J. Virginia Lincoln, from a 1976 publication of the US Commerce Department
Born
September 7, 1915
Ames, Iowa
Died
August 1, 2003
Boulder, Colorado
Occupation
Physicist
Jeannette Virginia Lincoln (September 7, 1915 – August 1, 2003) was an American physicist.[1]
Early life
Lincoln was born on September 7, 1915, in Ames, Iowa. He parents were Rush B. Lincoln and Jeannette Bartholomew Lincoln. Her father was a major general in the US Army Air Forces. Lincoln's mother taught chemistry at Iowa State University. Her brother, Rush B. Lincoln Jr. became a Major General in the US Army. Their grandfather Lincoln fought in the Civil War as a Confederate captain. Lincoln was unsurprisingly deep into her family's military life and continued with this throughout her life.[2]
Lincoln studied at Dana Hall in Wellesley, Massachusetts and went on to earn a bachelor's degree in physics from Wellesley College. She received a master's degree from Iowa State University in 1938.[2] Simultaneously, she was an instructor in household equipment at Iowa State from 1936 to 1942, instructing students how to use new electronics and devices.[3]
Career
In 1942, Lincoln began work in the Interservice Radio Propagation Laboratory (later renamed the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory or CRPL) at the National Bureau of Standards (NBS) in Washington, D.C. In 1946 the CRPL (Central Radio Propagation Laboratory) was created in order to keep information and research in a one place and to provide radio propagation predictions. These predictions included the investigation of solar and geophysical effects as well as ionospheric data. In 1954 CRPL moved to Boulder, Colorado and Lincoln's first job was a radio weather forecaster. She prepared monthly ionospheric prediction contour maps. These predictions were used in selecting frequencies for long distance radio communications. In 1949, Lincoln helped create a statistical method for predicting sunspot activity that is still used today.[4] In 1966, she became director for the World Data Center for Solar-Terrestrial Physics. She later became the Solar-Terrestrial Physics division chief for NOAA's National Geophysical and Solar-Terrestrial Data Center.[1] From there she worked at the Data Center from 1966 until 1980, the year of her retirement.[1]
^Coffey, Helen E. (2004-12-01). "Obituary: Jeannette Virginia Lincoln, 1915-2003". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. 36 (5): 1679–1681. Bibcode:2004BAAS...36.1679C.
^Coffey, Helen E. (2004-12-01). "Obituary: Jeannette Virginia Lincoln, 1915-2003". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. 36 (5): 1679–1681. Bibcode:2004BAAS...36.1679C.