The Hubble Wars: Astrophysics Meets Astropolitics in the Two-billion-dollar Struggle Over the Hubble Space TelescopeThe Hubble Space Telescope is the largest, most complex, and most powerful observatory ever deployed in space, designed to allow astronomers to look far back into our own cosmic past with unprecedented clarity. Yet from the day it was launched in 1990 - and soon discovered to be semi-blind - Hubble has been at the center of a cosmic-size controversy over who was responsible for its notorious failure to function and what could be done about it. In 1987, Eric J. Chaisson, an accomplished young astrophysicist, signed on as a senior scientist with the Hubble project. Drawing on the journals of his five-year tenure, he now re-creates the day-to-day struggle over (and often with) the infamously flawed two-billion-dollar recalcitrant beast in the sky. It's a hilarious and frightening story about a three-way war between science, government, and industry (with the military launching guerrilla attacks from the sidelines). Chaisson probes the politics and economics of astronomy and brings to life the human personalities - inside NASA, the international scientific community, and private industry - who do battle in The Hubble Wars. Writing lucidly about the technology of the telescope itself, Chaisson lets us feel what it's like to be at the controls of the most complex and expensive gadget ever built by humans, and relates the unending tasks devised to deal with "the bird's" eccentricities. Despite its imperfect vision, Hubble is able to see some stars, and Chaisson also explains with a scientist's keen passion the many wondrous discoveries that Hubble has made possible. In December 1993, NASA launched a much-heralded mission to "fix" Hubble, and shortly thereafter declared that it would now seebetter than originally expected. Chaisson tests these claims against the evidence of the images produces, and assesses what Hubble means to the goals of future space exploration. With over one hundred black-and-white and full-color photographs, this is an illuminating account of the perils - and possibilities - at the heart of one of the most ambitious scientific enterprises in history, and a provocative inquiry into the place of science in space. |
Contents
Deployment and Early Operations | 33 |
Jitters in Space and on the Ground | 86 |
Hubbles First Light | 121 |
Copyright | |
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aberration active galaxies angstroms arc second astronauts astronomers Beta Pictoris black hole bright Canadarm Carinae celestial clearly clouds core cosmic designed Discovery disk early Earth electronic ence engineers Eta Carinae exposure faint-object camera field of view fine-guidance sensors first-light focus galaxies Giacconi globular clusters Goddard ground ground-based telescopes guide stars gyros high-resolution Hubble image Hubble mission Hubble project Hubble Space Telescope Hubble's imaging campaign institute's jitter launch light light-years magnitude main mirror miles million NASA NASA's nebula needed objects observations observatory onboard operations optical orbit Perkin-Elmer picture planet planetary camera problem quasar radiation release resolution safemode scheduled science instruments scientific scientists shuttle solar arrays South Atlantic Anomaly space agency spacecraft spectrograph spectrum spherical aberration stellar supernova target TDRSS technical telescope's tion ultraviolet Universe wavelengths wide-field and planetary wide-field camera