Science Fiction and the Universe

I have been a science fiction reader since my grade school days. The first book in the genre I remember reading was something from my school’s “Boys’ Shelf” about robots. I could never figure out why this stuff was singled out for boys to read, and so I started selecting them for my own interests. It turns out that really good science fiction is a painless way to learn about astronomy, physics, human nature, politics, other sciences, and a zillion other topics—all rolled into one!

Of course, as a kid, I didn’t know that. I just knew that the science fiction stacks at the library had some really cool stuff! About the same time I was getting hooked on those robot stories, my little brother joined the Boy Scouts and started getting Boys’ Life magazine, which ALSO had science fiction in it. By the time I hit college, I had started reading Isaac Asimov and Robert A. Heinlein books and short stories. I still get Analog and Asimov’s science fiction magazines each month and can’t wait to dig in and explore the universe from various unique points of view. And now my bookshelves are groaning with books by everyone from Arthur C. Clarke to Roger Zelazny!

Some of today’s best SF writers got their start on the pages of Analog and Asimov’s magazines. I’ve also learned that many of my colleagues in astronomy and the planetarium field are avid science fiction readers, and many of them get their copies each month. This is, I must admit, very cool! (Of course there are those who view SF with disdain, something I have never understood, since once you start reading the stuff, you’re hooked. Yet, one of my former colleagues at Sky & Telescope once told me that he couldn’t believe I read SF. Turns out he’d never read any and didn’t have any idea how rich the genre is!)

So, are you a science fiction reader? If not, do you want to become one? Over the next few weeks I’m thinking of putting up some reviews of my favorite books. In the meantime, here are some reviews of the two magazines I’ve put on my web pages.

What’s It Like?

A couple of entries ago I talked about observing on Mauna Kea in 1996. I suppose I went into it with only a little bit of a romantic view of Big Astronomy Observing, knowing that it wouldn’t quite be like the days of old with the lonely astronomer sitting in the cage while the selfless night assistant monitored the proceedings and moved the telescope at my command. For one thing, I knew that modern observatories use computers to position their telescopes precisely, and that most observers sit in nice, comfy control rooms and not in drafty chairs on the telescope, peering through eyepieces.

Our own observations on Mauna Kea made heavy use of computers to quickly capture images and do some quick processing to make sure we got what we wanted, before moving on to the next target. Our observing runs were chock full of targets: Comet Hale-Bopp, Comet Machholz, an assortment of asteroids, and just for grins toward the end of the night, we targeted a few deep-sky objects before we shut the systems down. If we’d had to go out on the observatory floor and manually position the scope for all those objects? Well, it wouldn’t have happened.

Control room at the UH 2.2-meter telescope in 1996
Control room at the UH 2.2-meter telescope in 1996

Computers revolutionized astronomy and nowadays you see amateurs routinely hooking up their Dells and IBMs and other systems up to guide their telescopes. Many amateur scopes have their own onboard guiding systems, complete with star ephemeris information and more. Heck, you see them being run from laptops and Personal Digital Assistants! It’s a far cry from the early days when the computers at observatories were pretty much limited to guiding the telescope for precision pointing. Today they also monitor the instruments attached to the telescopes, record data, and in some cases do what is called “pipeline” processing to get it ready for the observer who got the telescope time in the first place. It’s safe to say that most of modern astronomy would be impossible to do without computers.
There are those who bemoan the loss of the “old days” when the observer had complete control of the process, sort of like a king on a throne, but I think those folks are few and far between. Far from computerization being a tool to remove power from lofty astronomers, it has democratized the process for more observers and made a great deal more science possible. Without it, the wonderful images from the Hubble Space Telescope, Gemini Observatories, Spitzer Space Telescope, the myriad amateur astronomers who turn out breathtaking work, and so many others would not exist.