Awards & Winners

Samuel Pierpont Langley

Date of Birth 22-August-1834
Place of Birth Roxbury
(Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, Greater Boston, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Samuel P. Langley, S. P. Langley
Profession Physicist, Astronomer, Inventor, Aerospace Engineer, Engineer, Aviation
Samuel Pierpont Langley was an American astronomer, physicist, inventor of the bolometer and pioneer of aviation. He attended Boston Latin School, graduated from English High School of Boston, was an assistant in the Harvard College Observatory, then moved to a job ostensibly as a professor of mathematics at the United States Naval Academy, but actually was sent there to restore the Academy's small observatory. In 1867, he became the director of the Allegheny Observatory and a professor of astronomy at the Western University of Pennsylvania, now known as the University of Pittsburgh, a post he kept until 1891 even while he became the third Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution in 1887. Langley was the founder of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.

Awards by Samuel Pierpont Langley

Check all the awards nominated and won by Samuel Pierpont Langley.

1886


Rumford Prize
(For his research in radiant energy.)
Rumford Medal
(For his researches on the spectrum by means of the Bolometer.)
Henry Draper Medal
(For numerous investigations of a high order of merit in solar physics, and especially in the domain of radiant energy.)