The year 1971 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Astronomy and space exploration
Biology
Computer science
- July 4 â Michael S. Hart posts the first e-book, a copy of the United States Declaration of Independence, on the University of Illinois at UrbanaâÂÂChampaign's mainframe computer, the origin of Project Gutenberg.
- November 3 â The Unix Programmer's Manual is published.
- November 15 â Intel release the world's first microprocessor, the 4004.
- November/December â Computer Space is released, the first arcade video game.
- Ray Tomlinson sends the first ARPAnet e-mail between host computers, at BBN, Cambridge, Massachusetts, with the first use of the @ sign in an address.
- Kenbak-1 goes on sale, considered to be the world's first personal computer by the Computer History Museum and the American Computer Museum.
- The earliest floppy disks, 8 inches in diameter, become commercially available as components of products shipped by IBM, their inventor.
Conservation
Earth sciences
Mathematics
Medicine
Paleontology
Physics
Psychology
Technology
Institutions
Awards
Births
Deaths
- January 23 â Fritz Feigl (b. 1891), Austrian-born Brazilian chemist
- January 25 â Donald Winnicott (b. 1896), English child psychiatrist.
- February 16 â Heinrich Willi (b. 1900), Swiss pediatrician.
- February 25 â Theodor Svedberg (b. 1884), Swedish chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
- March 11 â Philo T. Farnsworth (b. 1906), American television pioneer.
- April 1 â Dame Kathleen Lonsdale (b. 1903), Irish-born crystallographer.
- April 6 â Margaret Newton (b. 1887), Canadian plant pathologist.
- April 12 â Igor Tamm (b. 1895), Russian physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
- June 6 â Edward Andrade (b. 1887), English physicist.
- June 15
- Hillel Oppenheimer (b. 1899), German-born Israeli botanist.
- Wendell Meredith Stanley (b. 1904), American chemist, Nobel Prize laureate.
- June 30 â Soviet cosmonauts
- Georgy Dobrovolsky (b. 1928)
- Vladislav Volkov (b. 1935)
- Viktor Patsayev (b. 1933)
- September 15 â Benno Mengele (b. 1898), Austrian electrical engineer
References