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Authors: Ronald Florence

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Small Magellanic Cloud, Cepheids in, 14, 15, 17

Smith, Gerald L. K., 219

Smith, R. D., 183-184

Smith, Sinclair “Smitty,” 150, 152, 215-216, 218, 230, 296, 297, 328, 329, 335, 336

background of, 308
drive and control system designed by, 308-312, 319, 320-321, 328-329, 405, 411
illness and death of, 311, 312, 314

Smith, Walter, 221

solar eclipse of 1919, 4

Solar Union, 46

Southern Pacific railroad, 247, 376

Soviet Union, 131, 414-415

spectrograph, 17n

Sperry, Elmer, 120

Staples, David Jackson, 27

Stebbins, Joel, 63, 305, 328

Stellafane, 94, 213

stock markets, 112, 114, 130-131, 158-159, 161

Stokes, Anson Phelps, 165

Strong, John, 328, 382, 383-384

Sullivan, Eugene, 340

Sun Shipbuilding Company, 286

supernovas, 259-261, 281, 304, 353, 354

Swasey, Ambrose, 28

Swope, Gerard, 100, 132, 133, 142, 157, 163, 166, 167, 173

technology:

international competition in, 41-42
in 1920’s, 89-90

telescopes:

recent trends in, 414-417
refractor vs. reflector, 28-29, 33-34

Texas, University of, 139, 191, 223, 309, 41211

Thomas, Lowell, 197-198, 203, 217

Thomson, Elihu, 77, 98-100, 111, 115-116, 117, 119, 122, 126, 127, 132, 135, 136, 140-145, 154, 155, 156, 162, 163, 167, 171, 172, 173, 300

background of, 98

Thomson-Houston, 98

Thorkelson, H. J., 75-76, 80, 87, 106

3C 295, 405

Times, 202, 380

Times (London), 4

Timken, H. H., 120

Tolman, Richard, 148-150, 335, 362

Tombaugh, Clyde, 21

Tracey, Dan, 209, 210

Traxler, Ben, 229-230, 257, 260, 292, 318, 352, 363, 372, 385, 394, 398, 405, 409

Triangulum (M33), 20, 62, 63, 67, 302, 305

United States:

in 1920s, 6-7, 10-11, 89-90
in Great Depression, 130-131, 142, 158-160, 161, 179, 183, 197-198, 219, 245-246, 334, 343-344
in World War II, 356-357, 365-366
post-World War 11, 365, 376-377

U.S. Steel, 128, 344

van Maanen, Adrien, 21-22, 23n, 75, 150

variable stars, see Cepheid variable stars

Victoria telescope, 124

von Karmann, Theodor, 113, 178, 214, 267, 268, 293, 295

Ward, George, 139, 175-176

Warner, Worcester Reed, 28

Warner & Swasey, 28-29, 30, 31, 111, 120, 123, 124, 225, 226, 263

Washington, D.C., in 1920s, 10

Weaver, Warren, 225, 276, 298, 337, 338, 339, 341, 364, 366, 379, 387, 388

Weber, Gus, 372

Weinberg, Steven, 396-397

Westinghouse, 175, 263, 265, 281, 296

bills from, 286
description of, 284-285, 289
mounting manufactured by, 284-291, 297, 314-315, 346
publicity, media and, 284, 287-288, 290, 292, 314, 319

