England, 1910–1913.
Tank, military:
Sir Ernest Swinton, England, 1914.
Tape recorder:
(magnetic steel tape) Valdemar Poulsen, Denmark, 1899.
Teflon:
DuPont, U.S., 1943.
Telegraph:
Samuel F. B. Morse, U.S., 1837.
Telephone:
Alexander Graham Bell, U.S., 1876.
Telescope:
Hans Lippershey, The Netherlands, 1608; (astronomical) Galileo Galilei, Italy, 1609; (reflecting) Isaac Newton, England, 1668.
Television:
(Iconoscope–T.V. camera table) Vladimir Zworykin, U.S., 1923, and also kinescope (cathode ray tube) 1928; (mechanical disk-scanning method) successfully demonstrated by J.L. Baird, Scotland, C.F. Jenkins, U.S., 1926; (first all-electric television image) Philo T. Farnsworth, U.S., 1927; (color, mechanical disk) Baird, 1928; (color, compatible with black and white) George Valensi, France, 1938; (color, sequential rotating filter) Peter Goldmark, U.S., first introduced, 1951; (color, compatible with black and white) commercially introduced in U.S., National Television Systems Committee, 1953.
Thermodynamics:
(first law: energy cannot be created or destroyed, only converted from one form to another) Julius von Mayer, Germany, 1842; James Joule, England, 1843; (second law: heat cannot of 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 Nernst, 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.
Toilet, flush:
Product of Minoan civilization, Crete, c. 2000 B.C. Alleged invention by “Thomas Crapper” is untrue.
Tractor:
Benjamin Holt, U.S., 1900.
Transformer, electric:
William Stanley, U.S., 1885.
Transistor:
John Bardeen, Walter H. Brattain, William B. Shockley, U.S., 1947.
Tuberculosis bacterium:
Robert Koch, Germany, 1882.
Typewriter:
Christopher Sholes, Carlos Glidden, U.S., 1867.
Uncertainty principle:
(that position and velocity of an object cannot both be measured exactly, at the same time) Werner Heisenberg, Germany, 1927.
Uranus:
(first planet discovered in recorded history) William Herschel, England, 1781.
Vaccination:
Edward Jenner, England, 1796.
Vacuum cleaner:
(manually operated) Ives W. McGaffey, U.S., 1869; (electric) Hubert C. Booth, England, 1901; (upright) J. Murray Spangler, U.S., 1907.
Van Allen (radiation) Belt:
(around Earth) James Van Allen, U.S., 1958.
Video disk:
Philips Co., The Netherlands, 1972.
Vitamins:
(hypothesis of disease deficiency) Sir F. G. Hopkins, Casimir Funk, England, 1912; (vitamin A) Elmer V. McCollum, M. Davis, U.S., 1912–1914; (vitamin B) McCollum, U.S., 1915–1916; (thiamin, B1) Casimir Funk, England, 1912; (riboflavin, B2) D. T. Smith, E. G. Hendrick, U.S., 1926; (niacin) Conrad Elvehjem, U.S., 1937; (B6) Paul Gyorgy, U.S., 1934; (vitamin C) C. A. Hoist, T. Froelich, Norway, 1912; (vitamin D) McCollum, U.S., 1922; (folic acid) Lucy Wills, England, 1933.
Voltaic pile:
(forerunner of modern battery, first source of continuous electric current) Alessandro Volta, Italy, 1800.
Wallpaper:
Europe, 16th and 17th century.
Wassermann test:
(for syphilis) August von Wassermann, Germany, 1906.
Wheel:
(cart, solid wood) Mesopotamia, c.3800–3600 B.C.
Windmill:
Persia, c.600.
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., 1993.
Xerography:
Chester Carlson, U.S., 1938.
Yellow Fever:
(transmission of)Walter Reed, U.S., 1900.
Zero:
India, c. 600; (absolute zero temperature, cessation of all molecular energy) William Thompson, Lord Kelvin, England, 1848.
Zipper:
W. L. Judson, U.S., 1891.
0 comments:
Post a Comment