William McCrea (astronomer)


Sir William Hunter McCrea FRS FRSE FRAS was an English astronomer and mathematician.

Biography

He was born in Dublin in Ireland on 13 December 1904.
His family moved to Kent in 1906 and then to Derbyshire where he attended Chesterfield Grammar School. His father was a school master at Netherthorpe Grammar School in Staveley. He went to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1923 where he studied Mathematics, later gaining a PhD in 1929 under Ralph H. Fowler.
From 1930 he lectured in Mathematics at the University of Edinburgh. During his time in Edinburgh he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker, Sir Charles Galton Darwin, Edward Copson and Charles Glover Barkla. He won the Society's Keith Medal for the period 1939–41.
In 1932 he moved to Imperial College London as a Reader. In 1936 he became Professor of Mathematics and head of the mathematics department at the Queen's University of Belfast.
In the Second World War he was co-opted onto the Admiralty Operational Research Group. After the war, he joined the mathematics department at Royal Holloway College in 1944. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1952.
In 1965, McCrea created the astronomy centre of the physics department at the University of Sussex.
McCrea died on 25 April 1999 at Lewes in Sussex.

Family

In 1933 he married Marian Core and had three children.

Discoveries

In 1928, he studied Albrecht Unsöld's hypothesis, and discovered that three quarters of the Sun is made of hydrogen, and about one quarter is helium, with 1% being other elements. Previous to this many people thought the Sun consisted mostly of iron. After this, people realised most stars consist of hydrogen.
In 1964 he proposed mass transfer mechanism as an explanation of blue straggler stars.

Awards

McCrea was president of the Royal Astronomical Society from 1961 to 1963 and president of Section A of the British Association for the Advancement of Science from 1965–6.
He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1985. He won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1976.