1882 in science
The year 1882 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
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| 1882 in science | 
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| Paleontology | 
| Extraterrestrial environment | 
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Astronomy
    
- September – Great Comet of 1882 sighted.[1]
 - December 6 – Transit of Venus, 1882.
 

Great Comet as seen from Cape Town by David Gill
Biology
    
- March 24 – Robert Koch announces his discovery of the bacterium responsible for tuberculosis, Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
 - Élie Metchnikoff discovers phagocytosis.[2]
 
Chemistry
    
- Italian physicist Luigi Palmieri detects helium on Earth for the first time through its D3 spectral line when he analyzes the lava of Mount Vesuvius.[3]
 
Earth sciences
    
- Clarence Dutton's Tertiary History of the Grand Cañon District is published by the United States Geological Survey.
 
Mathematics
    
- June – German mathematician Ferdinand von Lindemann publishes proof that π is a transcendental number and that squaring the circle is consequently impossible.[4][5]
 - December – Swedish mathematician Gösta Mittag-Leffler establishes the journal Acta Mathematica.
 - Felix Klein first describes the Klein bottle.
 
Medicine
    
- March 28 – Paul Beiersdorf patents an adhesive bandage in Germany, the foundation of the Beiersdorf company.
 - Vladimir Bekhterev publishes Provodiashchie puti mozga ("The Conduction Paths in the Brain and Spinal Cord"), beginning to note the role of the hippocampus in memory.
 
Technology
    
- January 12 – Holborn Viaduct power station in the City of London, the world's first coal-fired public electricity generating station, begins operation.[6]
 - By March – Étienne-Jules Marey invents a chronophotographic gun capable of photographing 12 consecutive frames per second on the same plate.
 - April 29 – Werner von Siemens demonstrates his Electromote, the first form of trolleybus, in Berlin.
 - June 6 – Henry W. Seeley patents the electric clothes iron in the United States.[7]
 - September 4 – Thomas Edison starts the United States' first commercial electrical power plant, lighting one square mile of lower Manhattan.
 - English mechanical engineer James Atkinson invents his "Differential Engine".
 - American electrical engineer Schuyler Wheeler produces an electric fan.
 - Alfred P. Southwick publishes his proposals for use of the electric chair as an execution method in the United States.
 
Events
    
- First International Polar Year, an international scientific program, begins.
 - The Chartered Institute of Patent Agents, the modern-day Chartered Institute of Patent Attorneys, is founded in the United Kingdom.
 
Awards
    
- Copley Medal: Arthur Cayley[8]
 - Wollaston Medal for Geology: Franz Ritter von Hauer
 
Births
    
- March 14 – Wacław Sierpiński (died 1969), Polish mathematician.
 - March 23 – Emmy Noether (died 1935), German mathematician.
 - March 30 – Melanie Klein (died 1960), Viennese-born psychoanalyst.
 - April 27 – Harry Allan (died 1957), New Zealand botanist.
 - June 17 – Harold Gillies (died 1960), New Zealand-born plastic surgeon.
 - July 12 – Traian Lalescu (died 1929), Romanian mathematician.
 - July 21 – Herbert E. Ives (died 1953), American optical engineer.
 - September 30 – Hans Geiger (died 1945), German inventor of the Geiger counter.
 - October 5 – Robert Goddard (died 1945), American rocket scientist.
 - October 26 – Marietta Pallis (died 1963), Indian-born Graeco-British ecologist.
 - November 18 – Frances Gertrude McGill (died 1959), pioneering Canadian forensic pathologist.
 - December 11 – Max Born (died 1970), German physicist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in physics in 1954.
 - December 28 – Arthur Eddington (died 1944), English astrophysicist.
 - Israel Aharoni (died 1946), Belarusian-born Jewish zoologist.
 
Deaths
    
- January 11 – Theodor Schwann (born 1810), German physiologist.
 - April 19 – Charles Darwin (born 1809), English naturalist and geologist.
 - August 24 – John Dillwyn Llewelyn (born 1810), Welsh botanist and photographer.
 - September 23 – Friedrich Wöhler (born 1800), German chemist.
 - October 27 – Christian Heinrich von Nagel (born 1803), German geometer.
 - November 20 – Henry Draper (born 1837), doctor, American astronomer.
 - December 24
- Johann Benedict Listing (born 1808), German mathematician.
 - Charles Vincent Walker (born 1812), English telegraph engineer.
 
 
References
    
- Plummer, William Edward (March 1889). "The great comet of September 1882". The Observatory. 12: 140–142. Bibcode:1889Obs....12..140P.
 - Petrunkevitch, Alexander (1920). "Russia's Contribution to Science". Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences. 23: 239.
 - Stewart, Alfred Walter (2008). Recent Advances in Physical and Inorganic Chemistry. BiblioBazaar, LLC. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-554-80513-9.
 - Lindemann, F. (1882). "Über die Zahl π". Mathematische Annalen. 20: 213–225. doi:10.1007/BF01446522.
 - Crilly, Tony (2007). 50 Mathematical Ideas you really need to know. London: Quercus. pp. 21, 81. ISBN 978-1-84724-008-8.
 - Harris, Jack (1982-01-14). "The electricity of Holborn". New Scientist. London.
 - Patent no. 259,054. "Household Amenities and Appliances: Timeline of Their Arrival". PartSelect. Retrieved 2012-01-25.
 - "Copley Medal | British scientific award". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
 
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