Nisha Rathode (Editor)

William Rutter Dawes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Citizenship
  
English

Fields
  
Astronomy

Parents
  
William Dawes

Role
  
Astronomer

Name
  
William Dawes


William Rutter Dawes httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
19 March 1799 West Sussex (
1799-03-19
)

Died
  
February 15, 1868, Haddenham, United Kingdom

Notable awards
  
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society

Awards
  
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society

William Rutter Dawes (19 March 1799 – 15 February 1868) was an English astronomer.

Contents

William Rutter Dawes William Rutter Dawes Wikipedia

Biography

Dawes was born at Christ's Hospital in Horsham District of West Sussex, the son of William Dawes, also an astronomer, and Judith Rutter.

Dawes was a clergyman who made extensive measurements of double stars as well as observations of planets. He was a friend of William Lassell. He was nicknamed "eagle eye". He set up his private observatory at his home in Haddenham, Buckinghamshire. One of his telescopes, an eight-inch refractor by Cooke, survives at the Cambridge Observatory where it is known as the Thorrowgood Telescope.

He made extensive drawings of Mars during its 1864 opposition. In 1867, Richard Anthony Proctor made a map of Mars based on these drawings.

He won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1855.

Dawes craters on the Moon and Dawes crater on Mars are named after him, as is a gap within Saturn's C Ring.

An optical phenomenon, the Dawes limit, is named after him.

Selected writings

  • Dawes, William Rutter (1849). The Stars in Six Maps, on the Gnomonic Projection. C. Knight. 
  • References

    William Rutter Dawes Wikipedia