Yes, well done, and thank you.
Made me look again, and I noticed;
From
the Wiki page for Sydney Chapman, a section for "honours"
Chapman was bestowed many honours over his career including Smith's Prize in 1913,[5] election as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1919,[2] Royal Society Bakerian lecturer in 1931, Royal Society Royal Medal in 1934, London Mathematical Society De Morgan Medal in 1944. In 1949, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society and was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1953. In 1964, he was awarded the Copley Medal of the Royal Society. He was elected to the National Academies of Science of the United States, Norway, Sweden and Finland.[5] He served as President of the London Mathematical Society during 1929–1931 and the Royal Meteorological Society 1932–1933.
The lunar Crater Chapman is named in his honour, as is the Sydney Chapman Building on the campus of the University of Alaska Fairbanks. This building served as the first permanent home of the University of Alaska Geophysical Institute, and it now contains the Department of Computer Science and the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. The American Geophysical Union organises "Chapman Conferences," which are small, topical meetings intended to foster innovative research in key areas.[15] The Royal Astronomical Society founded the Chapman Medal in his memory.[16]
Now from
the Wiki page for Kristian Birkeland, a section called "legacy"
(there is no section for honours, in Birkeland's page)
Birkeland's theory of the aurora was eventually confirmed and accepted as correct.
An example of one of his experiments is depicted on the left front of the Norwegian 200 kroner note; it shows a magnetized terrella, simulating the Earth, suspended in an evacuated chamber. Birkeland's face appears a second time in a watermark in the blank space above the drawing of the Terrella, and his rudimentary magnetosphere appears on the back, but is only visible under ultraviolet light. The ring encircling the magnetic pole depicted on the back of the bank note is similar to the patterns predicted by Birkeland and shown more recently by satellites. His drawing of what became known as Birkeland currents from his book, The Norwegian Aurora Polaris Expedition 1902–1903,[7] is shown on the back of the banknote at the right.
Birkeland was right and eventually confirmed, yet Chapman, his greatest critic, got all the honours,
and Electric Universe theory has been treated condescendingly by the mainstream for these last hundred years.
Now mainstream has "Chapman" conferences, to try and catch up.
~Paul