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Richard Edwin Hills

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Nationality
  
British

Notable awards
  
Royal Society

Fields
  
Astronomy

Name
  
Richard Hills


Richard Edwin Hills

Born
  
Richard Edwin Hills 30 September 1945 (age 78) (
1945-09-30
)

Institutions
  
University of Cambridge

Thesis
  
Interferometric Observations of Radio-Emission from Galactic Water Vapour (1973)

Alma mater
  
University of Cambridge, University of California

Institution
  
University of Cambridge

Richard Edwin Hills FRAS FRS (born 1945), is Emeritus Professor of Radio Astronomy, Astrophysics Group, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge.

Contents

Education

Born on 30 September 1945 and educated at Bedford School, Richard Hills read Natural Sciences at Queens' College, Cambridge and then went to the University of California, Berkeley to complete his doctorate.

Career

He was a Research Scientist at the Max Planck Institute in Bonn between 1972 and 1974, before he returned to Cambridge and became involved in the development of telescopes and instrumentation for astronomy at wavelengths of around one millimetre - the spectral region that lies between radio waves and infrared - which is relatively unexplored.

Hills worked as a scientist at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, where he observed distant, redshifted quasars and studied processes associated with star formation. In December 2007 he was appointed as Project Scientist for the ALMA telescope, a sub-millimeter interferometer in the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile.

Hills is a Fellow of St Edmund's College, Cambridge and was Director of Studies for Natural Sciences at St Edmund's between 1990 and 2007. He was Professor of Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge between 1990 and 2007, Deputy Head of the Department of Physics at the University of Cambridge between 1999 and 2003, and has been Emeritus Professor of Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge since 2012.

Awards and honours

Professor Hills was the awarded the Royal Astronomical Society's Jackson-Gwilt Medal in 1989, and was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2014. His nomination for the Royal Society reads

References

Richard Edwin Hills Wikipedia