Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society
| Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society | |
|---|---|
The RAS gold medal awarded to Asaph Hall | |
| Awarded for | Achievement in astronomy or geophysics |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Reward(s) | Medal |
| First awarded | 1824[1] |
| Last awarded | 2017[2] |
| Currently held by | Nick Kaiser (astronomy) & Michele Dougherty (geophysics)[2] |
| Website | http://www.ras.org.uk/awards-and-grants/awards |
The Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) is the highest award given by the RAS. The RAS Council have "complete freedom as to the grounds on which it is awarded"[3] and as such it can be awarded for any reason.[4] Past awards have been given for "outstanding personal researches in the fields of astronomy and geophysics" as well as general contributions to astronomy and geophysics "that may be made through leadership in research programmes, through education and through scientific administration". It has been awarded both for research that has taken a lifetime[3] (it has most frequently been given to recognise an extraordinary lifetime achievement)[4] and for specific pieces of research.[3]
History
The first Gold Medals were awarded in 1824. Silver medals were also awarded in 1824 and 1827,[1] but that practice was quickly abandoned, instead the RAS established other awards.
In the early years, more than one medal was often awarded in a year, but by 1833 only one medal was being awarded per year. This caused a problem when Neptune was discovered in 1846, because many felt an award should jointly be made to John Couch Adams and Urbain Le Verrier. A controversy arose and no award was made in 1847. The controversy was resolved by giving 12 "testimonial" awards in 1848 to various people including Adams and Le Verrier, and in 1849 awards resumed, with a limit of one per year. Adams and Le Verrier did not get their gold medals until 1866 and 1868, respectively. Adams, who was then President of the RAS, presented Le Verrier with the medal.
In some years, particularly early on, the RAS sometimes decided that there were no suitable nominations and so did not award the Gold Medal. There are therefore 17 years without an award, the most recent being 1942 (on that occasion due to the disruption of World War Two). One medal per year was the usual practise, although two medals were awarded in both 1867 and 1886. To ensure balance in research areas, in 1964 the award was expanded to two medals per year, one in astronomy (including astrophysics, cosmology etc.) and one in geophysics (including planetary science, tectonics etc.), which remains the current system.[4] All recipients are listed below, along with the years when no award was made.
The first woman to receive the Gold Medal was Caroline Herschel in 1828. No other woman received the award until Vera Rubin in 1996. Margaret and Geoffrey Burbidge were jointly awarded the 2005 Gold Medal in astronomy, the first joint award since 1886.
The medal features an image of the 40-foot telescope constructed by Sir William Herschel, the first President of the RAS.
Recipients
| Year | Astronomy | Geophysics | Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1824 | Charles Babbage Johann Franz Encke | [note 1] | [1] | |
| 1825 | No award | |||
| 1826 | John Herschel James South Wilhelm Struve | [1] | ||
| 1827 | Francis Baily | [note 2] | [1] | |
| 1828 | Thomas Makdougall Brisbane James Dunlop Caroline Herschel | [note 3] | [1] | |
