1783 in science
The year 1783 in science and technology involved some significant events:
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Astronomy
    

The Meteor of August 18, 1783, as seen from the East Angle of the North Terrace, Windsor Castle, watercolour by Paul Sandby
- February 26 – Caroline Herschel discovers NGC 2360.
 - May – John Goodricke presents his conclusions that the variable star Algol is what comes to be known as an eclipsing binary to the Royal Society of London.
 - August 18 – Great Meteor passes over Great Britain, exciting scientific interest.[1][2]
 - November 27 – John Michell proposes the existence of black holes ("dark stars").[3]
 - Jérôme Lalande publishes a revised edition of John Flamsteed’s star catalogue in an ephemeris, Éphémérides des mouvemens célestes, numbering the stars consecutively by constellation, the system which becomes known as "Flamsteed designations".[4]
 
Aviation
    
- June 5 – The Montgolfier brothers send up at Annonay, near Lyon, a 900 m linen hot air balloon as a public demonstration. Its flight covers 2 km and lasts 10 minutes, to an estimated altitude of 1600–2000 metres.[5]
 - August 27 – Jacques Charles and the Robert brothers launch the first hydrogen balloon in Paris.
 - November 21 – The first free flight by humans in a balloon is made by Pilâtre de Rozier and Marquis d'Arlandes who fly aloft for 25 minutes about 100 metres above Paris for a distance of 9 km.[5]
 - December 26 – Louis-Sébastien Lenormand makes the first ever recorded public demonstration of a parachute descent by jumping from the tower of the Montpellier observatory in France using his rigid-framed model which he intends as a form of fire escape.
 
Botany
    
- Jean Baptiste François Pierre Bulliard publishes his Dictionnaire Elémentaire de Botanique, contributing to the spread of Linnaean terminology, particularly in mycology.
 - Erasmus Darwin begins publication of A System of Vegetables, a translation of Linnaeus in which he coins many common English language names of plants.
 
Chemistry
    
- Antoine Lavoisier publishes Réflexions sur le phlogistique, showing the phlogiston theory to be inconsistent, proposing chemical reaction as an alternative theory in a paper read to the French Academy of Sciences in June, names hydrogen and demonstrates that water is a compound and not an element.[6]
 - Discovery of tungsten – José and Fausto Elhuyar find an acid in wolframite which they reduce with charcoal to isolate tungsten.
 
Earth sciences
    
- February 5–March 28 – Calabrian earthquakes in Kingdom of Two Sicilies.
 - June 8 – The volcano Laki in Iceland begins a major eruption with extensive climatic consequences on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.[7]
 - August 4 (Edo period, Tenmei 3) – Mount Asama, the most active volcano in Japan, begins climactic eruption, exacerbating a famine, following a plinian eruption beginning on May 9 (Tenmei eruption).
 
History of science and technology
    
- German physician Melchior Adam Weikard publishes a biography of microscopist Wilhelm Friedrich von Gleichen, Biographie des Herrn Wilhelm Friedrich v. Gleichen genannt Rußwurm.
 
Physics
    
- Jean-Paul Marat publishes Mémoire sur l'électricité médicale ("Memorandum on Medical Electricity").
 
Technology
    
- Henry Cort of Funtley, England, invents the grooved rolling mill for producing bar iron.[8]
 - Thomas Bell patents a method of printing on fabric from engraved cylinders.[9][10]
 - Horace-Bénédict de Saussure publishes Essai sur l'hygrométrie, recording his experiments with the hair hygrometer.
 
Births
    
- May 22 – William Sturgeon, English inventor (died 1850)
 - June 9 – Benjamin Collins Brodie, English physiologist (died 1862)
 - October 6 – François Magendie, French physiologist (died 1855)
 - October 22 – Constantine Samuel Rafinesque, Ottoman-born French American polymath (died 1840)
 - October 31 – Karl Wilhelm Gottlob Kastner, German chemist (died 1857)
 - December 18 – Mary Anne Whitby, English scientist (died 1850)
 
Deaths
    
- March 30 – William Hunter, Scottish anatomist (born 1718)
 - April 16 – Christian Mayer, Moravian astronomer (born 1719)
 - September 18 – Leonhard Euler, Swiss mathematician and physicist (born 1707)
 - October 29 – Jean le Rond d'Alembert, French mathematician and physicist (born 1717)
 - November – Carl Linnaeus the Younger, Swedish naturalist (born 1741 )
 - December 13 – Pehr Wilhelm Wargentin, Swedish astronomer (born 1717)
 - December 16 – Arima Yoriyuki, Japanese mathematician (born 1714)
 - Wilhelm Friedrich von Gleichen, German microscopist (born 1717)
 
References
    
- Beech, Martin (1989). "The Great Meteor of 18th August 1783". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 99 (3): 130–33. Bibcode:1989JBAA...99..130B.
 - Cavallo, Tiberius (1 January 1784). "Description of a Meteor, Observed Aug. 18, 1783". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. London. 74: 108–111. doi:10.1098/rstl.1784.0010. It is also the subject of study by Charles Blagden.
 - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (London).
 - Ridpath, Ian. "Flamsteed numbers – where they really came from". Star Tales. Archived from the original on 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
 - Gillispie, Charles Coulston (1983). The Montgolfier Brothers and the Invention of Aviation, 1783-1784. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08321-6.
 - Emsley, John (2001). Nature's Building Blocks. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 183–191. ISBN 978-0-19-850341-5.
 - Brayshay, M.; Grattan, J. (1999). "Environmental and social responses in Europe to the 1783 eruption of the Laki fissure volcano in Iceland: a consideration of contemporary documentary evidence". In Firth, C. R.; McGuire, W. J. (eds.). Volcanoes in the Quaternary. Special Publication, 161. London: Geological Society. pp. 173–187. ISBN 978-1-86239-049-2.
 - Gale, W.K.V. (1981). Ironworking. Princes Risborough: Shire. pp. 17–19. ISBN 978-0-85263-546-9.
 - Hunt, David (1992). A History of Preston. Preston: Carnegie. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-948789-67-0.
 - Lemire, Beverley; Riello, Giorgio (2006). East and West: Textiles and Fashions in Eurasia in the Early Modern Period (PDF). Working Papers of the Global Economic History Network. London School of Economics. p. 29. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
 - "Copley Medal | British scientific award". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
 
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