Background
Wilson, Robert was born on April 16, 1927. Son of Robert G. Wilson and Anne Riddle.
Wilson, Robert was born on April 16, 1927. Son of Robert G. Wilson and Anne Riddle.
He studied physics at King"s College, Durham and obtained his Doctor of Philosophy in Edinburgh, where he worked at the Royal Observatory on stellar spectra.
Foreign the American astronomer, see Robert Woodrow Wilson
He was an astronomer, who fully embraced the opportunities provided by the space age and he was one of the pioneers who laid the groundwork for the development of the Great Space Observatories, such as the Hubble Space Telescope. In 1959 Wilson joined the Plasma Spectroscopy Group at Harwell where he was responsible for measuring the temperature in the Zeta experiment, confirming that it had not been hot enough to have produced thermonuclear fusion. As head of the Plasma Spectroscopy Group at Culham, he led a programme of rocket observations of ultraviolet spectra of the sun and stars.
By placing telescopes on rockets and satellites it was possible to avoid the absorption of the ultraviolet light by the Earth"s atmosphere and gain a great deal of information about the hot plasmas especially in the Sun"s chromosphere and corona.
Wilson then became involved in the European Space Research Organization"s first astronomy satellite, the Territorial Decoration-1A mission, and led the British collaboration with Belgium in the S2/68 experiment which in 1972 conducted the first all sky survey in the ultraviolet. Wilson was best known for his role as "father" of the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) satellite.
This had started life in 1964 as a proposal to ESRO for a Large Astronomical Satellite, which proved too expensive and studies were abandoned in 1967. This concept was called the Ultraviolet Astronomical Satellite (UVAS).
lieutenant was again submitted to ESRO in November 1968 but despite a favourable assessment report was not accepted.
Convinced of the soundness of the concept, Wilson offered the design work to National Aeronautics and Space Administration and this ultimately led to IUE, an international project between National Aeronautics and Space Administration, European Space Agency and the United Kingdom. In 1972 he relinquished his post as Director, Science Research Council"s Astrophysics Research Unit, Culham to become Perren Professor of Astronomy at University College London. He was the George Darwin Lecturer of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1985. He was knighted in 1989.
Cospar Bureau 1986-1990.
Married Fiona Nicholson.