(b. Dec. 11, 1863, Dover, Del., U.S.-d. April 13, 1941, Cambridge, Mass.)
Annie Jump Cannon was an American astronomer who specialized in the classification of stellar spectra. Cannon was the oldest daughter of Wilson Cannon, a Delaware state senator, and Mary Jump.
She studied physics and astronomy at Wellesley College, graduating in For several years thereafter she traveled and dabbled in photography and music. In 1894 she returned to Wellesley for a year of advanced study in astronomy, and in 1895 she enrolled at Radcliffe in order to continue her studies under Edward C. Pickering, who was director of the Harvard College Observatory.
In 1896 she was named an assistant at the Harvard Observatory, becoming one of a group known as “Pickering’s Women.” There, joining Williamina P.S. Fleming, Cannon devoted her energies to Pickering’s ambitious project, begun in 1885, of recording, classifying, and cataloging the spectra of all stars down to those of the ninth magnitude.
The scheme of spectral classification by surface temperature used for the project and later (1910) universally adopted was largely work that Cannon had developed from earlier systems, and she eventually obtained and classified spectra for more than 225,000 stars. Her work was published in nine volumes as the Henry Draper Catalogue (1918–24).
In 1911 Cannon succeeded Fleming as curator of astronomical photographs at the observatory, and in 1938 she was named William Cranch Bond Professor of Astronomy. After 1924 she extended her work, cataloging tens of thousands of additional stars down to the 11th magnitude for the twovolumeHenry Draper Extension (1925, 1949).
The work was an invaluable contribution to astronomy, bearing strongly on countless other problems and areas of research and exerting major influence on the evolution of the science of astronomy from one of mere observation to one of great theoretical and philosophical content. In the course of her work Cannon also discovered some 300 variable stars and five novae. Among the numerous honours and awards accorded her were the first honorary doctorate from the University of Oxford to be awarded to a woman (1925) and the Henry Draper Medal of the National Academy of Sciences in 1931.
She was also the first woman to become an officer in the American Astronomical Society. In 1933 she established that organization’s Annie J. Cannon Award, which is given to a North American female astronomer (within five years of receiving a doctorate) for her distinguished contribution to astronomy. Cannon officially retired from the observatory in 1940 but carried on research until her death the next year.