Columns:
| # | Tweet | User | Followers | Views ▼ | Ratio | Engagement | Posted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [image] #OnThisDay February 20, 1972, Nobel laureate Maria Goeppert Mayer, the physicist who explained the structure of atomic nuclei through the nuclear shell model, passed away. She was the second woman ever to win the Nobel Prize in Physics, after Marie Curie.
Born on June 28, 1906, | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.0K | 18.4K | 4.5x | 70 | Feb 20 |
| 2 | [image] #OnThisDay February 22, 1857, Heinrich Hertz was born in Hamburg, Germany — the physicist who first proved the existence of electromagnetic waves, confirming James Clerk Maxwell’s revolutionary theory.
In the late 1880s, Hertz generated and detected radio waves in his laboratory | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.1K | 15.5K | 3.8x | 54 | Feb 22 |
| 3 | [image] #OnThisDay 31 March, 1727, we remember Sir Isaac Newton — the man who transformed our understanding of motion, gravity, and the universe.
A true giant of science.
Born in 1642 in Woolsthorpe, England, Newton showed early brilliance in mathematics and physics.
He would go on to | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.1K | 15.0K | 3.7x | 34 | Mar 31 |
| 4 | [image] #OnThisDay April 10, 1813,
We remember Joseph-Louis Lagrange — a mathematician who reshaped mechanics, number theory, and calculus. His work still powers modern physics and engineering.
Born in Turin (1736), Lagrange showed early brilliance. By his 20s, he was already | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.0K | 9.7K | 2.4x | 36 | Apr 10 |
| 5 | [image] #OnThisDay April 13, we remember John Archibald Wheeler (1911–2008), the visionary physicist who reshaped how we think about the universe—from black holes to quantum reality.
Wheeler coined the term “black hole” in 1967—giving a name to one of the most mysterious objects in the | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.0K | 2.8K | 0.7x | 39 | Apr 13 |
| 6 | [image] #OnThisDay April 15, 1707, one of the greatest mathematicians in history was born — Leonhard Euler
A man whose work still shapes modern mathematics, physics, and engineering.
Euler introduced much of the mathematical notation we use today:
- (base of natural logs)
- (imaginary | @hist_of_the_day ✓ | 4.0K | 1.1K | 0.3x | 51 | Apr 15 |