Tag Archives: Astronomy

An Arbitrary Anniversary of Science

We always seem to be looking forward in science. The fact that everyone is excited about the next robot venture on mars or breakthrough in medicine is what drives research and innovation in the first place. However, I think it a pleasant idea to look back at some of the memorable moments in science that have shaped our world and brought us here to these exact circumstances. So, here is a little retrospective of science on January 28th, going back as long as four centuries ago.

And what’s so special about January 28th, you ask? Nothing! That’s what makes it fun to look back. So, enjoy!

  • 1613:Galileo records observing a “star” which is actually (most likely) the first viewing of planet Neptune.

    via Wikimedia Creative Commons


  • 1807: Pall Mall, London, England, is the first street in any city to be lit by gaslight, courtesy of entrepreneur Frederick Albert Windsor.
  • 1903: Birthdate of Kathleen Yardley Lonsdale, a crystallographer who proved the flatness of the benzene ring.
  • 1922: Birthdate of Robert W. Holley, joint recipient of the 1968 Nobel Prize in Medicine for describing the structure of alanine tRNA.
  • 1958: Buchanan, New York sees construction begin of the first private thorium-uranium atomic reactor to supply power.
  • 1960: the U.S. Navy bounces the first wire photograph transmitted by radio waves off of the moon at a 400-MHz frequency.
  • 1986:The tragic Challenger space shuttle explosion kills seven astronauts after a mere 73 seconds after liftoff.                                     

    Space Shuttle Challenger via Wikimedia Creative Commons


  • 1999: Element 114, Flerovium, is reported by Russian scientists at Dubna (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research).
With these events and discoveries, we can celebrate January 28th as an arbitrary anniversary of science.
-Chloe Bocker