- William Hammond Wright
William Hammond Wright (
November 4 ,1871 –May 16 ,1959 ) was an Americanastronomer . He was director of theLick Observatory from 1935 until 1942.Wright was born in
San Francisco . After graduating in 1893 from theUniversity of California , he became Assistant Astronomer at Lick Observatory. From 1903 to 1906 he worked on establishing the "Southern station" of the observatory atCerro San Cristobal nearSantiago de Chile . It only took him 6 months to start with observations from this new site, and he recorded a large series of radial velocity measurements ofstar s in the southern sky. In 1908 he was promoted to Astronomer. From 1918 to 1919 he was stationed atAberdeen Proving Ground working for the ordnance section of theUnited States Army . He then returned to the Lick Observatory and worked there until his retirement.He is most famous for his work on radial velocity of stars in our
galaxy , and his work with aspectrograph he designed himself. He obtained spectra ofnova s andnebula e. In 1924 he made photographic observations of Mars in multiplewave length s. From these pictures he concluded that its atmosphere was about 60mile s (100 km) deep.In 1928 he received the
Henry Draper Medal , and in 1938 theGold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society . A crater on Mars is named in his honor.External links
* [http://dynaweb.oac.cdlib.org:8088/dynaweb/uchist/public/inmemoriam/inmemoriam1960/@Generic__BookTextView/1097 Obituary]
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