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The year 1961 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Astronomy and space exploration
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January 31 – Ham, a 37-pound male chimpanzee, is rocketed into space in a test of the Project Mercury capsule designed to carry U.S. astronauts into space.
April 12 – Yuri Gagarin is the first human in space, making a single Low Earth orbit in Vostok 1 before parachuting to the ground.
April 15 – R. N. Schwartz and Charles Hard Townes publish "Interstellar and Interplanetary Communication by Optical Masers" in Nature, providing a basis for Optical SETI.
May 19 – Venera program: Venera 1 becomes the first manmade object to fly-by another planet by passing Venus (however the probe had lost contact with Earth a month earlier and does not send back any data).
May 25 – Apollo program: President Kennedy announces before a special joint session of Congress his goal to initiate a project to put a "man on the Moon" before the end of the decade.
Cephalosporin C is first characterized, by Guy Newton and Edward Abraham of the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology in the University of Oxford.[2]
Biology
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February 24 – Brattleboro rat strain first born.
May 15 – J. Heinrich Matthaei performs the Poly-U-Experiment in the United States, opening the way to solution of the genetic code, a key event in modern genetics.[3]
Leonard Ornstein first describes disc electrophoresis.[5][6]
Computer science
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July – Rolf Landauer first formulates Landauer's principle.[7]
Geophysics
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April – Project Mohole begins.
Francis Birch establishes Birch's law on compressional wave velocities.[8][9]
Mathematics
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Stephen Smale proves the Poincaré conjecture in dimensions greater than 4.[10]
Medicine
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March 9 – The United Kingdom Minister of Health, Enoch Powell, in his "water towers" speech to a Conservative Party conference, proposes closing down of large, traditional psychiatric hospitals in favour of more community-based care.[11]
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is first discovered, in the United Kingdom.
New Zealand cardiologist J. C. P. Williams identifies Williams syndrome.[12]
Pharmacology
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The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug Ibuprofen, derived from propanoic acid by the research arm of Boots UK (Andrew R. M. Dunlop with Stewart Adams, John Nicholson, Vonleigh Simmons, Jeff Wilson and Colin Burrows), is patented.[13][14]
Thalidomide is withdrawn from sale.
Physics
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February 14 – Discovery of the chemical elements: Element 103, Lawrencium, is first synthesized at Berkeley, California.
October 30 – The largest nuclear weapon by yield, Tsar Bomba, is detonated in Russia, having a 50-megaton yield.
Bark scale by German acoustics scientist Eberhard Zwicker.
Spain joins CERN; Yugoslavia leaves.
Psychology
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July – First Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures.
Technology
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June – RPG-7 rocket-propelled grenade launcher introduced in the Soviet Union.
September 12 – V/STOL aircraft Hawker Siddeley P.1127 makes its first transitions from vertical to horizontal flight and back, using thrust vectoring.
James L. Buie patents transistor-coupled transistor logic, later known as transistor-to-transistor logic circuitry (TTL), used in integrated circuits.[15]
Philips publicly introduce the compact audio cassette tape system, developed by a team led by Lou Ottens.[16]
^Rheinberger, Hans-Jörg (2001). Experimentalsysteme – Eine Geschichte der Proteinsynthese im Reagenzglas. Wallstein. ISBN 978-3-89244-454-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Hayflick, L.; Moorhead, P. S. (1961). "The serial cultivation of human diploid cell strains". Experimental Cell Research. 25 (3): 585–621. doi:10.1016/0014-4827(61)90192-6. PMID 13905658.
^Lenhoff, Howard M.; Teele, Rita L.; Clarkson, Patricia M.; Berdon, Walter E. (2010). "John C. P. Williams of Williams-Beuren syndrome". Pediatric Radiology. 41 (2): 267–269. doi:10.1007/s00247-010-1909-y. ISSN 0301-0449. PMID 21107555. S2CID 206933052.
^Lee, J. A. N. (2013). "Computer Pioneers". James L. Buie. IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved 2015-11-14. While working for TRW, Inc., Los Angeles, in the early 1960s, Buie developed and patented TTL circuitry, which became the dominant IC technology in the 1970s and early 1980s.