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Sept 14th, 2018 : Pulsar
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Jocelyn Bell Burnell from Northern Ireland was at Cambridge to pursue a PhD at the university’s Cavendish laboratory. Going over three miles of charts from the new radio telescope she noticed a small repeating radio wave signal others had missed. She said “I noticed it because I was being really careful, really thorough, because of impostor syndrome.” She phoned her PhD supervisor Antony Hewish but he said forget it, just man made interference. But she pursued it and found more signals from several locations which led to the discovery of Pulsars. This was such an important discovery it was awarded the Nobel prize in 1974… to Antony Hewish. :smack: The astrophysics community knew it should be hers, but astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle was the only one bitching about it. Probably because this was not unusual, it’s always been that way and Bell Burnell knew it. http://cellar.org/2017/pulsar2.jpg And then, and then... Quote:
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I hear another example of academic sexism on a almost weekly basis.
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