| 1829 | Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel William Pearson Heinrich Christian Schumacher | [1] | ||
| 1830 | Johann Franz Encke William Richardson | [1] | ||
| 1831 | Marie-Charles Damoiseau Henry Kater | [1] | ||
| 1832 | No award | |||
| 1833 | George Biddell Airy | [1] | ||
| 1834 | No award | |||
| 1835 | Manuel J. Johnson | [1] | ||
| 1836 | John Herschel | [1] | ||
| 1837 | Otto A. Rosenberger | [1] | ||
| 1838 | No award | |||
| 1839 | John Wrottesley | [1] | ||
| 1840 | Jean Plana | [1] | ||
| 1841 | Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel | [1] | ||
| 1842 | Peter Andreas Hansen | [1] | ||
| 1843 | Francis Baily | [1] | ||
| 1844 | No award | |||
| 1845 | William Henry Smyth | [1] | ||
| 1846 | George Biddell Airy | [1] | ||
| 1847 | No award | |||
| 1848 | No award | [note 4] | [1] | |
| 1849 | William Lassell | [1] | ||
| 1850 | Otto Wilhelm Struve | [1] | ||
| 1851 | Annibale de Gasparis | [1] | ||
| 1852 | Christian August Friedrich Peters | [1] | ||
| 1853 | John Russell Hind | [1] | ||
| 1854 | Charles Rümker | [1] | ||
| 1855 | William Rutter Dawes | [1] | ||
| 1856 | Robert Grant | [1] | ||
| 1857 | Heinrich Schwabe | [1] | ||
| 1858 | Robert Main | [1] | ||
| 1859 | Richard Christopher Carrington | [1] | ||
| 1860 | Peter Andreas Hansen | [1] | ||
| 1861 | Hermann Goldschmidt | [1] | ||
| 1862 | Warren de la Rue | [1] | ||
| 1863 | Friedrich Wilhelm Argelander | [1] | ||
| 1864 | No award | |||
| 1865 | George Phillips Bond | [1] | ||
| 1866 | John Couch Adams | [1] | ||
| 1867 | William Huggins William Allen Miller | [1] | ||
| 1868 | Urbain Le Verrier | [1] | ||
| 1869 | Edward James Stone | [1] | ||
| 1870 | Charles-Eugène Delaunay | [1] | ||
| 1871 | No award | |||
| 1872 | Giovanni Schiaparelli | [1] | ||
| 1873 | No award | |||
| 1874 | Simon Newcomb | [1] | ||
| 1875 | Heinrich d'Arrest | [1] | ||
| 1876 | Urbain Le Verrier | [1] | ||
| 1877 | No award | |||
| 1878 | Ercole Dembowski | [1] | ||
| 1879 | Asaph Hall | [1] | ||
| 1880 | No award | |||
| 1881 | Axel Möller | [1] | ||
| 1882 | David Gill | [1] | ||
| 1883 | Benjamin A. Gould | [1] | ||
| 1884 | Andrew Ainslie Common | [1] | ||
| 1885 | William Huggins | [1] | ||
| 1886 | Edward Charles Pickering Charles Pritchard | [1] | ||
| 1887 | George William Hill | [1] | ||
| 1888 | Arthur Auwers | [1] | ||
| 1889 | Maurice Loewy | [1] | ||
| 1890 | No award | |||
| 1891 | No award | |||
| 1892 | George Howard Darwin | [1] | ||
| 1893 | Hermann Carl Vogel | [1] | ||
| 1894 | S. W. Burnham | [1] | ||
| 1895 | Isaac Roberts | [1] | ||
| 1896 | Seth Carlo Chandler | [1] | ||
| 1897 | Edward Emerson Barnard | [1] | ||
| 1898 | William Frederick Denning | [1] | ||
| 1899 | Frank McClean | [1] | ||
| 1900 | Henri Poincaré | [1] | ||
| 1901 | Edward Charles Pickering | [1] | ||
| 1902 | Jacobus Kapteyn | [1] | ||
| 1903 | Hermann Struve | [1] | ||
| 1904 | George Ellery Hale | [1] | ||
| 1905 | Lewis Boss | [1] | ||
| 1906 | William Wallace Campbell | [1] | ||
| 1907 | Ernest William Brown | [1] | ||
| 1908 | David Gill | [1] | ||
| 1909 | Oskar Backlund | [1] | ||
| 1910 | Friedrich Küstner | [1] | ||
| 1911 | Philip Herbert Cowell | [1] | ||
| 1912 | Arthur Robert Hinks | [1] | ||
| 1913 | Henri-Alexandre Deslandres | [1] | ||
| 1914 | Max Wolf | [1] | ||
| 1915 | Alfred Fowler | [1] | ||
| 1916 | John L. E. Dreyer | [1] | ||
| 1917 | Walter Sydney Adams | [1] | ||
| 1918 | John Evershed | [1] | ||
| 1919 | Guillaume Bigourdan | [1] | ||
| 1920 | No award | |||
| 1921 | Henry Norris Russell | [1] | ||
| 1922 | James Hopwood Jeans | [1] | ||
