1979 in science
The year 1979 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.Astronomy and space exploration
- February 7 – Pluto enters a 20-year period inside the orbit of Neptune for the first time in 230 years.
- March 7 – The largest magnetar event is recorded.
- July 11 – America's first space station, Skylab, is deliberately allowed to burn up on atmospheric entry over the Indian Ocean.
- September 1 – The American Pioneer 11 becomes the first spacecraft to visit Saturn when it passes the planet at a distance of 21,000 km.
- December 24 - The maiden launch of Ariane 1, the first rocket in the Ariane launcher family.
- Amateur Achievement Award of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific given for the first time.
Biology
- Arthur William Baden Powell publishes New Zealand Mollusca.
Computer science
- VisiCalc becomes the first spreadsheet program.
- The US Federal Government releases the initial, draft version of Ada, a strongly typed, comb-structured language with exception handlers, for embedded systems.
Conservation
- April 5 – First stage of Kakadu National Park declared in Australia.
Earth sciences
- The RISE project first discovers hydrothermal vents known as 'black smokers', on a mid-ocean ridge in the Pacific Ocean.
History of science
- Robert Gwyn Macfarlane publishes Howard Florey: The Making of a Great Scientist.
Mathematics
- 'Monstrous moonshine': John Conway and Simon P. Norton prove there is a connection between the Monster group M and the j-function in number theory.
- The first modern Sudoku, known as Number Place, appears in Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games, devised by Howard Garns.
- August – The eating disorder Bulimia nervosa is first described and named by British psychiatrist Gerald Russell.
- December 9 – The World Health Organization certifies the global eradication of smallpox.
- The last naturally occurring cases of polio are reported in the United States.
- Tumor protein p53 is identified by Lionel Crawford, David Lane, Arnold J. Levine and Lloyd J. Old.
Paleontology
- Dinosaur eggs found in the Two Medicine Formation of Montana.
Technology
- March 1 – Philips publicly demonstrate a prototype of an optical digital audio disc at a press conference in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
- June 12 – Human-powered aircraft Gossamer Albatross, built by an American team led by Paul MacCready and piloted by Bryan Allen, makes a successful crossing of the English Channel to win the second Kremer prize.
Awards
- Nobel Prizes
- * Physics – Sheldon Lee Glashow, Abdus Salam, Steven Weinberg
- * Chemistry – Herbert C. Brown, Georg Wittig
- * Medicine – Allan M. Cormack, Godfrey N. Hounsfield
- Turing Award – Kenneth E. Iverson
Births
- June 29 – Artur Avila, Brazilian-born mathematician.
Deaths
- January – Oscar H. Banker, Armenian American inventor.
- March 11 – Noël Poynter, English medical historian.
- March 17 – Henry Aaron Hill, American fluorocarbon chemist, first African American president of the American Chemical Society.
- April 5 – Eugène Gabritschevsky, Russian biologist and artist.
- May 6 – Karl Wilhelm Reinmuth, German astronomer.
- June 1 – Werner Forssmann, German physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
- September 26 – Sir Barnes Wallis, English aeronautical engineer.
- October 10 – Guido Fanconi, Swiss pediatrician.
- October 12 – Katharine Burr Blodgett, American physicist and chemist.