Renée Canavaggia Explained

Renée Canavaggia (9 May 1902 - 1996), was a French astrophysicist and translator.

Early life and family

Canavaggia was born in Castelsarrasin, France, to Louise Patry of Limoges and Jerome Canavaggia, a Corsican magistrate. She was the youngest of three daughters; her older sisters were Marie (who became a professional translator and literary secretary to Louis-Ferdinand Céline)[1] and Jeanne (a noted abstract painter).[2] She studied philosophy at the University of Montpellier and then went to Paris with her sister Marie, staying in a flat at the Square de Port-Royal for a number of years.[3] She then oriented her studies towards mathematics.

Career

In early 1930 she became a trainee at the Observatoire de Paris. Amongst other partnerships, she worked with astronomer and mathematician Henri Mineur on numerical methods and with astronomers Daniel Barbier and Daniel Chalonge on stellar classification.[4] Between 1936 and 1940, she was works director at the office of stellar statistics of of Paris (later to be part of the Centre national de la recherche scientifique) of which Chalonge was a founder member. From 1943 to 1945, she worked on the project to produce a celestial map of the entire sky.[5] [6] [7]

She was a secretary then an organising committee member of the International Astronomical Union.[8] [9]

Bibliography of translated and edited works

Scientific publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Godard, Henri. Céline. Gallimard. 2011. Paris.
  2. Web site: Site du peintre Jeanne Laganne. www.laganne.fr. 28 May 2018.
  3. Book: Céline. Louis-Ferdinand. Lettres à Pierre Monnier (1948-1952). 107. Gallimard. 2015.
  4. Web site: Comptes rendus Academie des sciences 0235. archive.org. 28 May 2018.
  5. Renée Canavaggia, 9 May 1902 - 1996. 1997JAF....55....1P. Pecker. J. -C. Journal des Astronomes Français. 1997. 55. 1.
  6. Web site: Renée Canavaggia (1902-1996). www.bnf.fr. 29 May 2018.
  7. Book: Hearnshaw, John B.. The Analysis of Starlight: Two Centuries of Astronomical Spectroscopy. 167. Cambridge University Press. 1986.
  8. Book: Oosterhof. P. T.. Transactions of the International Astronomical Union. 10. 327. 1955. Cambridge University Press.
  9. Web site: Renée Canavaggia. www.iau.org. 28 May 2018.