Background
David Axon was born in Doncaster in the county of Yorkshire, England, to an English father and Welsh mother.
David Axon was born in Doncaster in the county of Yorkshire, England, to an English father and Welsh mother.
He received a bachelor’s degree in Physics from the University of Durham in 1972, and in 1977 he completed his Doctor of Philosophy at the same institution under the direction of Arnold Wolfendale.
He was a professor at the University of Hertfordshire and the Rochester Institute of Technology (Rochester Institute of Technology), and at the time of his death was Head of the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences at the University of Sussex. He subsequently held research fellowships at the University of Sussex, University College London and the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge. In 1983 Axon was appointed to a faculty position at the University of Manchester where he taught Physics and carried out research at the Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratory at Jodrell Bank Observatory.
In 1993 he took up an appointment at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore where he was the instrument scientist responsible for the NICMOS near infra-red camera.
He returned to Manchester in 1998 but the following year was appointed Professor and Head of the Department of Physical Sciences at the University of Hertfordshire. From 2002-2008 he was Professor and Chair of the Physics Department at Rochester Institute of Technology. He maintained a research chair at Hertfordshire.
David Axon died in 2012 of an apparent heart attack while visiting Rochester Institute of Technology.
David Axon was a leading expert in the field of astronomical polarimetry and the phenomenology of active galactic nuclei.