| Themes > Science > Physics > About Physics, Generalities > Physics Time-Line > Physics Time-Line to 1799 | ||
-585: Thales of Miletus, prediction of an eclipse -580: Thales of Miletus, birth of scientific thought -580: Thales of Miletus, water as the basic element -580: Thales of Miletus, magnets and attraction to rubbed amber -560: Thales of Miletus, first cosmologies -550: Anaximenes, flat Earth -525: Pythagoras, understanding the world and mathematics -520: Anaximander, Earth surface is curved (cylinder) -515: Parmenides, paradoxes of change and motion -500: Pythagoreans, Earth is a sphere -480: Oenopides, finds angle of Earth's tilt to ecliptic -480: Protagoras, reality comes from the senses -480: Heraclitus, fire as primary substance -480: Heraclitus, change is the essence of being -475: Parmenides, Earth is a sphere -470: Anaxagoras, materials are made of "seeds" (atoms) -470: Anaxagoras, sun, moon and stars are made of same material as Earth -470: Anaxagoras, sun as a hot glowing rock -460: Eudoxus, Celestial spheres -460: Empedocles, Four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water -455: Philolaus, Earth Rotates -450: Zeno, paradoxes of discrete or continuous space and time -445: Leucippus, indivisble atoms -425: Democritus, Atomic theory -390: Plato, theory of knowledge -390: Plato, ether as a fifth element -385: Democritus, Milky Way is composed of many stars -370: Aristotle, Free falling bodies accelerate but heavier bodies fall faster -360: Heracleides, Venus and Mercury orbit the sun -352: Chinese, recorded observation of a supernova -350: Heracleides, Rotation of the Earth -340: Aristotle, Earth is a sphere -340: Aristotle, Space is continuous and always filled with matter -335: Kiddinu, precession of equinoxes -335: Strato, experiments with falling bodies and levers -330: Aristotle, physics and metaphysics -330: Aristotle, geocentric cosmology -325: Pytheas, tides are caused by moon -306: Epicurus, support for atomic theory -295: Euclid, elements of mathematics -265: Zou Yan, five elements: water, metal, wood, fire and earth -260: Aristarchus of Samos, ratio of Earth-Sun distance to Earth-Moon distance from angle at half moon -260: Aristarchus of Samos, distance and size of moon from Earth's shadow during lunar eclipse -260: Aristarchus of Samos, heliocentric cosmology -250: Chinese, free bodies move at constant velocity -240: Archimedes, Principle of levers and compound pulley -240: Archimedes, Archimedes' principle of hydrostatics -235: Eratosthenes, Measurement of Earth's circumference -190: Seleucus, further support for heliocentric theory -170: Chinese, record of sun spots -150: Hipparchus, precession of the equinoxes -130: Hipparchus, size of moon from parallax of eclipse 83: Chinese, loadstone compass 100: Bhaskara, diameter of the Sun 100: Hero of Alexandria, expansion of air with heat 100: Hero of Alexandria, laws of light reflection 130: Ptolemy, geocentric cosmology of epicycles 180: Egypt, alchemy 550: Johannas Philoponus, impetus keeps a body moving 721: Abu Hayyan, preparation of chemicals such as nitric acid 890: Al-Razi, atomic of matter and space 890: Al-Razi, andromeda galaxy 1000: Ali Al-hazen, reflection, refraction and lenses 1000: Ali Al-hazen, pinhole camera to demonstrate that light travels in straight lines to the eye 1054: China and Arabia Supernova of Crab Nebula recorded 1121: Al-khazini gravity acts towards centre of Earth 1155: Bhaskara first description of a perpetual motion machine 1225: Jordanus Nemorarius, mechanics of lever and composition of motion 1250: Albertus Magnus, isolation of arsenic 1260: Roger Bacon, empiricism 1267: Roger Bacon, magnifying lens 1269: Pierre de Maricourt, experiments with magnets and compass 1304: Theodoric of Freibourg, experiments to investigate rainbows 1320: William of Occam, Occam's Razor 1355: Jean Buridan, physics of impetus 1440: Nicolas Cusanus, Earth is in motion 1440: Nicolas Cusanus, infinite universe 1450: Johann Gutenberg, first printing press in Europe 1472: Johannes Regiomontanus, observation of Halley's comet 1480: Leonardo de Vinci, description of parachute 1480: Leonardo de Vinci, compares reflection of light to reflection of sound waves 1490: Leonardo de Vinci, capillary action 1492: Leonardo de Vinci, foresees flying machines 1494: Leonardo de Vinci, foresees pendulum clock 1514: Nicolaus Copernicus, writes about