Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
There is an old joke: a lawyer, a priest, and an observational astronomer walk into a bar. The bartender turns out to be a visiting extraterrestrial who presents the trio with a complicated-looking black box. The alien first demonstrates that when a bucket ful of garbage is fed into the entrance chute of the box, a small bag of high-quality diamonds and a gallon of pure water appear at its output. Then, assuring the three that the machine is his gift to them, the bartender vanishes.
The lawyer says, “Boys, we're rich! It's the goose that lays the golden egg! We need to form a limited partnership so we can keep this thing secret and share the profits.”
The priest says, “No, no, my brothers, we need to take this to the United Nations, so it can benefit all humanity.”
“We can decide all that later,” the observational astronomer says. “Get me a screwdriver. I need to take this thing apart and see how it works.”
This text grew out of 16 years of teaching observational astronomy to undergraduates, where my intent has been partly to satisfy – but mainly to cultivate – my students' need to look inside black boxes. The text introduces the primary tools for making astronomical observations at visible and infrared wavelengths: telescopes, detectors, cameras, and spectrometers, as well as the methods for securing and understanding the quantitative measurements they make.
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- Information
- To Measure the SkyAn Introduction to Observational Astronomy, pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010