Math! Science! History!

Annie Jump Cannon: The Census Taker of the Sky


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She looked at starlight and said, I can organize that, and then she did! For Women's History Month, host Gabrielle Birchak profiles Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941), the American astronomer who took a chaotic universe and filed it into something the world could actually study. Cannon was one of the Harvard Computers, a group of women hired at Harvard College Observatory to analyze photographic glass plates of the night sky, and she became the fastest, most prolific stellar classifier in history. Over her lifetime, she manually classified over 350,000 stars, more than any person before or since.

In this episode, Gabrielle breaks down the Harvard Spectral Classification System, OBAFGKM, the sequence Cannon refined and that astronomers worldwide still use today. You'll learn what each letter means, what colors and temperatures they represent, where our own sun sits in the sequence (spoiler: it's a G2 star), and why Cannon's seemingly quiet classification work was actually one of the most powerful scientific acts of the early twentieth century. Classification, Gabrielle argues, isn't boring, it's the infrastructure that turned starlight into data and beautiful objects into the science of astrophysics.

This episode also reflects on the human side of Cannon's story: the fact that she was nearly deaf for most of her career, that she was a suffragist, that she produced one of the most monumental data catalogs in scientific history, the nine-volume Henry Draper Catalogue, and that despite her extraordinary achievements, her system was named the Harvard Classification System, not the Cannon System. Her work endured. Her system stayed. That's the real legacy.

Key Topics Covered:

  • Who Annie Jump Cannon was and why she matters for Women's History Month
  • The Harvard Computers and their role at Harvard College Observatory
  • The OBAFGKM stellar spectral classification sequence, explained color by color and temperature by temperature
  • The Henry Draper Catalogue: 225,300 stars classified across nine volumes, 1918–1924
  • Why classification isn't clerical work, it's the foundation of science
  • Cannon's recognition, awards, and the Annie Jump Cannon Award, still given annually by the American Astronomical Society

FEMINIST MNEMONIC (GABRIELLE'S VERSION)

Obviously Bold, A Feminist Generation Keeps Marching. O – B – A – F – G – K – M

RESOURCES & LINKS

About Annie Jump Cannon

Annie Jump Cannon Biography, National Women's History Museum

Annie Jump Cannon: Star Classifier, Sky & Telescope

Annie Jump Cannon, Space.com

The Harvard Computers

Project PHaEDRA: Transcribing the Work of the Harvard Computers, Smithsonian Digital Volunteers

The Henry Draper Catalogue

The Henry Draper Catalogue, Internet Archive (original volumes, free)

Stellar Classification

Harvard Spectral Classification, Annie Jump Cannon and the Creation of Stellar Classification (Princeton Astronomy)

The Annie Jump Cannon Award

Annie Jump Cannon Award in Astronomy, American Astronomical Society

2025 Recipient: Maya Fishbach (University of Toronto), gravitational-wave astrophysics & cosmology

2024 Recipient: Jennifer Bergner (UC Berkeley), astrochemistry and planetary formation

Recommended Reading

The Glass Universe: How the Ladies of the Harvard Observatory Took the Measure of the Stars by Dava Sobel, Penguin Random House | Amazon

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Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers. Calm Piano - by Breakz Studios from Pixabay

Until next time, carpe diem!

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Math! Science! History!By Gabrielle Birchak

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