- :: Atom & Cosmos
- :: Body & Brain
- :: Earth
- :: Environment
- :: Genes & Cells
- :: Humans
- :: Life
- :: Matter & Energy
- :: Molecules
- :: Science & Society
- :: Other Topics
- :: Science News For Kids
"The truth is that what ordinary people really care
about are things they can see, with their own eyes,” writes Zimmerman, a
science writer and historian.
The Hubble Space Telescope has let the
public see the universe and has completely changed humanity’s perception of the
cosmos. The Universe in a Mirror explores the lives of the men and women
who dreamed of, lobbied for and engineered the first optical, Earth-orbiting
telescope — the one that made the view of the
heavens clear.
Zimmerman begins
the story with astronomers who were “condemned to look at the heavens as though
they had bad vision and were forbidden from using glasses.” The consequences of
these cataracts, the author contends, were profound: Dreamers like Lyman
Spitzer, hard-nosed realists like Nancy Roman, brilliant engineers like Jean
Olivier and tenacious astronauts like Story Musgrave united to find a way to
shoot a mirror-equipped metal can into space so that everyone could marvel at
the universe’s mysteries.
Zimmerman describes how the men and
women who make Hubble fly risk their careers, families and lives to “build and
fix what has undoubtedly been the most successful and important scientific
instrument ever put into space.”
The Universe in a
Mirror is an epic biography of the Hubble telescope. But
perhaps more poignant is the book’s subtle reminder of all that will be lost in
just a few years when Hubble falls from its orbit around Earth — and disintegrates.
Princeton Univ. Press, 2008, 287 p., $29.95.

Please login or register to participate.