- Source: Roger Hayward
Roger Hayward (1899 – October 11, 1979) was an American artist, architect, optical designer and astronomer. He is the inventor of an early Schmidt-Cassegrain camera that was patented in 1945. He was born on January 7, 1899, to mother, artist Ina Kittredge (Phelps) Hayward and local businessman and time piece hobbyist Robert Peter Hayward. He was the grandson of American landscape artist William Preston Phelps.
In December 1968 he wrote "Blivets: Research and Development" to The Worm Runner's Digest in which he presented interpretations of impossible objects.
References
Bell, Trudy (September 2007). "Roger Hayward: Forgotten Artist of Optics". Sky and Telescope. 114 (3): 30–37. Bibcode:2007S&T...114c..30B.
US Patent 2,403,660, Schmidt-Cassegrain camera
External links
The Roger Hayward Papers
Roger Hayward - Renaissance Man, a biography of Roger Hayward written by his family members and published by Oregon State University
A digitized collection of pastel drawings of molecules created by Hayward
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Stephen Hawking
- Buku Catatan Josephine
- Solidarisme
- Brothers (film 1982)
- Grand Prix Sepeda Motor musim 2007
- Bombs over Burma
- Ted Bundy
- Yerusalem
- Sekelat
- Fluorin
- Roger Hayward
- Roger Hayward Rogers
- Impossible trident
- Hayward (surname)
- 1979 in architecture
- Public relations
- Cassegrain reflector
- Roger Michell
- California State University, East Bay
- Roger Berry