Karl G. Jansky Lecture
Ausgesinn
D'Karl G. Jansky Lecture ass e Präis fir Astronomie (a speziell Radioastronomie) vum National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) vun der USA. En ass nom Astronom Karl Guthe Jansky genannt, deen 1932 als Éischte Radiosignaler aus enger kosmescher Quell (Zentrum vun der Mëllechstrooss) fonnt hat an domat d'Radioastronomie gegrënnt hat. De Präisdréier hält seng ëffentlech Virliesung zu Charlottesville (Sëtz vum NRAO) a Socorro (New Mexico, an der Ëmgéigend vum Very Large Array).
Ënner de Präisdréier si bis elo sechs Nobelpräisdréier (Townes, Chandrasekhar, Penzias, Wilson, Fowler, Taylor) ze fannen.
Präisdréier
[änneren | Quelltext änneren]A Klameren der Titel vum Virtrag.
- 2016 Jacqueline H. van Gorkom, Columbia University
- 2015 Nick Z. Scoville, Caltech (Star and Planet Formation through Cosmic Time)
- 2014 Jill Tarter, SETI-Institut (Are We Alone? Searching for Intelligent Life Beyond Earth)
- 2013 Charles L. Bennett, Johns Hopkins University (A Tour of the Universe)
- 2012 Mark Reid, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) (Measuring the Cosmos)
- 2011 Sander Weinreb, Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Caltech (Radio Astronomy from Jansky to the Future: an Engineer's Point of View)
- 2010 Reinhard Genzel, Max Planck Institute für Extraterrestrische Physik (The Galactic Center Black Hole and Nuclear Star Cluster)
- 2009 Anthony Readhead, Caltech (The Central Engines that Power Active Galaxies)
- 2008 Arthur M. Wolfe, University of California, San Diego (Finding the Gas that Makes Galaxies)
- 2007 Karl Martin Menten, Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie Bonn (Tuning in to the Molecular Universe)
- 2006 Frank J. Low, Infrared Laboratories, Inc. (How the Spitzer Space Telescope was Designed, Tested and Built)
- 2005 Rashid Sunyaev, Direkter MPI Astrophysik zu Garching (Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation, Clusters of Galaxies and Cosmology)
- 2004 Ronald D. Ekers, Australia Telescope National Facility (Paths to Discovery)
- 2003 Donald C. Backer, Radio Astronomy Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley (Massive Black Holes, Gravitational Waves, and Pulsars)
- 2002 Shrinivas Kulkarni, Caltech (The Brightest Explosions in the Universe)
- 2001 William J. Welch, University of California at Berkeley (Astronomical Arrays of the Future; Astronomy, SETI, and More)
- 2000 V. Radhakrishnan, Raman Research Institute, Bangalore, Indien (Astronomy's Devices)
- 1999 Frank D. Drake, SETI Institute and University of California, Santa Cruz (Progress in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence)
- 1998 Bernard Burke, MIT, (Radio Telescopes: Reaching for the Astronomical Frontiers)
- 1997 James E. Peebles, Princeton University (The Big Bang and Our Evolving Universe)
- 1996 James M. Moran, Harvard University and Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (Brilliant Masers and Mysterious Black Holes)
- 1995 Jocelyn Bell-Burnell, Open University, (Tick, Tick, Tick, Pulsating Star, How We Wonder What You Are)
- 1994 Vera C. Rubin, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism (What's the Matter in the Universe)
- 1993 David S. Heeschen, fréieren Direkter vum NRAO (The Development of Radio Astronomy in the United States)
- 1992 Irwin I. Shapiro, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (Reckoning the Size of the Universe Through Gravitational Lenses)
- 1991 Allan R. Sandage, The Observatories of Carnegie Institution (The Quest for the Curvature of Space)
- 1990 Alan H. Barrett, MIT (Molecular Radio Astronomy: The Beginnings)
- 1989 Joseph H. Taylor, Princeton University (Time and the Nature of the Universe)
- 1988 William A. Fowler, Caltech (The Age of the Observable Universe)
- 1987 Hendrik van de Hulst, Universität Leiden (Far from the Stars)
- 1986 Robert Hanbury Brown, Universitéit Sydney (Stars, Photons, and Uncommon Sense)
- 1985 Geoffrey Burbidge, University of California, San Diego (How Strange the Violent Universe ?)
- 1984 Robert Woodrow Wilson, Leeder vum Radio Physics Research Department, Bell Laboratories (Millimeter Wave Astronomy)
- 1983 Arno Penzias, Vizepresident fir Fuerschung, Bell Laboratories (The Astronomical Origin of the Earth's Materials)
- 1982 Philip Morrison, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (The New Waves: Fifty Years of Radio Astronomy)
- 1981 Martin Rees, Plumian Professer zu Cambridge (The Next Hundred Billion Years)
- 1980 Martin Schwarzschild, Princeton University (What Shape Galaxies, Pancakes or Potatoes ?)
- 1979 Maarten Schmidt, Direkter vum Hale-Observatoire (Quasars as Probes of the Early Universe)
- 1978 Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Universität Chicago (General Relativity in Astronomy at Einstein's Centennial)
- 1977 Margaret Burbidge, University of California, San Diego (Galaxies, Quasars, and the Space Telescope)
- 1976 Edward M. Purcell, Harvard University (A story of spinning particles)
- 1975 Grote Reber, CSIRO, Tasmanien, Australien (Beginning of Radio Astronomy)
- 1974 Lyman Spitzer, Direkter vun der Princeton University Observatory (A Space Astronomer Looks at the Interstellar Medium)
- 1973 J. Paul Wild, Leeder vun der Sektioun Radiophysik, CSIRO, Sydney (Exploring the Sun with Radio Waves)
- 1972 Bart J. Bok, Steward Observatory (Star Birth in the Galaxy)
- 1971 Charles H. Townes, Universitéit Berkeley (Exploring the Creation)
- 1970 Robert H. Dicke, Princeton University (Gravitation and the Universe).
- 1969 Fred Hoyle, Plumian Professor in Cambridge (The Relationship of Astronomy and Physics).
- 1968 Josef Samuilowitsch Schklowski, Leeder vum Sektor Radioastronomie am Sternberg Astronomie Institut der UdSSR (On the Variability of Cosmic Radio Source Emission)
- 1967 Jan Hendrik Oort, Direkter vum Observatoire Leiden (Large-scale Distribution and Motion of Hydrogen in the Galaxy)
- 1966 John G. Bolton, Direkter vum Australian National Radio Astronomy Observatory (Radio Astronomy: Steppingstones to Quasars)