| 1923 | Albert A. Michelson | [1] | ||
| 1924 | Arthur Eddington | [1] | ||
| 1925 | Frank Watson Dyson | [1] | ||
| 1926 | Albert Einstein | [1] | ||
| 1927 | Frank Schlesinger | [1] | ||
| 1928 | Ralph Allen Sampson | [1] | ||
| 1929 | Ejnar Hertzsprung | [1] | ||
| 1930 | John Stanley Plaskett | [1] | ||
| 1931 | Willem de Sitter | [1] | ||
| 1932 | Robert Grant Aitken | [1] | ||
| 1933 | Vesto Slipher | [1] | ||
| 1934 | Harlow Shapley | [1] | ||
| 1935 | E. Arthur Milne | [1] | ||
| 1936 | Hisashi Kimura | [1] | ||
| 1937 | Harold Jeffreys | [1] | ||
| 1938 | William Hammond Wright | [1] | ||
| 1939 | Bernard Lyot | [1] | ||
| 1940 | Edwin Hubble | [1] | ||
| 1941 | No award | |||
| 1942 | No award | |||
| 1943 | Harold Spencer Jones | [1] | ||
| 1944 | Otto Struve | [1] | ||
| 1945 | Bengt Edlén | [1] | ||
| 1946 | Jan Oort | [1] | ||
| 1947 | Marcel Minnaert | [1] | ||
| 1948 | Bertil Lindblad | [1] | ||
| 1949 | Sydney Chapman | [1] | ||
| 1950 | Joel Stebbins | [1] | ||
| 1951 | Anton Pannekoek | [1] | ||
| 1952 | John Jackson | [1] | ||
| 1953 | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | [1] | ||
| 1954 | Walter Baade | [1] | ||
| 1955 | Dirk Brouwer | [1] | ||
| 1956 | Thomas George Cowling | [1] | ||
| 1957 | Albrecht Unsöld | [1] | ||
| 1958 | André Danjon | [1] | ||
| 1959 | Raymond Arthur Lyttleton | [1] | ||
| 1960 | Viktor Ambartsumian | [1] | ||
| 1961 | Herman Zanstra | [1] | ||
| 1962 | Bengt Strömgren | [1] | ||
| 1963 | H. H. Plaskett | [1] | ||
| 1964 | Martin Ryle | Maurice Ewing | [1] | |
| 1965 | Gerald Maurice Clemence | Edward Bullard | [1] | |
| 1966 | Ira Sprague Bowen | Harold Clayton Urey | [1] | |
| 1967 | Allan Sandage | Hannes Alfven | [1] | |
| 1968 | Fred Hoyle | Walter Munk | [1] | |
| 1969 | Martin Schwarzschild | Albert Thomas Price | [1] | |
| 1970 | Horace W. Babcock | [1] | ||
| 1971 | Richard van der Riet Woolley | Frank Press | [1] | |
| 1972 | Fritz Zwicky | H. I. S. Thirlaway | [1] | |
| 1973 | Edwin Salpeter | Francis Birch | [1] | |
| 1974 | Ludwig Biermann | K. E. Bullen | [1] | |
| 1975 | Jesse Greenstein | Ernst Öpik | [1] | |
| 1976 | William H. McCrea | J. A. Ratcliffe | [1] | |
| 1977 | John G. Bolton | David R. Bates | [1] | |
| 1978 | Lyman Spitzer | James Van Allen | [1] | |
| 1979 | C. G. Wynne | Leon Knopoff | [1] | |
| 1980 | Maarten Schmidt | Chaim L. Pekeris | [1] | |
| 1981 | Bernard Lovell | J. Freeman Gilbert | [1] | |
| 1982 | Riccardo Giacconi | Harrie Massey | [1] | |
| 1983 | M. J. Seaton | Fred Whipple | [1] | |
| 1984 | Yakov Borisovich Zel'dovich | S. K. Runcorn | [1] | |
| 1985 | Stephen Hawking | Thomas Gold | [1] | |
| 1986 | Alexander Dalgarno | George E. Backus | [1] | |
| 1987 | Martin Rees | Takesi Nagata | [1] | |
| 1988 | Cornelis de Jager | Don L. Anderson | [1] | |
| 1989 | Ken Pounds | Raymond Hide | [1] | |
| 1990 | B. E. J. Pagel | James W. Dungey | [1] | |
| 1991 | Vitaly Ginzburg | G. J. Wasserburg | [1] | |
| 1992 | Eugene N. Parker | Dan P. McKenzie | [1] | |
| 1993 | Donald Lynden-Bell | Peter Goldreich | [1] | |
| 1994 | James E. Gunn | Thomas R. Kaiser | [1] | |
| 1995 | Rashid Sunyaev | John T. Houghton | [1] | |
| 1996 | Vera Rubin | Kenneth Creer | [note 3] | [1] |
| 1997 | Donald Osterbrock | Donald Farley | [1] | |
| 1998 | James Peebles | Robert L. Parker | [1] | |
| 1999 | Bohdan Paczyński | Kenneth Budden | [1] | |
| 2000 | Leon Lucy | Robert Hutchison | [1][5] | |
| 2001 | Hermann Bondi | Henry Rishbeth | [1] | |
| 2002 | Leon Mestel | J. A. Jacobs | [1] | |
| 2003 | John Bahcall | David Gubbins | [1] | |
