Henri Chrétien
Henri Jacques Chrétien was a French astronomer and an inventor.
Image:Trompe lóeil Villa Paradou.jpg|thumb|Trompe-l'œil mosaic floor in the Villa Paradou by Rainer Maria Latzke honoring Henri Chrétien,
Born in Paris, France, his most famous inventions are:
- the anamorphic widescreen process, using an anamorphic lens system called Hypergonar, that resulted in the CinemaScope widescreen technique, and
- the co-invention, with George Willis Ritchey, of the Ritchey–Chrétien telescope, an improved type of astronomical telescope, employing a system now used in virtually all large research telescopes.
Chrétien was one of the founders of the Institut d'optique théorique et appliquée and professor at the French "grande école" SupOptique.
Awards and honors
- The astronomical Chrétien International Research Grants awards are in honor of him
- In 1901, Chrétien, Joseph Joachim Landerer and Thomas David Anderson jointly received the Prix Jules Janssen, the highest award of the Société astronomique de France.
- Valz Prize from the French Academy of Sciences
- The crater Chrétien on the Moon is named in his honor.
- In 1955, he received an Academy Award for his work on the CinemaScope process
- The Pavillon Henri Chrétien, an historical building on the Nice Observatory site which is visible from the city of Nice, also bears his name.
Publications
*
*