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The Muleskinner and the Stars - The Life and Times of Milton La Salle Humason, Astronomer (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
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The Muleskinner and the Stars - The Life and Times of Milton La Salle Humason, Astronomer (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
Series: Springer Biographies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This is the story of the astronomer Milton La Salle Humason, whose
career was integral to developing our understanding of stellar and
universal evolution and who helped to build the analytical basis
for the work of such notable astronomers and astrophysicists as
Paul Merrill, Walter Adams, Alfred Joy, Frederick Seares, Fritz
Zwicky, Walter Baade and Edwin Hubble. Humason's unlikely story
began on the shores of the Mississippi River in Winona, Minnesota,
in 1891 and led to the foot of Mount Wilson outside Los Angeles,
California, twelve years later. It is there where he first attended
summer camp in 1903 and was captivated by its surroundings. The
mountain would become the backdrop for his life and career over the
next six decades as he helped first build George Ellery Hale's
observatory on the summit and then rose to become one of that
institution's leading figures through the first half of the
twentieth century. The story chronicles Humason's life on Mount
Wilson, from his first trip to the mountain to his days as a
muleskinner, leading teams of mules hauling supplies to the summit
during the construction of the observatory, and follows him through
his extraordinary career in spectroscopy, working beside Edwin
Hubble as the two helped to reconstruct our concept of the
universe. A patient, knowledgeable and persistent observer, Humason
was later awarded an honorary doctorate for his work, despite
having no formal education beyond the eighth grade. His skill at
the telescope is legendary. During his career he photographed the
spectra of stars, galaxies and other objects many thousands of
times fainter than can be seen with the naked eye and pushed the
boundary of the known universe deeper into space than any before
him. His work, which included assisting in the formulation of
Hubble's Law of redshifts, helped to set the field of cosmology
solidly on its foundation. Milton Humason was one of the most
charismatic characters in science during the first half of the 20th
century. Uneducated, streetwise, moonshining, roguish, humble and
thoroughly down to earth, he rose by sheer chance, innate ability
and incredible will to become the leading deep space observer of
his day. "The Renaissance man of Mount Wilson," as Harlow Shapley
once referred to him, Humason's extraordinary life reminds us that
passion and purpose may find us at any moment.
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