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George Darwin Lectureship
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The George Darwin Lectureship is an award granted by the Royal Astronomical Society to a 'distinguished and eloquent speaker' on the subject of Astronomy including astrochemistry, astrobiology and astroparticle physics.[1] The award is named after the astronomer George Darwin and has been given annually since 1984.[1][2] The speaker may be based in the UK or overseas.
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George Darwin Lecturers
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Laureates of the award include:[1][3]
- 2024 Chiaki Kobayashi[4]
- 2023 [needs update]
- 2022 Alan Fitzsimmons[citation needed]
- 2021 Filippo Fraternali[citation needed]
- 2020 Ofer Lahav[citation needed]
- 2019 Chris Done[citation needed]
- 2018 Stephen J. Smartt: "Kilonovae and the birth of multi-messenger astronomy" [1]
- 2017 Catherine Heymans : Observing the Dark side of our Universe[1][5]
- 2016 Michael Kramer : Probing Einstein's Universe and its physics - the joy of being curious[6]
- 2015 Katherine Blundell : Rapid Evolution in Astronomy[7]
- 2014 James S. Dunlop : The Cosmic History of Star Formation[8]
- 2013 Eline Tolstoy : Galactic Palaeontology[9]
- 2012 Andrew Collier Cameron: Winds, Tides and the Migration of Hot Jupiters
- 2011 Michael Turner : Connecting quarks to the cosmos
- 2010 Carlos Frenk : The Small-Scale Structure of the Universe
- 2009 Neil Gehrels : SWIFT and its results
- 2008 Alan Watson : The Birth of Cosmic Ray Astronomy on the Argentine Pampas
- 2007 Reinhard Genzel : The Massive Black Hole and Nuclear Star Cluster of the Milky Way
- 2006 Michael Werner : The Spitzer Space Telescope: Probing the universe with Infrared Eyes
- 2005 Joseph Silk : The Dark Side of the Universe
- 2004 Mike Edmunds : The Elemental Universe
- 2003 Anneila Sargent : The Formation of Planetary Systems
- 2002 Ramesh Narayan : Evidence for the Black Hole Event Horizon
- 2001 Wendy Freedman : The Expansion Rate of the Universe
- 2000 Kip Thorne : Gravitational Waves: Opening a New Window onto the Universe.
- 1999 Geoff Marcy : Extrasolar Planets
- 1998 Michael Perryman : A Stereoscopic View of the Galaxy
- 1997 Simon White : The Formation of Galaxies
- 1996 Andrew Fabian : Broad Iron Lines from AGN: Test of Strong Gravity
- 1995 Bohdan Paczyński : Gravitational micro-lensing and the search for dark matter
- 1994 Scott Tremaine : Is the Solar System Stable?
- 1993 Riccardo Giacconi : Recent observations from the Hubble Space Telescope
- 1992 John Barrow : Unprincipled Cosmology
- 1991 Sandra Faber : How galaxies (probably) formed
- 1990 Andre Maeder : Massive Stars in Galaxies
- 1989 Roger Blandford : Gravitational Lenses
- 1988 Roger Tayler : The Sun as a Star
- 1987 Wal Sargent : Observing the evolution of large scale structure in the Universe
- 1986 Gerald Neugebauer : Infrared astronomy
- 1985 Robert Wilson: A perspective of ultraviolet astronomy
- 1984 Icko Iben : The life of an intermediate mass star - in isolation/in a close binary
- 1931 Willem de Sitter : Jupiter's Galilean satellites
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References
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