George Ellery Hale
Encyclopedia : G : GE : GEO : George Ellery Hale
George Ellery Hale (June 29 1868 – February 21 1938) was an American solar astronomer, born in Chicago. He was educated at MIT, at the Observatory of Harvard College, (1889-90), and at Berlin (1893-94). As an undergraduate at MIT, he invented the spectroheliograph, with which he made his discoveries of the solar vortices and magnetic fields of sun spots.
In 1890 he was appointed director of the Kenwood Astrophysical Observatory; he was professor of Astrophysics at Beloit College (1891-93; associate professor at the University of Chicago until 1897, and full professor (1897-1905). He was coeditor of Astronomy and Astrophysics in 1892-95 and after 1895 editor of the Astrophysical Journal.
He helped found a number of observatories, including Yerkes Observatory and Mount Wilson Observatory. At Mount Wilson, he hired and encouraged Harlow Shapley and Edwin Hubble and did a great deal of fundraising, planning, organizing and promotion of astronomical institutions, societies and journals. Hale also played a central role in the development of Pasadena's California Institute of Technology (Caltech) into a leading research university.
Honors
Awards- Henry Draper Medal in 1904.
- Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1904.
- Bruce Medal in 1916.
- Janssen Medal in 1917.
- Galileo Medal, Florence, in 1920.
- Actonian Prize in 1921.
- Copley Medal in 1932.
- Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory.
- 22-year solar Hale Cycle.
- Asteroid 1024 Hale.
- Hale crater on the Moon.
- Hale crater on Mars.
- Hale Middle School Woodland Hills, CA
External links
- [Biography]
- [Bruce Medal page]
- [Awarding of the Bruce Medal: PASP 28 (1916) 12]
- [Awarding of the RAS gold medal: MNRAS 64 (1904) 388]
Obituaries
- [ApJ 87 (1938) 369]
- [JRASC 32 (1938) 192]
- [MNRAS 99 (1939) 322]
[Obs 61 (1938) 163](not online)- [PASP 50 (1938) 156]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