| 2004 | Jeremiah P. Ostriker | Grenville Turner | [1] | |
| 2005 | Margaret Burbidge Geoffrey Burbidge | Carole Jordan | [note 5] | [1] |
| 2006 | Simon White | Stan Cowley | [1] | |
| 2007 | John L. Culhane | Nigel O. Weiss | [1] | |
| 2008 | Joseph Silk | Brian Kennett | [1] | |
| 2009 | David A. Williams | Eric Priest | [1][6] | |
| 2010 | Douglas Gough | John Woodhouse | [1][7] | |
| 2011 | Richard Ellis | Eberhard Grün | [1][8] | |
| 2012 | Andy Fabian | John Brown | [1][9] | |
| 2013 | Roger Blandford | Chris Chapman | [1][10] | |
| 2014 | Carlos Frenk | John Zarnecki | [1][11] | |
| 2015 | Michel Mayor | Mike Lockwood | [4] | |
| 2016 | John D. Barrow | Philip England | [12] | |
| 2017 | Nick Kaiser | Michele Dougherty | [2] | |
| 2018 | James Hough | Robert White | [13] | |
^ Silver medalists: Jean-Louis Pons, Charles Rümker
^ Silver medalists: Mark Beaufoy, William Samuel Stratford
^ ab The first woman to receive the Gold Medal was Caroline Herschel in 1828. No other woman did so until Vera Rubin in 1996.
^ Replaced by testimonial medals, awarded to John Couch Adams, George Biddell Airy, Friedrich Wilhelm Argelander, George Bishop, George Everest, Peter Andreas Hansen, Karl Ludwig Hencke, John Herschel, John Russell Hind, John William Lubbock, Urbain Le Verrier & Maxmilian Weisse
^ Margaret and Geoffrey Burbidge received the first joint award since 1886
References
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society. |
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkblbmbnbobpbqbrbsbtbubvbwbxbybzcacbcccdcecfcgchcicjckclcmcncocpcqcrcsctcucvcwcxcyczdadbdcdddedfdgdhdidjdkdldmdndodpdqdrdsdtdudvdwdxdydzeaebecedeeefegeheiejekelemeneoepeqereseteuevewexeyezfafbfcfdfefffgfhfifjfkflfmfnfofpfqfrfsftfu "Gold Medal Winners" (PDF). RAS. 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
"Winners of the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society". RAS. 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
^ abc "RAS honours leading astronomers and geophysicists". Royal Astronomical Society. 11 January 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
^ abc "Gold Medal (A)". RAS. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
^ abcd "Winners of the 2015 awards, medals and prizes - full details". 9 January 2015. Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
^ "News: Appointments and awards". Astronomy & Geophysics. 41 (4): 7. 2000. Bibcode:2000A&G....41d...7.. doi:10.1046/j.1468-4004.2000.00404-9.x.
^ "RAS meeting and Community Forum - JENAM 2009". Archived from the original on February 17, 2009. Retrieved 23 April 2009.
^ "RAS Honours Outstanding Astronomers and Geophysicists". Royal Astronomical Society. Retrieved 25 March 2011.
^ "RAS honours outstanding astronomers and geophysicists". Royal Astronomical Society. 19 January 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
^ "RAS honours leading astronomers and geophysicists". Royal Astronomical Society. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
^ "2013 winners of the RAS awards, medals and prizes". Royal Astronomical Society. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
^ "2014 winners of the RAS awards, medals and prizes". Royal Astronomical Society. 10 January 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
^ "RAS honours leading astronomers and geophysicist". RAS. 8 January 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
^ http://www.ras.org.uk/news-and-press/3086-ras-medals-and-awards-honour-leading-astronomers-and-geophysicists. Retrieved 4 June 2018. Missing or empty|title=(help)