The Discovery of Our Galaxy

by Charles Allen Whitney

Hardcover, 1971

Status

Available

Call number

QB15.W47

Publication

Alfred A. Knopf (1971), Edition: 1st

Description

This is a book about the mystery and the passion, the imagination, religion, and poetry, the philosophy, the intellectual flightsand, above all, the peoplethat have created the science of astronomy, from Thales of Miletus predicting eclipses in the sixth century B.C. to todays scientists probing the cosmic significance of the mysterious "black holes" discovered in 1970. With authority and charm, the distinguished Harvard astronomer Charles A. Whitney here re-creates the lives and temperaments of the great astronomers and retraces the ingenious arguments, the feats of observation and deduction, and the leaps of intuition by which they have gradually unveiled a picture of the universe and have brought us to an understanding of our own planets place in it. Among them: Kepler, searching the solar system for visible evidence of the transcendent order he believed in; Galileo, constructing the first telescope and proposing the concept of universal gravitation; Newton, paragon of logic, paradoxically driven by an unshakable belief in himself as Gods appointed prophet to create a world of mathematical certainty and thus expose the wonder of his Father in Heaven; William Herschel, the nineteenth-century German who may well be considered the father of modern astronomy, first man to chart the nebulae; Edwin Hubble, in the present century, discovering and exploring galaxies beyond our own. Finally, Professor Whitney makes clear for the layman the fascinating problems astronomers wrestle with today: the mysterious nature of quasars, strange cosmic bodies discovered in 1963; the unknown forces behind cataclysmic explosions recently glimpsed in other galaxies; the elusive nature of "interstellar dust"; the eternal question of how it all began. (Publisher).… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member dangraves
This book thrilled me when I first read it several years ago. Whitney explained with great clarity how we discovered that we lived in a galaxy--an island of stars--and how we measure the distance to far away objects. His prose is not only vivid but clear to a layman. For instance, his account of
Show More
Cepheid variables as yardsticks was completely understandable.

Of course, we now have even better, more precisely defined tools today, but I understand how they work thanks to Whitney.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

308 p.; 9.1 inches

ISBN

0394460685 / 9780394460680

Barcode

151

Similar in this library

Page: 0.0997 seconds