James G. Baker (19142005) July 11, 2005 | Harvard-educated astronomer James G. Baker, one of the true giants among 20th-century optical designers, died suddenly on June 30th at his home in Bedford, New Hampshire. He was 91. Although his foremost interest was astronomy, his genius for optical innovation emerged while he was a graduate student in the early 1940s, and it dominated his professional career. His contributions to the field of photographic reconnaissance are legendary. They began with lens designs used during World War II and extended through the Cold War years with the U-2 and SR-71 Blackbird spy planes and eventually satellite reconnaissance programs. He also contributed to many civilian projects, including the exotic mirror system of Polaroids revolutionary SX-70 consumer camera in the early 1970s. In the world of astronomy he is remembered for his development of the super-Schmidt meteor camera and the Baker-Nunn satellite-tracking system. The book that he coauthored in 1945 with George Dimitroff, Telescopes and Accessories, became a classic that remains a valuable reference today. He was also a skilled "glass pusher" and machinist. Numerous telescope projects were under way in his basement and garage workshops at the time of his death. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------P.S. Совсем недавно читал его статьи...
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