Annie Jump Cannon Award in Astronomy

{{short description|Awarded by the American Astronomical Society (AAS) to a woman resident of North America}}

The Annie Jump Cannon Award in Astronomy is awarded annually by the American Astronomical Society (AAS) to a woman resident of North America, who is within five years of receipt of a PhD, for distinguished contributions to astronomy or for similar contributions in related sciences which have immediate application to astronomy. The awardee is invited to give a talk at an AAS meeting and is given a $1,500 honorarium.[https://aas.org/grants-and-prizes/annie-jump-cannon-award-astronomy AAS Annie Jump Cannon Award in Astronomy]. Retrieved 10 December 2014. The award is named in honor of American astronomer Annie Jump Cannon.

Margaret Burbidge was due to be given the 1972 award, but she refused it on the grounds of gender discrimination, stating: "It is high time that discrimination in favor of, as well as against, women in professional life be removed".{{cite news |last1=Skuse |first1=Ben |title=Celebrating Astronomer Margaret Burbidge, 1919–2020 |url=https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/happy-birthday-margaret-burbidge/ |accessdate=6 April 2020 |work=Sky & Telescope |date=6 April 2020}} This prompted the AAS to set up its first committee on the status of women in astronomy and they ceased issuing the award directly. From 1973 to 2004 the American Association of University Women issued the awards, on advice from the AAS. The AAS resumed direct issuing of the award in 2005.

List of winners

Source: [https://aas.org/grants-and-prizes/annie-jump-cannon-award-astronomy American Astronomical Society]

class="wikitable"
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! Year

! Recipient

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| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Awarded by the AAS

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| 1934

Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
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| 1937

Charlotte Moore Sitterly
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| 1940

Julie Vinter Hansen
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| 1943

Antonia Maury
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| 1946

Emma Vyssotsky
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| 1949

Helen Sawyer Hogg
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| 1952

Ida Barney{{cite web |url=https://www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/womenastro/womenastro-all.html |title=Bibliography: Ida Smith Barney |work=Women in Astronomy|publisher=Library of Congress|accessdate=18 November 2012}}
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| 1955

Helen Dodson Prince
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| 1958

Margaret Mayall
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| 1962

Margaret Harwood
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| 1965

Erika Böhm-Vitense
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| 1968

Henrietta Swope
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| colspan="2" | Awarded by the AAUW with advice of AAS

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| 1974

Beatrice Tinsley
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| 1976

Catharine Garmany
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| 1978

Paula Szkody
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| 1980

Lee Anne Willson
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| 1982

Judith Young
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| 1984

Harriet Dinerstein
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| 1986

Rosemary Wyse
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| 1988

Karen Jean Meech
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| 1989

Jacqueline Hewitt
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| 1990

Claudia Megan Urry
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| 1991

Jane Luu
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| 1992

Elizabeth Lada
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| 1993

Stefi Baum
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| 1994

Andrea Ghez
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| 1995

Suzanne Madden
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| 1996

Joan Najita
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| 1997

Chung-Pei Ma
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| 1998

Victoria M. Kaspi
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| 1999

Sally Oey
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| 2000

Alycia J. Weinberger
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| 2001

Amy Barger
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| 2002

Vassiliki Kalogera
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| 2003

Annette Ferguson
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| 2004

Sara Ellison
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| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Awarded by the AAS

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| 2006

Lisa J. Kewley
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| 2007

Ann Hornschemeier
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| 2008

Jenny Greene
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| 2009

Alicia M. Soderberg
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| 2010

Anna Frebel
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| 2011

Rachel Mandelbaum
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| 2012

Heather Knutson
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| 2013

Sarah Dodson-Robinson
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| 2014

Emily Levesque
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| 2015

Smadar Naoz
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| 2016

Laura A. Lopez
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| 2017

Rebekah Dawson
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| 2018

Ilse Cleeves
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| 2019

Blakesley Burkhart
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| 2020

Caroline Morley{{Cite web|url=https://mcdonaldobservatory.org/news/releases/20200207|title=Caroline Morley Receives Annie Jump Cannon Award | McDonald Observatory}}
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| 2021

Laura Kreidberg
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| 2022

Eve Lee
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| 2023

Marta Bryan
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| 2024

Jennifer Bergner
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| 2025

Maya Fishbach

See also

Notes