| known_for =
| awards = * Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1921)
- Henry Draper Medal (1922)
- Bruce Medal (1925)
- Janssen Medal (French Academy of Sciences) (1936)
- ForMemRS (1937)
Life
Russell was born on 25 October 1877, at Oyster Bay, New York, the son of Rev Alexander Gatherer Russell (1845-1911) and his wife, Eliza Hoxie Norris.
After graduating from Princeton Preparatory School in 1893, he studied astronomy at Princeton University, obtaining his B.A. in 1897 and his doctorate in 1900, studying under Charles Augustus Young. He is buried in Princeton Cemetery.
center|thumb|350x350px|Russell at the Fourth Conference International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research at [[Mount Wilson Observatory, 1910]]
Family
In November 1908 Russell married Lucy May Cole (1881-1968). They had four children. Their youngest daughter, Margaret Russell (1914-1999), married the astronomer Frank K. Edmondson in the 1930s.
Published work
Russell co-wrote an influential two-volume textbook in 1927 with Raymond Smith Dugan and John Quincy Stewart: Astronomy: A Revision of Young’s Manual of Astronomy (Ginn & Co., Boston, 1926–27, 1938, 1945). This became the standard astronomy textbook for about two decades. There were two volumes: the first was The Solar System and the second was Astrophysics and Stellar Astronomy. The textbook popularized the idea that a star's properties (radius, surface temperature, luminosity, etc.)
were largely determined by the star's mass and chemical composition, which became known as the Vogt–Russell theorem
(including Heinrich Vogt who independently discovered the result). Since a star's chemical composition
gradually changes with age (usually in a non-homogeneous fashion), stellar evolution results.
Russell dissuaded Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin from concluding that the composition of the Sun is different from that of the Earth in her thesis, as it contradicted the accepted wisdom at the time. He realized she was correct four years later after deriving the same result by different means. In his paper Russell credited Payne with discovering that the Sun had a different chemical composition from Earth but never shared the rewards of the fame he readily accepted for her work which he’d failed to recognize until years later.
Awards and honors
- Member of the American Philosophical Society (1913)
- Member of the United States National Academy of Sciences (1918)
- Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1921)
- Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1921)
- Lalande Prize (1922)
- Henry Draper Medal from the National Academy of Sciences (1922)
- Bruce Medal (1925)
- Rumford Prize (1925)
- Franklin Medal (1934)
- Janssen Medal from the French Academy of Sciences (1936)
- Foreign Member of the Royal Society (1937)
- Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1938)
- Henry Norris Russell Lectureship (1946)
- Asteroid 1762 Russell
References
External links
- Oral history interview transcript with Margaret Russell Edmondson on 21 April 1977, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives - Margaret Russell Edmondson was Russell's youngest daughter
