Jansky Lectureship
The Karl G. Jansky Lectureship is an honor established by the trustees of Associated Universities, Inc., to recognize outstanding contributions to the advancement of radio astronomy. First awarded in 1966, it is named in honor of the man who, in 1932, first detected radio waves from a cosmic source. Karl Jansky's discovery of radio waves from the central region of our Milky Way Galaxy started the science of radio astronomy.
The recipient of this award will present the annual Karl G. Jansky Lecture in Charlottesville, Virginia and in Socorro, New Mexico. The public lecture will be astronomical in nature. Professional astronomical symposia in NRAO facilities will be conducted prior to the evening lectures.
More detailed information about the nomination process can be found by viewing the Jansky Lectureship Charter.
Archive Collections of the Jansky Lectureship
The NRAO Archive maintains records, images, and recordings of the annual Jansky Lecture.
Recipients of the Jansky Lectureship
The recipients of the Karl G. Jansky Lectureship, their award year, institutional affiliations, and lecture titles, are listed below.
Year | Lecturer |
---|---|
2024 |
Ken KellermannNRAO Discovering the Radio Universe |
2023 |
Paul Vanden BoutNRAO Space Molecules to Solar Systems: Millimeter Astronomy at NRAO - Some Personal Remembrances |
2022 |
Francoise CombesParis Observatory Symbiosis between Black Holes and Galaxies |
2021 |
Luis F. RodriguezNational University of Mexico Jets from Stars in the Making |
2020 |
Martha P. HaynesCornell University 70 Years of Studying Hydrogen with Radio Telescopes: From Dark Matter to the Dark Ages |
2019 |
Anneila SargentCalifornia Institute of Technology Expanding Horizons with Millimeter/Submillimeter Astronomy |
2018 |
Roger D. BlandfordStanford University |
2017 |
Bernard FanaroffSquare Kilometer Array South Africa |
2016 |
Jacqueline van GorkomColumbia University |
2015 |
Nick ScovilleCalifornia Institute of Technology |
2014 |
Jill TarterSETI Institute Are We Alone? Searching for Intelligent Life Beyond Earth |
2013 |
Charles L. BennettJohns Hopkins University A Tour of the Universe |
2012 |
Mark ReidHarvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics |
2011 |
Sander WeinrebNASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the California Institute of Technology |
2010 |
Reinhard GenzelMax Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics The Galactic Center Black Hole and Nuclear Star Cluster |
2009 |
Anthony ReadheadCalifornia Institute of Technology |
2008 |
Arthur M. WolfeUniversity of California, San Diego |
2007 |
Karl M. MentenMax Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy |
2006 |
Frank J. LowInfrared Laboratories, Inc. |
2005 |
Rashid A. SunyaevMax Planck Institute for Astrophysics |
2004 |
Ronald D. EkersAustralia Telescope National Facility |
2003 |
Donald C. BackerRadio Astronomy Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley |
2002 |
Shrinivas (Shri) KulkarniCalifornia Institute of Technology |
2001 |
William J. (Jack) WelchUniversity of California at Berkeley |
2000 |
V. RadhakrishnanRaman Research Institute, Bangalore, India |
1999 |
Frank D. DrakeSETI Institute and University of California, Santa Cruz |
1998 |
Bernard BurkeMassachusetts Institute of Technology |
1997 |
P. James E. PeeblesPrinceton University |
1996 |
James M. MoranHarvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics |
1995 |
Jocelyn Bell-BurnellOpen University, Milton Keynes, UK |
1994 |
Vera C. RubinCarnegie Institution of Washington |
1993 |
David S. HeeschenFormer Director, National Radio Astronomy Observatory |
1992 |
Irwin I. ShapiroHarvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics |
1991 |
Allan R. SandageThe Observatories of Carnegie Institution |
1990 |
Alan H. BarrettMassachusetts Institute of Technology |
1989 |
Joseph H. TaylorPrinceton University (Nobel Prize 1993) |
1988 |
William A. FowlerCalifornia Institute of Technology (Nobel Prize 1983) |
1987 |
Hendrik van de HulstUniversity of Leiden, The Netherlands |
1986 |
Robert Hanbury BrownUniversity of Sydney |
1985 |
G. R. BurbidgeUniversity of California, San Diego |
1984 |
Robert W. WilsonBell Laboratories (Nobel Prize 1978) |
1983 |
Arno PenziasBell Laboratories (Nobel Prize 1978) |
1982 |
Philip MorrisonMassachusetts Institute of Technology |
1981 |
Martin ReesUniversity of Cambridge, England |
1980 |
Martin SchwarzschildPrinceton University |
1979 |
Maarten SchmidtHale Observatories |
1978 |
Subrahmanyan ChandrasekharUniversity of Chicago (Nobel Prize 1983) |
1977 |
E. Margaret BurbidgeUniversity of California, San Diego |
1976 |
Edward M. PurcellHarvard University (Nobel Prize 1952) |
1975 |
Grote ReberCSIRO, Tasmania, Australia |
1974 |
Lyman Spitzer, Jr.Princeton University Observatory |
1973 |
J. Paul WildCSIRO, Sydney, Australia |
1972 |
Bart J. BokSteward Observatory |
1971 |
Charles H. TownesUniversity of California, Berkeley (Nobel Prize 1964) |
1970 |
Robert H. DickePrinceton University |
1969 |
Fred HoyleUniversity of Cambridge, England |
1968 |
J. S. ShklovskySternberg Astronomical Institute, USSR |
1967 |
J. H. OortLeiden Observatory |
1966 |
John G. BoltonAustralian National Radio Astronomy Observatory |