J. G. White Engineering Company, 77, 78, 111, 124

Wildroot Cream Oil, 384, 386, 413

Wiley, Glen M., 247

Williamson, F. E., 247-248

Wilson, Albert, 397

Wilson, Charles, 202, 203, 205, 224, 225

Wilson, Olin, 113, 372, 401

wireless, see radio

Wirtz, Carl, 67

Wood, Harry 0., 209

Woodbury, David, 244-245, 329-331, 406

Woods, Wallace, 169, 170, 171, 172, 177

Works Progress Administration (WPA), 230, 315

World War I, 8, 347

World War 11, 333, 343-361, 363-364, 365-366

science in, 347, 356-357, 358, 366

Wright, Fred, 217

Wright, Helen, 56n

Yerkes, Charles Tyson, 31-32, 77, 79

Yerkes Observatory, 31-36, 39-40, 41, 61, 90, 138, 253, 392

Zeeman, Pieter, 12

Zeiss, 120, 212

Zwicky, Fritz, 151-152, 259-261, 281, 304-305, 306, 308, 334, 349, 351, 380, 381, 397, 405-406

Zworykin, Vladimir, 313, 328-329

Acknowledgments

I am indebted to many men and women who mined their memories, libraries, file cabinets, scrapbooks, office shelves, and back closets for material on the building of the two-hundred-inch telescope. Often memories from half a century back seemed as clear as yesterday—testimony to the incredible impression the enterprise made on so many.

In California I drew on the memories of Ben Traxler; Mel Johnson; Sylvia, Bill, and Mary Marshall; and Byron Hill, who also provided audio and video tapes, documents, and photographs from their private collections. Jim McCauley, Anne Price, Walter Smith, and John Hoxie brought back a Corning that is no more. Rein Kroon not only recounted details of his work in Pasadena and at Westinghouse but prepared a collection of otherwise unavailable documents from his private papers. I am truly sorry that Ben Traxler and Rein Kroon did not live to see this book completed. I would have enjoyed their reactions to the story, and the book would undoubtedly have profited from their critical readings.

In Pasadena, Jesse Greenstein, Horace Babcock, Olin Wilson, and Allan Sandage evoked the excitement of the anticipation and early days of the telescope. Larry Blackee, Bill McLellan, and Earle Emery shared memories of their years of working on the telescope, and pointed out treasures hidden in the domes at Palomar. Fred Harris, Hal Petrie, and Robert Brucaton fielded questions and shared the contemporary excitement of the basement of Robinson Hall. Christine Shirley graciously allowed me to tour Hale’s solar lab, with Horace Babcock as a guide.

During my stays at Palomar, Bob Thicksten, Will McKinley, Jeff Phinney, Dana and Bruce Cuney, John Henning, Paul van Ligten, Jean Mueller, Merle Street, Luz Lara, and Gerry Neugebauer shared a sense of the continued excitement of the telescope and the mountain. Willem Baan and John Salzer graciously opened the observing room
to a visitor during their run on the two-hundred. I would particularly like to thank Robert Brucato, Bob Thicksten, Hal Petrie, and the Palomar staff for putting up with my questions during the removal and washing of the mirror and the first-ever removal and replanting of the edge supports.

In Pasadena and Redwood City, Olga Rule, Carol Roth, and Naomi Serrurier shared memories of Bruce Rule and Mark Serrurier, along with private papers from their collections. Richard Preston, in Princeton, was generous with his notes and with tapes he made in his own interview of Byron Hill. Neal Matthews of the
San Diego Reader
shared the notes he made during a visit to Palomar. William Niering, of Connecticut College, helped with botanical fine points.

I would also like to acknowledge the many archivists and librarians who assisted my research. John Anderson and Ruth Shoemaker at the Hall of History at General Electric in Schenectady, Ron Brashear of the manuscript department of the Huntington Library, Michelle Cotton at the Corning Glass Works, Helen Knudsen at the Caltech Astrophysics Library, Melissa Smith and Emily Oakhill at the Rockefeller Archive Center, Virginia Wright at the library of the Corning Museum of Glass, Charles Ruch at Westinghouse, the staff at the Hagley Museum and Library, and Carol Buge and the current and past staffs of the Institute Archives at Caltech not only addressed dozens of requests for obscure documents and photographs but provided suggestions and surprises from their own expert knowledge.

