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| | Orig. Ed 1996 | | Description
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| In making
the invisible universe visible, radio telescopes allow astronomers to see through our local universe of nearby stars to view a distant universe. Radio astronomy has provided tremendous insights into the composition, physical characteristics, and evolution of objects in the universe and revealed completely new, unanticipated phenomena. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) has greatly contributed to this scientific revolution. The book traces the story of radio astronomy from its
accidental beginnings in the 1930s to the present, describes the development of NRAO instrumentation, and focuses on the considerable contributions made by the scientists using the NRAO instruments. This unique insight into the evolution of a truly modern science is written in a style that anyone with an interest in astronomy can understand and enjoy, and also provides technical information that professionals in astronomy, computer science, and electrical engineering will find useful.
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| | | "Benjamin Malphrus has provided a valuable study of the NRAO's Green Bank telescopes that
closes a major gap in the history of radio astronomy." -- Andrew J. Butrica, Space Times, Sept/Oct 1996.
"The book is scholarly and extremely well referenced, but is so clearly written that it is both understandable to general readers and valuable to professionals." -- C.H. McGruder III, Choice
"This book is an interesting and detailed description of the establishment and early years of radio astronomy in the USA. If you are interested in radio astronomy
from a hands-on perspective, you will enjoy this book and its many, many figures. Equally, if you are a student of the history of astronomy, you will find the work invaluable." -- Dr. Rob Fender, University of Sussex, Modern Astronomer, Issue 5, July 1997. |
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