- Sidney Dean Townley
Sidney Dean Townley (
April 10 ,1867 –March 18 ,1946 ) was an Americanastronomer and geodeticist.He was born in
Waukesha, Wisconsin to Reverend Robert Townley and his wife Mary Wilkinson. After the equivalent of ahigh school education, he gained a job as a clerk in the local town bank. A year and a half later he was admitted to theUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison . He would graduate four years later with distinction, and become a member ofPhi Beta Kappa .During his second year at the university he took a course in astronomy. He was also given a room at the
Washburn Observatory and worked nights as an assistant. These would serve to shape his interest in astronomy.In his second year as a graduate student he was offered a Hearst fellowship at the
Lick Observatory , which he accepted, arriving in 1892. In 1893, however, the fellowship funds were re-committed to aneclipse expedition toChile , so he had to depart.He became an instructor of
astronomy , first at theUniversity of Michigan , followed by theUniversity of California . From 1893 until 1898 he worked at the Detroit Observatory, where he studiedvariable star s andcomet s.By 1897 he gained his
Sc.D. from the University of Michigan with athesis on the "Orbit of Psyche". In 1898 he spent a year on leave to travel throughGermany , visiting major observatories inBerlin ,Liepzig , andMunich . After his return he began teaching at theUniversity of California, Berkeley , and was appointed director of the International Latitude Station atUkiah, California . While there he developed an interest ingeodesy , particularlyseismology .Townley was a member of the "
Astronomical Society of the Pacific " and served as its president in 1916, and also spent time as director and on the publication committee. He also joined the Seismological Society, and served at various times as president, secretary-treasurer, and editor of the society journal.In 1911 he became an assistant professor at
Stanford University . In a short time he became full professor, and would remain in that position until his retirement in 1932, thereafter becoming professor emeritus. Toward the end of his life he became an invalid, although he remained mentally alert until he died inStanford, California .During his career he published roughly 100 academic papers, and edited the contributions of many others. He was widely recognized for his editorial skills.
Townley crater on the
Moon wasnamed after him.Bibliography
* Sidney Dean Townley and Maxwell Wilford Allen, "Descriptive catalogue of earthquakes of the Pacific Coast of the United States, 1769 to 1928", 1939, "Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America", 29.
* Sidney Dean Townley,Annie Jump Cannon , and Leon Campbell, "Harvard catalogue of long period variable stars", 1928, "The Observatory", Cambridge, Mass.References
*
Robert G. Aitken , "Sidney Dean Townley, 1867-1946", 1946, "Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific", Vol. 58, No. 342.
* Patricia S. Whitesell, "Detroit Observatory: nineteenth-century training ground for astronomers", 2003, "Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage", 6(2).
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