1750 in science
The year 1750 in science and technology involved some significant events.Astronomy
- Thomas Wright suggests that the Milky Way Galaxy is a disk-shaped system of stars with the solar system near the centre.
Exploration
- April 1 – Pehr Osbeck sets out on a primarily botanical expedition to China.
Physics
- January 17 – John Canton reads a paper before the Royal Society on a method of making artificial magnets.
- Approx. date – Leonhard Euler and Daniel Bernoulli develop the Euler–Bernoulli beam equation.
Technology
- November 18 – Westminster Bridge across the River Thames in London, designed by the Swiss-born engineer Charles Labelye, is officially opened.
Publications
- Historia Plantarum, originally written by Conrad Gessner between 1555 and 1565.
Awards
- Copley Medal: George Edwards
Births
- March 16 – Caroline Herschel, German-born English astronomer
- July 2 – François Huber, Swiss naturalist
- July 5 – Aimé Argand, Swiss physicist and chemist
- September 22 – Christian Konrad Sprengel, German botanist
- October 25 – Marie Le Masson Le Golft, French naturalist
- Aaron Arrowsmith, English cartographer
- Jean Nicolas Fortin, French physicist and instrument maker who invented a portable mercury barometer in 1800
Deaths
- December 1 – Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr, German mathematician, astronomer, and cartographer