Annie S. D. Maunder

Annie S. D. Maunder
Annie S. D. Maunder in 1931
Born
Annie Scott Dill Russell

14 April 1868
Strabane, County Tyrone, Ireland
Died15 September 1947 (aged 79)
Wandsworth, London, England
NationalityBritish
Alma materVictoria College, Belfast
Girton College, Cambridge
Known forMaunder Minimum
Spouse
(m. 18511928)
Scientific career
FieldsSolar astronomy
InstitutionsRoyal Observatory, Greenwich

Annie Scott Dill Maunder (née Russell; 14 April 1868 – 15 September 1947) was an Irish-British astronomer, who recorded the first evidence of the movement of the sunspot emergence from the poles toward the equator over the 11-year solar cycle, finding the now-called Maunder Minimum. As sole author, she also devised with her husband, Edward Walter Maunder, the butterfly diagram for sunspots. Alone, she discovered that the sunspots in the Sun were asymmetrical. She was one of the leading astronomers of her time, but because of her gender, her contribution was often underplayed at the time. In 1916, she was elected to the Royal Astronomical Society, 21 years after being refused membership because of her gender.