Market1943 in science
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1943 in science

The year 1943 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Biology
• July 21 – Living specimens of Metasequoia glyptostroboides, the Dawn Redwood, previously known only as a Mesozoic fossil, are located in China. • The University of Oxford acquires the nearby Wytham Woods which become an important centre for research into ecology in England. • David Lack's study The Life of the Robin is published in England. ==Computer science==
Computer science
• March–December – Construction of British prototype Mark I Colossus computer, the world's first totally electronic programmable computing device, at the Post Office Research Station, Dollis Hill, to assist in cryptanalysis at Bletchley Park. • May 17 – The United States Army contracts with the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School to develop the ENIAC. ==Earth sciences==
Earth sciences
• February 20 – The cinder cone volcano Parícutin begins to appear in Mexico, giving volcanologists an unusual opportunity to observe its complete life cycle. ==Nuclear physics==
Nuclear physics
• January 1 – Project Y, the Manhattan Project's secret laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico, for development and production of the first atomic bombs under the direction of J. Robert Oppenheimer, begins operations. ==Pharmacology==
Pharmacology
• March 23 – The drugs Vicodin and Lortab are made in Germany. • October 19 – The antibiotic streptomycin (the first antibiotic remedy for tuberculosis) is first isolated by Albert Schatz in the laboratory of Selman Abraham Waksman at Rutgers University in the United States. • December – Winston Churchill's recurring bacterial pneumonia is successfully treated with the sulphapyridine M&B 693, a first-generation sulphonamide antibiotic. • A golden mould, Penicillium chrysogenum, growing on an American cantaloupe in Peoria, Illinois, is found to be ideal for mass production of penicillin. ==Psychology==
Psychology
Abraham Maslow proposes the Hierarchy of Needs theory of psychology in his paper "A Theory of Human Motivation". ==Physiology and medicine==
Physiology and medicine
• April 16–19 – Albert Hofmann discovers the hallucinogenic properties of lysergic acid diethylamide. • Leo Kanner of the Johns Hopkins Hospital first publicly adopts the term autism in its modern sense in English in referring to early infantile autism. • Warren S. McCulloch and Walter Pitts publish "A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity" in Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics, considered seminal in neural network theory. • Dr. Willem J. Kolff builds the first dialysis machine, in the occupied Netherlands. • New Zealand-born British anaesthetist Robert Macintosh introduces his new curved laryngoscope blade for tracheal intubation. ==Technology==
Technology
• March 5 – The Gloster Meteor, the first operational military jet aircraft for the Allies of World War II, has its first test flight, in England. • May 16–17 – Operation Chastise: British Royal Air Force attacks German dams using 'bouncing bombs' designed by Barnes Wallis. • Lyle Goodhue and William Sullivan patent the refillable aerosol spray in the United States, for use with mosquitorepellant. • Krueger flaps for aircraft wings are invented by Werner Krüger and evaluated in the wind tunnels in Göttingen. ==Awards==
Births
• January 14 – Ralph Steinman (died 2011), Canadian-born cell biologist, awarded Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (2011). • April 26 – Christiane Floyd, Austrian-born computer scientist. • May 9 – Colin Pillinger (died 2014), English astrophysicist. • May 14 – Richard Peto, English epidemiologist. • June 6 – Richard Smalley (died 2005), American organic chemist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1996) for discovery of buckminsterfullerene. • June 16 – Nancy Doe Hopkins, American molecular biologist and advocate for women in science. • June 22 – J. Michael Kosterlitz, Scottish-born condensed matter physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics (2016). • June 23 – Vint Cerf, American Internet pioneer. • July 11 – Hilary Kahn (died 2007), South African-born English computer scientist. • August 3 – Masato Sagawa, Japanese inventor. • August 10 – Louis E. Brus, American chemist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Chemistry (2023). • August 29 – Arthur B. McDonald, Canadian astrophysicist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Physics (2015). • September 20 – Richard McGehee, American mathematician working on celestial mechanics. • December 7 – Nick Katz, American mathematician. • Mary Lake Polan, American obstetrician and gynecologist. • Steen Willadsen, Danish-born embryologist. ==Deaths==
Deaths
• January 5 – George Washington Carver (born c.1864), African American agricultural botanist. • January 7 – Nikola Tesla (born 1856), Serbian American inventor. • January 24 – Carl Brigham (born 1890), American pioneer of psychometrics. • January 26 – Nikolai Vavilov (born 1887), Russian plant pathologist (in prison). • February 14 – David Hilbert (born 1862), German mathematician. • February 20 – Ernest Guglielminetti (born 1862), Swiss physician • February 23 – Abraham Buschke (born 1868), German Jewish dermatologist (in Theresienstadt concentration camp). • March 2 – Gisela Januszewska (born 1867), Austrian public health physician (in Theresienstadt concentration camp). • March 28 – Robert W. Paul (born 1869), English pioneer of cinematography. • April 8 – Kiyotsugu Hirayama (born 1874), Japanese astronomer. • June 26 – Karl Landsteiner (born 1868), Austrian-born American Jewish physiologist. • July 5 – Charles Gandy (born 1872), French physician. • July 7 – Hugh Whistler (born 1889), English ornithologist of India. • September 23 – John Bradfield (born 1867), Australian civil engineer. • September 30 – Carl Edvard Johansson (born 1864), Swedish metrologist. • October 1 – Albert Stewart Meek (born 1871), English-born Australian ornithologist. • November 14 – Frank Leverett (born 1859), American glaciologist. • November 20 – Bertha Lamme Feicht (born 1869), American electrical engineer. ==References==
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