Frank W. Dyson AKA Frank Watson Dyson Born: 8-Jan-1868 Birthplace: Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire, England Died: 25-May-1939 Location of death: en route from Australia to England Cause of death: Illness Remains: Buried, at sea, off the coast of Africa
Gender: Male Religion: Baptist Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Astronomer Nationality: England Executive summary: Six pips on the BBC Astronomer Frank W. Dyson studied stellar parallaxes, starstreams, solar eclipses, and the spectrum of the solar chromosphere, and with Arthur Eddington he confirmed that Albert Einstein was right about how gravity bends light. Dyson was a founding member of the International Astronomical Union, and a driving force behind establishment of the International Council for Science, an umbrella group of scientific organizations. As timekeeper at Greenwich, he suggested and in 1924 instigated the familiar six-pip signal that is still used by the British Broadcasting Corporation to mark the last six seconds of the hour before newscasts. Father: Watson Dyson (Baptist minister, b. circa 1838) Mother: Frances Dodwell Dyson ("Fanny", b. 1839, m. 1866) Sister: Ethel Mary Dyson (b. circa 1869) Brother: Edgar Dyson (b. circa 1870) Wife: Caroline Bissett Best Dyson (d. 1937, two sons, six daughters)
High School: Bradford Grammar School, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England University: Cambridge University (1889) Scholar: Chief Assistant, Royal Observatory at Greenwich (1894-1905) Administrator: Director, Royal Observatory at Edinburgh (1905-10) Administrator: Director, Royal Observatory at Greenwich (1911-33)
Knight of the British Empire 1926 Royal Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1925 Bruce Medal 1922 Royal Medal 1921 International Astronomical Union President (1928-32) British Astronomical Association President (1916-18)
British Horological Institute President
International Astronomical Union National Academy of Sciences Foreign Associate Royal Astronomical Society President (1911-13) Royal Society Vice President (1913-14) Astronomer Royal of England (1910-33) Astronomer Royal of Scotland (1905-11)
Lunar Crater Crater Dyson Asteroid Namesake 1241 Dysona
Author of books:
Astronomy: A Handy Manual for Students and Others (1913) Eclipses of the Sun and Moon (1937, with Richard van der Riet Woolley)
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