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The Life and Times of the Telescope by Fred Watson |
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| The telescope is undoubtedly one
of the world's most far-reaching inventions. For the past four centuries
the telescope has stood at the forefront of human discovery. From its humble
beginnings in seventeenth-century Holland, when a simple spectacle-maker
first presented his invention to his country's military leaders, to today's
colossal structures housed in space-age cathedrals, the telescope has unlocked
nature's secrets. And in the past decade, the Hubble Space Telescope has
brought us to the very edges of the universe, and the very beginning of
time. How did the telescope - a potent mix of art, science, and engineering
- reach its present level of sophistication?
The history of the telescope is a rich story of human ingenuity and perseverance involving some of the most colorful figures of the scientific world - Galileo, Johann Kepler, Isaac Newton, William Herschel, George Ellery Hale, and Edwin Hubble. Stargazer brings to life the story of these brilliant, and sometime quirky, scientists as they turned their eyes and ideas beyond what anyone thought possible. Professor Fred Watson, one of Australia's top astronomers, writes clearly and skillfully, without technical jargon but with a dash of humor, explaining the science and technology behind the telescope, and the enormous impact that it has had for four hundred years on how we have come to understand our universe. |
Stargazer The Life and Times of the Telescope by Fred Watson Da Capo Press, 2005. Order a copy. |
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