Evans taught for a year at the
University of Minnesota, then at
Mills College. While teaching in
Oakland he worked at the
Chabot Observatory and was appointed assistant professor. There he independently and belatedly invented the
Lyot filter. In 1942 Evans moved to
University of Rochester's Institute of Optics and developed optics for the
military effort. Between 1946 and 1952 he served as assistant superintendent of the
High Altitude Observatory, working in both
Boulder and
Climax, Colorado. In 1952, he became the first director of the
United States Air Force's new Upper Air Research Observatory, located at Sacramento Peak in southern New Mexico. The facility he directed was renamed the
National Solar Observatory after the
National Science Foundation took over responsibility for it in 1976. As director of the observatory Evans chose the name
Sunspot, New Mexico, for the post office and community where the observatory was located. == Awards ==