Friday, October 18, 2013

Astronomer Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg

Astronomer Helen Sawyer Hogg  (1905 - 1993) was a distinguished scientist as well as role model for female astronomers. She was the leading authority in variable stars in global clusters and her contributions were recognized by many awards including Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1946 (first woman in Physical Sciences) ,  Companion of the Order of Canada in 1976,  and induction into the Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame in 2004.  The asteroid 2917, discovered in 1980, was named Asteroid Sawyer Hogg in 1984.

 

 Helen Sawyer Hogg was born in Lowell, Mass., and studied astronomy at Mount Holyoke College, receiving her doctorate in 1931 at Radcliffe.  She married Canadian astronomer Frank Hogg and began her work at the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria, B.C., and  continued her research in 1935 at the David Dunlop Observatory in Toronto, working  alongside her husband.  Sawyer Hogg was also as a professor of astronomy at the University of Toronto and wrote a  popular astronomy column that ran for 30 years in the Toronto Star.

 David Dunlap Observatory, Richmond Hill

 
 Photographs taken in 1938 and 1940 showing a nova


 1939 Steward Observatory, Tucson, Arizona

In 1939 Sawyer Hogg travelled to the Steward Observatory in Tucson, Arizona to photograph globular clusters that were too far south to be observed from the Dunlap Observatory in Richmond Hill.

 
 David Dunlap Observatory to Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg, Steward Observatory, Tucson, Arizona
May 26, 1939

1963  Dunstable, Mass.

Helen Sawyer Hogg had a summer residence in Dunstable, Mass., about 15 miles from her hometown Lowell, Mass.


Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, Victoria to Helen Sawyer Hogg David Dunlap Observatory, June 3, 1963
Redirected to Dunstable, Mass., June 5, 1963