Fred Hoyle
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 23 years ago |
Date of birth | June 24,1915 |
Zodiac sign | Cancer |
Born | Gilstead |
Bingley | |
United Kingdom | |
Date of died | August 20,2001 |
Died | Bournemouth |
United Kingdom | |
Residence | United Kingdom |
Job | Astronomer |
Physicist | |
Novelist | |
Education | St John's College, Cambridge |
Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge | |
Awards | Bruce Medal |
Royal Medal | |
Klumpke-Roberts Award | |
Mayhew Prize | |
Crafoord Prize in Astronomy and Mathematics | |
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society | |
Spous | Barbara Clark |
Children | Geoffrey Hoyle |
Parents | Ben Hoyle |
Mabel Pickard | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 418109 |
The Black Cloud
October the First Is Too Late
The intelligent universe
Fifth Planet
Ossian's Ride
Into Deepest Space
The nature of the universe
Home is where the wind blows
Rockets in Ursa Major
Frontiers of Astronomy
Element 79
The Westminster Disaster
The Incandescent Ones
Andromeda Breakthrough
Diseases from Space
The inferno
The Molecule Men and The Monster of Loch Ness
Comet Halley
The Frozen Planet of Azuron
Astronomy and Cosmology: A Modern Course
The small world of Fred Hoyle
Seven Steps to the Sun
The Energy Pirate
Lifecloud: The Origin of Life in the Universe
The Giants of Universal Park
The Planet of Death
A different approach to cosmology
Of Men and Galaxies
Mathematics of evolution
The origin of the universe and the origin of religion
Ten faces of the universe
Nicolaus Copernicus: an essay on his life and work
Our Place in the Cosmos: The Unfinished Revolution
Cosmic life- force
Man in the Universe
Ice, the ultimate human catastrophe
Commonsense in nuclear energy
Archaeopteryx, the primordial bird
From grains to bacteria
The Origin of Life
From Stonehenge to modern cosmology
Energy or extinction?
Living Comets
On Stonehenge
The physics- astronomy frontier
Some recent researches in solar physics
Viruses from Space and Related Matters
Action at a distance in physics and cosmology
The theory of cosmic grains
Evolution from Space
A for Andromeda
October the First Is Too Late
The intelligent universe
Fifth Planet
Ossian's Ride
Into Deepest Space
The nature of the universe
Home is where the wind blows
Rockets in Ursa Major
Frontiers of Astronomy
Element 79
The Westminster Disaster
The Incandescent Ones
Andromeda Breakthrough
Diseases from Space
The inferno
The Molecule Men and The Monster of Loch Ness
Comet Halley
The Frozen Planet of Azuron
Astronomy and Cosmology: A Modern Course
The small world of Fred Hoyle
Seven Steps to the Sun
The Energy Pirate
Lifecloud: The Origin of Life in the Universe
The Giants of Universal Park
The Planet of Death
A different approach to cosmology
Of Men and Galaxies
Mathematics of evolution
The origin of the universe and the origin of religion
Ten faces of the universe
Nicolaus Copernicus: an essay on his life and work
Our Place in the Cosmos: The Unfinished Revolution
Cosmic life- force
Man in the Universe
Ice, the ultimate human catastrophe
Commonsense in nuclear energy
Archaeopteryx, the primordial bird
From grains to bacteria
The Origin of Life
From Stonehenge to modern cosmology
Energy or extinction?
Living Comets
On Stonehenge
The physics- astronomy frontier
Some recent researches in solar physics
Viruses from Space and Related Matters
Action at a distance in physics and cosmology
The theory of cosmic grains
Evolution from Space
A for Andromeda
Fred Hoyle Life story
Sir Fred Hoyle FRS was an English astronomer who formulated the theory of stellar nucleosynthesis and was one of the authors of the influential B²FH paper.