heliocentric theory but does not yet publish 1515: Leonardo Da Vinci, progress in mechanics, aerodynamics and hydraulics 1537: Niccolo Tartaglia, trajectory of a bullet 1551: Girolamo Cardano, studies of falling bodies 1553: Giambattista Benedetti, proposed equality of fall rates 1543: Nicolaus Copernicus, heliocentric theory published 1546: Gerardus Mercator, Magnetic pole of Earth 1572: Tycho Brahe, witnesses a supernova and cites it as evidence that the heavens are not changeless 1574: Tycho Brahe, Observes that a comet is beyond the moon 1576: Tycho Brahe, constructs a planetary observatory 1576: Thomas Digges, illustration of an infinite universe surrounding a Copernican solar system 1577: Tycho Brahe, observes that a comet passes through the orbits of other planets 1581: Galileo Galilei, constancy of period of pendulum 1581: Robert Norman, dip of compass shows that Earth is a magnet 1584: Giordano Bruno, suggests that stars are suns with other Earth's in orbit 1585: Giovanni Benedetti, impetus theory is better than Aristotle's physics 1585: Simon Stevin, law of equilibrium 1586: Simon Stevin, pressure in column of liquid 1586: Simon Stevin, verification of equality of fall rates 1589: Galileo Galilei, showed that objects fall at the same rate independent of mass 1592: Galileo Galilei, suggests that physical laws of the heavens are the same as those on Earth 1592: Galileo Galilei, primitive thermometer 1593: Johannes Kepler, related planets to platonic solids 1596: David Fabricius, observes a variable star, (Mira Ceta) 1600: Galileo Galilei, study of sound and vibrating strings 1600: William Gilbert, static electricity and magnetism 1604: Johannes Kepler, mirrors, lenses and vision 1604: Galileo Galilei, distance for falling object increases as square of time 1608: Hans Lippershey, optical telescope 1609: Lippershey and Janssen, the compound microscope 1609: Johannes Kepler, 1st and 2nd laws of planetary motion 1609: Thomas Harriot, maps moon using a telescope 1609: Johannes Kepler, notion of energy 1609: Galileo Galilei, builds a telescope 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes the phases of Venus 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes moons of Jupiter 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes craters on the moon 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes stars in the Milky Way 1610: Galileo Galilei, observes structures around Saturn 1611: Fabricius, Galileo, Harriot, Scheiner, sunspots 1611: Marco de Dominis, explanation of rainbows 1611: Johannes Kepler, principles of the astronomical telescope 1612: Simon Marius, Andromeda galaxy 1612: Galileo Galilei, hydrostatics 1613: Galileo Galilei, principle of inertia 1615: S. de Caus, forces and work 1618: Francesco Grimaldi, interference and diffraction of light 1619: Johannes Kepler, 3rd law of planetary motion 1619: Johannes Kepler, explains why a comets tail points away from the Sun 1619: Rene Descartes, vision of rationalism 1620: Francis Bacon, the empirical scientific method 1620: Francis Bacon, heat is motion 1620: Jan Baptista van Helmont, introduces the word "gas" 1621: Willebrod Snell, the sine law of refraction 1624: Galileo Galilei, theory of tides 1626: Godfried Wendilin, verification of Kepler's laws for moons of Jupiter 1630: Cabaeus, attraction and repulsion of electric charges 1631: Pierre Gassendi, observes a transit of Mercury 1632: Galileo Galilei, Galilean relativity 1632: Galileo Galilei, Support for Copernicus' heliocentric theory 1632: John Ray, water thermometer 1636: G. Pers de Roberval, gravitational forces are mutual attraction 1636: Marin Mersenne, speed of sound 1637: Rene Descartes, inertia, mechanistic physics 1637: Rene Descartes, refraction, rainbow and clouds 1638: Galileo Galilei, motion and friction 1639: Jeremiah Horrocks, observes a transit of Venus 1640: Evangelista Torricelli, theory of hydrodynamics 1641: Ferdinand II, sealed thermometer 1642: Blaise Pascal, mechanical calculator 1644: Evangelista Torricelli, mercury barometer and artificial vacuum 1645: Ismael Boulliau, inverse square law for central force acting on planets 1648: Blaise Pascal, explains barometer as a result of atmospheric pressure 1650: Otto von Guericke, demonstration of the power of vacuum using two large hemispheres and 8 horses 1654: Ferdinand II, sealed thermometer 1656: Christiaan Huygens, rings and moons of