I owe special debts to Paul Routley, now of the U.S. Naval Observatory, who introduced me to the wonders of astronomy and the Hale telescope; to Edward Burlingame for his faith and encouragement on this project; to Jesse Greenstein, Daniel Kevles, and Allan Sandage for their thoughtful reading of the manuscript of this book; and to my wife and son for putting up with many years of Palomar anecdotes.

For the errors that remain, I claim full credit.

About the Author

RONALD FLORENCE was educated at Berkeley and Harvard. The author of five previous books, he lives with his wife and son on the Connecticut shore, where they raise Cotswold sheep.

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Praise

“Atmospheric, sound, and elegantly readable,
The Perfect Machine
provides a riveting account of how, out of a welter of human passions and imperfections, this noble thing got built right.”

—Timothy Ferris

“Magnificent … a superb history by a superb writer and historian…. Must reading for organizers and users of Big Science.”

—Allan Sandage

“Ronald Florence has done an amazing job in reconstructing one of the greatest technological achievements of this century…. Anyone who thinks that all astronomers are unemotional, absent-minded academics is in for quite a few surprises.”

—Arthur C. Clarke

A
LSO BY
R
ONALD
F
LORENCE

Nonfiction
Fritz
Marx’s Daughters
The Optimum Sailboat

Fiction
Zeppelin
The Gypsy Man

Copyright

A hardcover edition of this book was published in 1994 by HarperCollins Publishers.

THE PERFECT MACHINE
. Copyright © 1994 by Ronald Florence.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Epub Edition © AUGUST 2011 ISBN: 978-0-062-10578-3

First HarperPerennial edition published 1995.

The Library of Congress has catalogued the hardcover edition as follows:

Florence, Ronald.

The perfect machine / Ronald Florence.

    p. cm.

Includes index. ISBN 0-06-018205-9

1. Reflecting telescopes—California—Palomar, Mount—History.

  2. Mount Wilson and Palomar Observatories—History. I. Title.

  QB88.F55 1994

  522’.29794’98—dc20            93-46374

ISBN 0-06-092670-8 (pbk.)

98 99

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*
The astronomer’s measurements of angular distances are like the latitude and longitude used for earthbound navigation. The 360 degrees of a circle are each divided into sixty arc minutes, and each arc minute is divided into sixty are seconds. The are second is 1/1,296,000th of a circle.

*
The spectrograph, a glorious discovery of nineteenth-century German science, is the primary research tool of the astronomer. Using a fine grating or prism, the astronomer can spread the light of the distant object into a spectrum, like a rainbow. Each chemical element, when heated, emits light of specific colors (wavelengths). The spectra that the astronomer records from distant objects include bright lines and black strips at various wavelengths, telltale signatures of the emission or absorption of specific wavelengths of light. By comparing the spectrum of a distant object with reference spectra, the astronomer can determine the presence or absence of chemical elements in the distant body. Spectra also enable the astronomer to classify types of stars and other celestial objects by color and, by measuring shifts from the expected position of various lines on the spectra, to determine the motion of distant objects.

*
Shapley had made some fundamental mistakes. He assumed that Cepheid variables in the globular clusters did not differ from those in the Milky Way. In fact, the Cepheids in the globular clusters belong to a different stellar population and are approximately two magnitudes fainter at a given period than classical (Population I) Cepheids. At the same time Shapley underestimated the magnitude of the Milky Way Cepheids because he did not make provision for the dimming of the apparent brightness of stars due to absorption of light by interstellar material. With striking luck the two mistakes cancelled each other out, and his estimates of the size of the Milky Way, and of the position of the sun within the Milky Way, were not far off.
    He had been flat wrong about the spiral nebulae. Looking back years later, Shapley wrote, “I consider this a blunder of mine because I faithfully went along with my friend Van Maanen and he was wrong on the proper motions of galaxies—that is, their cross motions…. I stood by Van Maanen.” Shapley had made a classic scientist’s mistake: citing the work of a colleague and friend on trust.

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