1945 in science
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The year 1945 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

- Salvador Edward Luria and Alfred Day Hershey independently recognize that viruses undergo mutations.
Chemistry
- A team at Oak Ridge National Laboratory led by Charles Coryell discovers chemical element 61, the only one still missing between 1 and 96 on the periodic table, which they will name promethium.[1] Found by analysis of fission products of irradiated uranium fuel, its discovery is not made public until 1947.
- Dorothy Hodgkin and C. H. (Harry) Carlisle publish the first three-dimensional molecular structure of a steroid, cholesteryl iodide.[2][3] In January, Hodgkin also discovers the structure of penicillin, not published until 1949.
- A team at American Cyanamid's Lederle Laboratories, Pearl River, New York, led by Yellapragada Subbarow, obtain folic acid in a pure crystalline form.[4][5]
Computer science
- June 30 – Distribution of John von Neumann's First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC, containing the first published description of the logical design of a computer with stored-program and instruction data stored in the same address space within the memory (von Neumann architecture).
- July – Publication of Vannevar Bush's article "As We May Think" proposing a proto-hypertext collective memory machine which he calls 'memex'.
- November – Assembly of the world's first general purpose electronic computer, the Electronic Numerical Integrator Analyzer and Computer (ENIAC), is completed in the United States, covering 1,800 square feet (170 m2) of floor space, and the first set of calculations is run on it.
History of science and technology
- Douglas Guthrie's A History of Medicine is published in the U.K.
Mathematics
- George Stigler solves the Stigler diet problem heuristically.[6]
Medicine
- February – Raymond L. Libby of American Cyanamid's research laboratories at Stamford, Connecticut, announces a method of orally administering the antibiotic penicillin.[7]
- The Amsler grid is introduced for monitoring of the central visual field.
Meteorology
- High-altitude west-to-east winds across Pacific, discovered by Japanese in 1942 and by Americans in 1944, are dubbed "jet stream".
Physics
- July 16 – Nuclear testing: the Trinity test, the first test of an atomic bomb, using 6 kilograms of plutonium, succeeds in detonating an explosion equivalent to that of 20 kilotons of TNT.
- August 6 and 9 – Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki make the world aware of the power of nuclear weapons.
- August 12 – The Smyth Report is released by the United States government, informing the public of the basics of nuclear fission and its military and civilian applications, and emphasizing the role played by physics in the development of the atomic bomb.
- August 21 – American physicist Harry Daghlian accidentally drops a tungsten carbide brick onto a plutonium–gallium alloy bomb core, exposing himself to a lethal dose of neutron radiation and becoming the first known fatality due to a criticality accident 25 days later.
Technology
- March 2 – The Bachem Ba 349 Natter is launched from Stetten am kalten Markt. The Natter is the first manned rocket, developed as an anti-aircraft weapon. The launch fails and the pilot dies.[8]
- October – Arthur C. Clarke puts forward the idea of a geosynchronous communications satellite.[9][10]
- November – Slinky toy first demonstrated by engineer Richard T. James in Philadelphia.
- The first desalination plant becomes operational.[11]
Institutions
- Kathleen Lonsdale and Marjory Stephenson become the first women elected as Fellows of the Royal Society of London.
Publications
- Argentine physicist Ernesto Sabato publishes Uno y el Universo ("One and the Universe"), a collection of essays criticizing the apparent moral neutrality of science and warning of dehumanization in technological societies.
- First book in the New Naturalist series is published in the United Kingdom, E. B. Ford's Butterflies.