Saturn 1657: Christiaan Huygens, pendulum clock 1657: Pierre Fermat, Fermat's principle in optics 1659: Christiaan Huygens, surface features on Mars 1660: Otto von Guericke, electrostatic machine 1660: Robert Boyle, sound will not travel in a vacuum 1661: Robert Boyle, corpuscular theory of matter 1661: Robert Boyle, chemical elements, acids and alkalis 1662: Robert Boyle, Boyle's law for ideal gases relating volume to pressure 1663: Blaise Pascal, isotropy of pressure 1663: James Gregory, describes a reflecting telescope 1663: Huygens, Wallace and Wren, laws of elastic collisions 1664: Robert Hooke, the great red spot of Jupiter 1664: Rene Descartes, published support for Copernican theory
1665: Giovanni Cassini, rotation periods of Jupiter, Mars and Venus 1665: Francesco Grimaldi, his wave theory of light is published 1665: Hooke, Huygens, colours of oil film explained by wave theory of light and interference 1665: Robert Hooke, studies with a microscope 1665: Robert Boyle, air is necessary for candles to burn 1666: Robert Boyle, fluid experiments 1666: Isaac Newton, studies spectrum of light 1666: Isaac Newton, begins work on laws of mechanics and gravitation 1667: Jean Picard, observes anomalies in star positions which are later explained as aberration 1668: John Wallis, conservation of momentum 1668: Isaac Newton, reflecting telescope 1669: Erasmus Bartholin, describes double refraction caused by polarisation effects of Iceland feldspar 1669: Hennig Brand, element phosphorus 1669: Gottfreid Leibniz, first concepts of action 1670: Robert Boyle, produces hydrogen by reacting metals with acid 1671: Giovanni Cassini, accurate measurement of distance to Mars and scale of solar system 1672: Jean Richer, the period of a pendulum varies with latitude 1672: Isaac Newton, variation of pendulum is due to equatorial bulge 1673: Ignace Pardies, wave explanation for refraction of light 1673: Christiaan Huygens, laws of centripetal force 1674: Robert Hooke, attempt to explain planetary motion as a balance of centfifugal force and gravitational attraction 1675: Giovanni Cassini, Saturns has separated rings which must be composed of small objects 1675: Isaac Newton, delivers his theory of light 1676: Olaus Roemer, measured the speed of light by observing Jupiter's moons 1676: Robert Hooke, law of elasticity and springs 1676: Edme Mariotte, pressure is inversely proportional to volume (Boyle's law) and height of atmosphere 1678: Robert Hooke, inverse square law of gravity 1678: Christiaan Huygens, writes about wave theory of light 1679: Christiaan Huygens, polarisation of light 1680: Isaac Newton, demonstrates that inverse square law implies eliptical orbits 1684: Isaac Newton, inverse square law and mass dependence of gravity 1684: Gottfreid Leibniz, differential calculus 1687: Isaac Newton, publishes laws of motion and gravitation 1687: Isaac Newton, publishes analysis of sound propagation 1688: P. Varignon, addition of forces 1690: Christiaan Huygens, principle of Huygens, secondary waves 1690: John Locke, knowledge comes only from experience and sensations 1692: Richard Bentley, why do stars not fall together under gravitation? 1702: Francis Hauksbee, rarified air glows during electrical discharge 1704: Isaac Newton, publishes corpuscular theory of light and colour 1705: Edmund Halley, noticed that three previous comets are the same and predicts its return in 1758 1709: Gabriel Fahrenheit, alcohol thermometer 1710: George Berkeley, idealist philosophy against materialist 1714: Gottfreid Leibniz, energy conservation 1714: Gottfreid Leibniz, rejection of absolute space and time 1714: Gabriel Fahrenheit, mercury thermometer 1718: Edmund Halley, measures proper motion of stars 1720: Edmund Halley, early form of Olbers' paradox 1721: George Berkeley, space exists because of matter in it 1724: Gabriel Fahrenheit, supercooling of water 1727: Stephen Hales, makes oxygen 1728: James Bradley, speed of light and stellar aberration 1729: Stephen Gray, conduction of electricity 1731: Rene Reaumur, alcohol/water thermometer 1733: Charles Du Fay, recognises distinction between positive and negative electric charge 1735: Antonio de Ulloa, element platinum 1736: Leonhard Euler, differential equations in mechanics 1738: Daniel Bernoulli, kinetic theory of gas 1738: Daniel Bernoulli, hydrodynamics 1739: Georg Brandt, element cobalt 1740: Pierre Bouguer, gravitational