The 1960s Science and Technology: Chronology
The 1960s Science and Technology: Chronology
1960 A synthetic ruby is used to produce a laser.
1960: Artificial suntanning cream is developed.
1960: The solar system is estimated to be 4.9 billion years old.
1960: The USS George Washington, a state-of-the-art nuclear-powered submarine, is launched.
1960: April 1 Tiros 1, the first weather satellite, is launched.
1961: The USS Enterprise aircraft carrier, run by eight nuclear reactors, is launched.
1961: Texas Instruments patents the first silicon chip used for electronic circuits.
1961: January 3 Three maintenance crew members are killed by a nuclear explosion in the Stationary Low Power Reactor Number One at the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission's National Reactor Testing Station in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
1961: January 31 The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launches into space a capsule containing a chimpanzee, and successfully recovers the animal.
1961: April Chemists form Element 103 (lawrencium), a radioactive chemical element, by showering californium with boron nuclei.
1961: April 12 Cosmonaut Yuri A. Gagarin becomes the first Russian launched into space.
1961: May 5 Astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. becomes the first American launched into space.
1962: The U.S. scientific space probe Mariner 2 reaches Venus 109 days after its launch.
1962: Kelvinator produces a dishwasher that employs high-frequency sound waves, rather than soap and water.
1962: Powdered orange juice is patented.
1962: June 16 Cosmonaut Valentina V. Tereshkova becomes the first woman in space.
1963: The USS Atlantis II clearly photographs the ocean floor.
1964: The Verrazano Narrows Bridge, the world's largest suspension bridge, opens in New York City.
1964: IBM produces a new product, the word processor, a hybrid of the typewriter and computer.
1964: August 5 Congress establishes the National Commission on Technology, Automation and Economic Progress, to analyze the impact of automation on unemployment.
1965: Traffic control in Chicago, New York, and Detroit becomes computerized.
1965: A computer at the New York Stock Exchange answers questions over the telephone using an artificial voice.
1965: February 17 Ranger 8, a moon probe, blasts off into space and sends back more than seven thousand images of the moon's surface before crashing into the lunar Sea of Tranquility.
1965: July 15 Mariner 4 sends the first close-up photographs of Mars.
1966: Radar is used to measure the polar ice thickness.
1966: June 2 Sorcerer I makes the first soft landing on the moon.
1967: Computer keyboards are developed, allowing immediate access between the operator and the computer.
1967: RCA develops a compact television camera weighing just over two pounds.
1967: A cordless, battery-powered telephone is developed.
1967: A solar-powered house is built.
1967: January 27 A launch pad fire kills American astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Edward H. White, and Roger B. Chaffee during a test for what would have been the first space mission with a three-person crew on board.
1967: March 1 The first overseas direct telephone dialing begins.
1968: Scientists use radar to map the surface of Venus.
1968: The picosecond, the smallest period of time detectable, is measured at Bell Laboratories.
1968: August 16 The Poseidon 3, a new missile that can be launched from submarines, is tested.
1968: October 11 Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo flight, begins a seven-day mission.
1969: January 22 The Atomic Energy Commission announces completion of the world's largest superconducting magnet.
1969: July 16 Apollo 11 is launched. This flight culminates in the landing of the first human on the surface of the moon.
1969: November 18 Americans land on the moon for the second time in Apollo 12.