Awards & Winners

Donald Lynden-Bell

Date of Birth 05-April-1935
Place of Birth Dover
(United Kingdom, Dover District)
Nationality United Kingdom
Profession Astronomer
Donald Lynden-Bell CBE FRS is an English astrophysicist, best known for his theories that galaxies contain massive black holes at their centre, and that such black holes are the principal source of energy in quasars. He was a co-recipient, with Maarten Schmidt, of the inaugural Kavli Prize for Astrophysics in 2008. Lynden-Bell has been the president of the Royal Astronomical Society. He currently works at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge; he was the Institute's first director. Educated at the University of Cambridge, in 1962 he published research with Olin Eggen and Allan Sandage arguing that our galaxy originated through the dynamic collapse of a single large gas cloud. In 1969 he published his theory that quasars are powered by massive black holes accreting material. From counting dead quasars, he deduced that most massive galaxies have black holes at their centres. He was also a member of a group of astronomers known as the 'Seven Samurai' which postulated the existence of the Great Attractor, a huge, diffuse region of material around 250 million light-years away that results in the observed motion of our local galaxies.

Awards by Donald Lynden-Bell

Check all the awards nominated and won by Donald Lynden-Bell.

2008


Kavli Prize in Astrophysics
(for their work on quasars.)

2000


John J. Carty Award for the Advancement of Science
(Astronomy/Astrophysics. For his outstanding work in theoretical astrophysics, and especially for the originality of his contributions to our understanding of the collective dynamic effects within stellar systems.)