1757 in science
The year 1757 in science and technology involved some significant events.Astronomy
- Nicolas Louis de Lacaille publishes his Astronomiae Fundamenta Novissimus, containing a standard catalogue of 398 bright stars with positions corrected for aberration and nutation.
- Tobias Mayer presents accurate tables of the Moon's motion to the Board of Longitude in Great Britain.
Chemistry
- Scottish physician Francis Home publishes The Principles of Agriculture and Vegetation, an early presentation of the chemical principles underlying plant nutrition, in Edinburgh.
Medicine
- December 8 – Opening of the "New Lying-In" or Rotunda Hospital in Dublin, designed by Richard Cassels.
- Albrecht von Haller begins publication of Elementa physiologiae corporis humani in Switzerland.
Physics
- Leonhard Euler publishes his equations for inviscid flow.
Technology
- London instrument maker John Bird makes the first navigational sextant.
- Benjamin Franklin invents a three-wheel clock movement, which later leads to several variants in the design of pendulum clocks.
- The Grubenmann brothers complete timber arch bridges in Switzerland which include the longest vehicular bridge spans extant at this date:
- * Crossing the Rhine at Schaffhausen in two spans of 52 m and 59 m
- * A single-span of 67 m at Reichenau
Awards
- Copley Medal: Lord Charles Cavendish
Births
- January 17 – John Gough, English natural philosopher
- May 24 – William Charles Wells, Scottish American physician
- June 22 – George Vancouver, English explorer
- July 11 – Johann Matthäus Bechstein, German naturalist
- August 9 – Thomas Telford, Scottish civil engineer
- November 12 – Robert Willan, English dermatologist
- date unknown - Agnes Ibbetson, English plant physiologist
Deaths
- January 9
- * Louis Bertrand Castel, French Jesuit mathematician and physicist
- * Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle, French scientific populariser
- August 28 – David Hartley, English physician and psychologist
- October 17 – René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur, French physicist