anomalies 1742: Anders Celsius, reverse centigrade temperature scale 1743: Jean Christin, Celsius temperature scale 1743: Jean d'Alembert, energy in Newtonian mechanics 1744: Pierre de Maupertuis, principle of least action 1744: Jean d'Alembert, theory of fluid dynamics 1744: Leonhard Euler, Euler-Lagrange equations 1744: Mikhail Lomonosov, heat is a form of motion 1745: von Kleist, van Musschenbroek, Leyden jar for electric charge storage 1746: Andreas Marggraf, rediscovery of element zinc 1746: Leonhard Euler, wave theory of light refraction and dispersion 1747: d'Alembert, Euler, solution of equations for vibrating string 1748: Mikhail Lomonosov, conservation of mass and energy 1749: Thomas Melvill, early spectrscopy and yellow line of sodium in salt 1750: Benjamin Franklin, theory of electricity and lightning 1750: John Michell, magnetic induction 1750: John Michell, inverse square law for magnetic fields 1750: Thomas Wright, Milky Way could be due to slab like distribution of stars 1751: Benjamin Franklin, electricity can magnetise needles 1751: Frederik Cronstedt, element nickel 1752: Jean d'Alembert, viscosity 1754: Joseph Black, discovery of carbon dioxide showing that there are gases other than air 1755: Immanuel Kant, theory that the universe formed from a spinning nebula in an infinite hierarchy 1756: William Cullen, evaporation causes cooling 1756: Mikhail Lomonosov, supports wave theory of light 1761: Joseph Black, discovery and measurements of latent and specific heats 1761: John Harrison, portable chronometer 1765: Leonhard Euler, rigid body motions 1766: Joseph Priestley, inverse square law for electric charge 1766: Henry Cavendish, hydrogen is an element 1771: Luigi Galvani, electricity in animals 1772: Carl Scheele, saw air as two gases one of which encouraged combustion 1772: Daniel Rutherford, nitrogen 1772: Antoine Lavoisier, conservation of mass in chemical reactions 1772: Joseph Lagrange, theory of Lagrange points 1774: Priestley, Scheele, element oxygen 1774: Nevil Maskelyne, gravitational deflection of plumb line by a mountain 1774: Carl Scheele, element chlorine 1774: Johann Gahn, element manganese 1775: Alessandro Volta, electrical condenser 1776: Pierre-Simon Laplace, deterministic causality 1777: Antoine Lavoisier, composition of air and burning as a chemical reaction 1779: Charles Augustin de Coulomb, Coulomb's law of friction 1781: Immanuel Kant, Critique of pure reason 1781: William Herschel, discovery of Uranus 1781: Carl Scheele, element molybdenum in ore 1781: Charles Messier, catalogue of nebulae 1781: Heinrich Olbers, Uranus is a planet, not a comet 1782: Jacob Hjelm, isolation of element molybdenum 1782: Franz von Reichstein, element tellurium in ores 1782: William Herschel, catalog of double stars 1782: William Herschel, sun's motion through space 1783: John Michell, Newtonian black hole 1783: Fausto and Juan José de Elhuyar, element tungsten 1783: Rene Hauy, nature of crystals 1784: Henry Cavendish, water is a compound of oxygen and hydrogen 1784: Pierre Laplace, electrostatic potential 1785: Charles Augustin de Coulomb, electric force proportional to product of charges and inverse square of distance 1786: Antoine Lavoisier, distinction between elements and compounds 1787: Antoine Lavoisier, system for naming chemicals 1787: Jacques-Alexander Charles, law of gas expansion with temperature 1788: Joseph Lagrange, Lagrangian mechanics 1788: John Hunter, Diffusion of heat 1789: Antoine Lavoisier, Conservation of mass in chemical reactions 1789: Martin Klaproth, elements zirconium and uranium in compounds 1790: Definition of metric system in France 1790: Adair Crawford, element strontium in compounds 1791: William Gregor, element titanium in compounds 1794: Johann Gadolin, element yttrium in compounds 1794: Pierre Laplace, analysis of Newtonian black hole 1796: Alessandro Volta, chemical batteries and voltage 1797: Henry Cavendish, measured the gravitational constant with a torsion balance 1797: Nicholas Vauquelin, element berylium idnetified in gem stones 1797: Nicholas Vauquelin, element chromium 1798: Benjamin Thompson, heat generated equals work done 1798: M. Klaproth, isolation of element tellurium 1798: Humphry Davy, Transmission of heat through vacuum 1798: Benjamin Rumford, experimental relation between work done and heat generated |
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