{"id":2935,"date":"2011-06-16T09:00:30","date_gmt":"2011-06-16T08:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2935"},"modified":"2011-06-16T09:00:30","modified_gmt":"2011-06-16T08:00:30","slug":"unsung-heroes-annie-jump-cannon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/06\/16\/unsung-heroes-annie-jump-cannon\/","title":{"rendered":"Unsung Heroes: Annie Jump Cannon"},"content":{"rendered":"
How many stars are there in the sky? If you\u2019re the fantastically named
Annie Jump Cannon<\/strong> the answer is \u201cat least 230,000\u201d.
Working at Harvard Observatory around the end of the 19th century, Cannon is
credited with pioneering the first organised system of classifying stellar
objects, the Harvard Classification System. Nicknamed \u201cThe Census Taker
of the Sky\u201d, she classified almost a quarter of a million stars, more
than anyone else has ever done – including 300 she personally
discovered.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Possessing a sharp mind, and with the good fortune of coming from
a family that could afford quality education, Cannon had attended Wellesley
College<\/a> and graduated with a degree in physics in 1884. Finding the
limited career options of home life boring, and having little in common
with her peers, being (paraphrasing from her autobiographical writings)
older and better educated, Cannon returned to Wellesley in 1894. Guided by
her former instructor, the formidably minded professor Sarah
Frances Whiting<\/a>, Cannon took graduate courses in astronomy and spectroscopy<\/a>
(a relatively new development in imaging at the time), and discovered her
true calling.<\/p>\n
After two years of graduate study, and looking to get access to
Harvard\u2019s superior telescope facilities, Cannon was hired at the
Harvard Observatory as part of the group that would become known as
\u201cPickering\u2019s women\u201d. The
Harvard Computers<\/strong>, to use the group\u2019s actual name, were
a small group of women hired by Edward
Pickering<\/a> to work through the raw data being gathered by the
observatory (this of course being a time when a computer was still
generally a person who calculated things, not a machine). Pickering had
hired Cannon and her fellow computers largely because women were cheaper
to employ than men, allowing him to hire more of them; a neccessity
given that the rate at which data was being gathered was outstripping
the rate at which it could be processed.<\/p>\n
So, what was Cannon earning, given her degree and graduate work at one
of America\u2019s most prestigious private colleges, and the fund set
up by the wealthy physician Anna Draper to support the
observatory\u2019s work? Somewhere in the region of $0.25 to $0.50 an
hour. This put her slightly above an unskilled factory worker, and
somewhat below a clerical or secretarial worker. What would a lot of
us do in the face of woefully poor pay despite excellent
qualifications and a natural talent? Probably look for new work, or
failing that become disillusioned and start putting in less effort
than perhaps we should.<\/p>\n
Fortunately for modern astronomers, Annie Jump Cannon had a passion
for her field, a drive for progress, and a rather brilliant mind for
organising and classifying abstract data. Rather than throw up her
arms in frustration at the poor pay and oten tedious work of examining
stellar images she set herself to the task of examining the bright
stars of the Southern hemisphere.<\/p>\n
Now for some vaguely sciencey details: at the time, there was a
disagreement between two others working at the observatory, Antonia
Maury<\/a> and Williamina
Fleming<\/a>, as to how stars should be classified. Cannon pioneered a
third system, classifying stars based on the strength of their Balmer
absorption lines (one of a set of series that describe the spectral
line emissions of hydrogen atoms, the strength of a star\u2019s Balmer
absorption lines provide a reliable indicator of the stars
temperature). This provided a thorough and yet elegant means of
classifying stellar objects, dividing them into letter categories
based on temperature. When astronomers refer to our sun as a G-type
star, that\u2019s Cannon\u2019s classification system in action.1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
Following her groundbreaking work on stellar classifications,
Cannon remained dedicated to the field of astronomy, eventually
receiving a regular appointment at Harvard as the William C Bond
Astronomer, in addition to receiving an honorary doctorate from
Oxford (the first one given out to a female academic). Her legacy
lives on for astronomers, both in the ongoing use of her work and
in the Annie
Jump Cannon Award<\/a>, given out by the American Astronomical
Society to pioneering female researchers in the field. Even off
the planet, Cannon\u2019s memory lives on, one of the Moon\u2019s
craters being named in her honour.<\/p>\n
So, next time you\u2019re looking up at the sky, keep in mind
Annie Jump Cannon, who more than likely labelled most of the stars
you can see.<\/p>\n
(As a final note, Cannon was not the only woman working in the
Harvard Observatory at the time to do amazing things. Henrietta Swan Leavitt<\/strong><\/a>‘s work on Cepheid
stars arguably provided the vital theoretical underpinnings on
which much of Edwin
Hubble<\/a>\u2019s work was based. She received almost no
recognition for her discoveries during her own lifetime.)<\/p>\n
\n