William Ian Axford | |
---|---|
Born | 2 January 1933 Dannevirke New Zealand |
Died | 13 March 2010 Napier, New Zealand |
(aged 77)
Institutions |
Cornell University 1963–1967 |
Notable awards | Rutherford Medal (RSNZ) 1994 Chapman Medal (RAS) 1994 |
Sir William Ian Axford, FRS, FRSNZ (2 January 1933 – 13 March 2010), was a New Zealand space scientist who was director of Germany's Max Planck Institute for Aeronomy from 1974 to 1990. Axford's research was focused on the interaction of the sun with the magnetic field of earth (magnetosphere) or the interstellar medium (heliosphere).
Axford studied at Canterbury University in Christchurch for his double Bachelor's degrees in science and engineering, followed by a double Master's in science with first class honours and in engineering with distinction, then undertook doctoral studies at the University of Manchester and received his PhD in 1960.[1]
After a year at the University of Cambridge, he then joined the Defence Research Board of Canada, where he published one of his most cited papers: A unifying theory of high-latitude geophysical phenomena and geomagnetic storms, in 1961.[2] He became a professor of physics and astronomy at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York in 1963. He later moved to the University of California, San Diego.
Axford became a director at the Max Planck Institute for Aeronomy (since renamed the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research) in 1974.[3] He held that position, with a short break in which he was Vice Chancellor of the Victoria University of Wellington in 1982–1985, until his retirement in 2001. The institute participated in the international missions Giotto to Halley's Comet, solar observatories Ulysses and SOHO while Axford was director of the institute. The science of all three missions had a strong connection to the activity of the sun: SOHO and Ulysses monitored solar activity, and the Giotto mission was able to monitor the interaction of solar particles with Halley's Comet. Most of Axford's research was associated with the magnetosphere and the heliosphere.
He died on 13 March 2010, aged 77, following a long illness.[4][5][6][7][8][9]
Axford received several awards, for example the John Adam Fleming Medal in 1972, the Tsiolkovsky Medal in 1987, the Chapman Medal, and the Rutherford Medal in 1994. In 1995 he was named New Zealander of the Year and in the following year he was knighted. Since 1986 he was a Fellow of the Royal Society in London and since 1993 he was a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand.[4][5][9]
On his 60th birthday, the asteroid 5097 Axford was named in his honour at an astronomical symposium in Germany.[1]