Madge Adam | |
Birth Date: | 6 March 1912 |
Birth Name: | Madge Gertrude Adam |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Education: | Doncaster High School, St Hugh's College, Oxford, Lady Margaret Hall |
Thesis1 Title: | and |
Thesis2 Title: | )--> |
Thesis1 Year: | and |
Thesis2 Year: | )--> |
Doctoral Advisors: | )--> |
Madge Gertrude Adam (6 March 1912 - 25 August 2001) was an English solar astronomer who was the first postgraduate student in solar physics at the University of Oxford observatory.
Adam was born the youngest of three children near Highbury, North London, where her father was a teacher at Drayton Park School. With the start of World War I, he enlisted and was killed in action at Ypres in 1918 causing her mother and siblings to relocate to Yorkshire to live with her mother's parents. She became ill at the age of nine and spent a year at the Liverpool Open-Air Hospital to treat her skeletal tuberculosis of an elbow and rickets.
On her release from hospital, Adam won a scholarship to Doncaster High School in South Yorkshire, where she gained a life-long passion for science and mathematics. In 1931, she enrolled in St Hugh's College, Oxford with a scholarship in physics, becoming "the first woman to achieve a first in physics at Oxford". There she gained an MA followed by a D.Phil. from Lady Margaret Hall.[1]
When a new director of the Oxford observatory, who had just installed the university's first solar telescope, announced his research program in solar physics, Adam (who had just earned a first in physics) knocked on his door and said, "How about me?" By joining the research team, she became the first postgraduate student and solar physicist at the university's observatory. Over the years, she became a key figure there for the remainder of her life, eventually becoming acting director during World War II after the director left to work on aircraft production. She became permanent assistant director thereafter and took over the observatory's financial accounts.
She was appointed an assistant tutor at St. Hugh's, and also "taught astronomy courses, with an emphasis on astronavigation, to Royal Navy and RAF cadets".
She was "internationally known for her work on the nature of sunspots and on their magnetic fields."[2] She was a lecturer at the University of Oxford in the Department of Astrophysics from 1937–1979, and was a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society from 11 March 1938.[3] [4]