Irene Fischer
Irene Kaminka Fischer (born July 27, 1907, in
Vienna,
Austria, died October 22, 2009, in
Boston) was an Austrian-American
mathematician and
geodesist. She was a member of the
National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the
American Geophysical Union, and inductee of the
National Imagery and Mapping Agency Hall of Fame. Fischer became one of two internationally known
women scientists in the field of geodesy during the golden age of the
Project Mercury and the
Apollo program. Her ''Mercury
datum'' (or ''
Fischer ellipsoid'' 1960 and 1968), as well as her work on the
lunar parallax, were instrumental in conducting these missions. "In his preface to the ACSM publication, Fischer's former colleague,
Bernard Chovitz, referred to her as one of the most renowned geodesists of the third quarter of the twentieth century. Yet this fact alone makes her one of the most renowned geodesists of all times, because, according to Chovitz, the third quarter of the twentieth century witnessed "the transition of geodesy from a regional to a global enterprise."
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