Awards & Winners

Martin Ryle

Date of Birth 27-September-1918
Place of Birth Brighton
(United Kingdom, England, East Sussex, Sussex, Brighton and Hove)
Nationality United Kingdom
Profession Physicist, Astronomer
Sir Martin Ryle FRS was an English radio astronomer who developed revolutionary radio telescope systems and used them for accurate location and imaging of weak radio sources. In 1946 Ryle and Vonberg were the first people to publish interferometric astronomical measurements at radio wavelengths, although it is claimed that Joseph Pawsey from the University of Sydney had actually made interferometric measurements earlier in the same year. With improved equipment, Ryle observed the most distant known galaxies in the universe at that time. He was the first Professor of Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, and founding director of the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory. He was Astronomer Royal from 1972 to 1982. Ryle and Antony Hewish shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974, the first Nobel prize awarded in recognition of astronomical research.

Awards by Martin Ryle

Check all the awards nominated and won by Martin Ryle.

1974


Nobel Prize in Physics
(for their pioneering research in radio astrophysics: Ryle for his observations and inventions, in particular of the aperture synthesis technique, and Hewish for his decisive role in the discovery of pulsars)
Bruce Medal

1965


Henry Draper Medal
(For the development of a novel radio-telescopic equipment which made it possible to determine accurately positions of the numerous weak radio sources in the sky.)

1954


Hughes Medal
(For his distinguished and original experimental researches in radio astronomy.)