By 1918 American astronomer Harlow Shapley (1885--1972) had completed the work that established his reputation as a scientist and secured his place as one of the most important contributors to the development of twentieth-century astronomy. This work included techniques to determine stellar distances and the discovery of the eccentric location of the solar system within the Milky Way. While Shapley continued to conduct scientific research for the next five decades, his most important contribution to astronomy during these years lay in his Directorship of the Harvard College Observatory. Preoccupation with Shapley's early work neglects other important facets of his professional life. From lecturing in colleges and churches, to promoting inte...
Astrophysicists have generally traced the roots of their science to the development of the spectrosc...
Eighty years ago Samuel Christian Schmucker was one of the most widely known science writers and lec...
Astronomy is by far the most popular of the physical sciences, enticing enough to become a major cul...
This is a book chapter from the NASA book Cosmos and Culture: Cultural Evolution in a Cosmic Context...
Few American scientists have devoted as much attention to religion and science as Harvard geologist ...
During the 1950s, American chemist and Nobel laureate Harold C. Urey began advocating the necessity ...
The popularizer of astronomy Mary Proctor was well known in her days but has been little remembered ...
Making Stars Physical offers the first extensive look at the astronomical career of John Herschel, s...
Born in Red Oak, Iowa, in 1906, Fred Lawrence Whipple earned his Ph.D. in astronomy at the Universit...
American physicist Arthur Holly Compton (1892-1962), who shared the Nobel prize with C. T. R. Wilson...
Between 1893 and 1941, the understanding of the Milky Way galaxy within the American culture changed...
Edwin P. Hubble 1889-1953; Sir Lawrence Bragg; William N. Birchby 1877-1953; Faculty Changes; Pure C...
Astronomy is by nature an interdisciplinary activity: it involves mathematics, physics, chemistry an...
In the hundred years since George Ellery Hale was born in Chicago on June 29, 1868, no astronomer ha...
Jacobus C. Kapteyn (1851-1922) was a Dutch astronomer who contributed heavily to major catalogs of s...
Astrophysicists have generally traced the roots of their science to the development of the spectrosc...
Eighty years ago Samuel Christian Schmucker was one of the most widely known science writers and lec...
Astronomy is by far the most popular of the physical sciences, enticing enough to become a major cul...
This is a book chapter from the NASA book Cosmos and Culture: Cultural Evolution in a Cosmic Context...
Few American scientists have devoted as much attention to religion and science as Harvard geologist ...
During the 1950s, American chemist and Nobel laureate Harold C. Urey began advocating the necessity ...
The popularizer of astronomy Mary Proctor was well known in her days but has been little remembered ...
Making Stars Physical offers the first extensive look at the astronomical career of John Herschel, s...
Born in Red Oak, Iowa, in 1906, Fred Lawrence Whipple earned his Ph.D. in astronomy at the Universit...
American physicist Arthur Holly Compton (1892-1962), who shared the Nobel prize with C. T. R. Wilson...
Between 1893 and 1941, the understanding of the Milky Way galaxy within the American culture changed...
Edwin P. Hubble 1889-1953; Sir Lawrence Bragg; William N. Birchby 1877-1953; Faculty Changes; Pure C...
Astronomy is by nature an interdisciplinary activity: it involves mathematics, physics, chemistry an...
In the hundred years since George Ellery Hale was born in Chicago on June 29, 1868, no astronomer ha...
Jacobus C. Kapteyn (1851-1922) was a Dutch astronomer who contributed heavily to major catalogs of s...
Astrophysicists have generally traced the roots of their science to the development of the spectrosc...
Eighty years ago Samuel Christian Schmucker was one of the most widely known science writers and lec...
Astronomy is by far the most popular of the physical sciences, enticing enough to become a major cul...