{"title":"Managing innovation in telescope making","authors":"Emily A. Margolis","doi":"10.1177/00218286221111100","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"If one followed the extensive media coverage of the James Webb Space Telescope, one might conclude that infrared astronomy is having its moment. In anticipation of the longawaited December 2021 launch, print, television, and social media frequently amplified stories of the space-based infrared observatory and its scientific goals. Renee M. Rottner, Assistant Teaching Professor of Technology Management at the University of CaliforniaSanta Barbara, reminds readers that this public attention is but a moment in a longer history of infrared astronomers building tools to observe beyond Earth’s atmosphere. In Making the Invisible Visible: A History of the Spitzer Infrared Telescope Facility (1971-2003), Rottner presents a chronology of the project that became the Spitzer Infrared Telescope Facility (SITF). SITF was the last of NASA’s “Great Observatories.” Launched in 2003, its infrared observations complimented data from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. Designed and operated by government, industry, and university stakeholders, SITF observed the universe for 16 years and contributed to numerous discoveries, including a giant ring around Saturn, and confirmed the value of space-based infrared observatories. Making the Invisible Visible focuses on the 30-plus years that preceded the telescope’s launch, with an emphasis on the planning and management of this project. Rottner shows how decision makers and project managers realized SITF through changing political and economic circumstances. She presents their discussions, debates, and decisions against the backdrop of scientific and technological developments, including the legitimization and growth of the field of infrared astronomy and the start of NASA’s space shuttle program. Brief biographies of key participants enliven and enrich the chronological account of SITF, as Rottner makes visible the ways in which personal experiences and personality shaped the project. Rottner balances written documentation with first-hand accounts to reconstruct the origins and management of SITF. In addition to combing through meeting minutes, conference proceedings, project briefings, and government reports, she conducted oral history interviews with 29 contributors to SITF. Making the Invisible Visible features extensive excerpts from these interviews. Rottner allows space for participants to place their work in broader contexts based on their understanding of events. Bringing relevant scholarship into conversation with these recollections, to reinforce or challenge them, would have strengthened the analysis. 1111100 JHA0010.1177/00218286221111100Journal for the History of AstronomyBook Reviews book-review2022","PeriodicalId":56280,"journal":{"name":"Journal for the History of Astronomy","volume":"53 1","pages":"497 - 498"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal for the History of Astronomy","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/00218286221111100","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
If one followed the extensive media coverage of the James Webb Space Telescope, one might conclude that infrared astronomy is having its moment. In anticipation of the longawaited December 2021 launch, print, television, and social media frequently amplified stories of the space-based infrared observatory and its scientific goals. Renee M. Rottner, Assistant Teaching Professor of Technology Management at the University of CaliforniaSanta Barbara, reminds readers that this public attention is but a moment in a longer history of infrared astronomers building tools to observe beyond Earth’s atmosphere. In Making the Invisible Visible: A History of the Spitzer Infrared Telescope Facility (1971-2003), Rottner presents a chronology of the project that became the Spitzer Infrared Telescope Facility (SITF). SITF was the last of NASA’s “Great Observatories.” Launched in 2003, its infrared observations complimented data from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. Designed and operated by government, industry, and university stakeholders, SITF observed the universe for 16 years and contributed to numerous discoveries, including a giant ring around Saturn, and confirmed the value of space-based infrared observatories. Making the Invisible Visible focuses on the 30-plus years that preceded the telescope’s launch, with an emphasis on the planning and management of this project. Rottner shows how decision makers and project managers realized SITF through changing political and economic circumstances. She presents their discussions, debates, and decisions against the backdrop of scientific and technological developments, including the legitimization and growth of the field of infrared astronomy and the start of NASA’s space shuttle program. Brief biographies of key participants enliven and enrich the chronological account of SITF, as Rottner makes visible the ways in which personal experiences and personality shaped the project. Rottner balances written documentation with first-hand accounts to reconstruct the origins and management of SITF. In addition to combing through meeting minutes, conference proceedings, project briefings, and government reports, she conducted oral history interviews with 29 contributors to SITF. Making the Invisible Visible features extensive excerpts from these interviews. Rottner allows space for participants to place their work in broader contexts based on their understanding of events. Bringing relevant scholarship into conversation with these recollections, to reinforce or challenge them, would have strengthened the analysis. 1111100 JHA0010.1177/00218286221111100Journal for the History of AstronomyBook Reviews book-review2022
如果一个人关注了媒体对詹姆斯·韦伯太空望远镜的广泛报道,他可能会得出这样的结论:红外天文学正在迎来它的时刻。由于期待已久的2021年12月发射,印刷、电视和社交媒体经常夸大天基红外天文台及其科学目标的故事。加州大学圣巴巴拉分校技术管理助理教学教授芮妮·m·罗特纳(Renee M. Rottner)提醒读者,这种公众关注不过是红外天文学家建造观测地球大气层之外的工具的漫长历史中的一个时刻。在《使不可见变为可见:斯皮策红外望远镜设备的历史(1971-2003)》一书中,罗特纳介绍了斯皮策红外望远镜设备(SITF)项目的年表。SITF是美国宇航局最后一个“大天文台”。它于2003年发射升空,其红外观测数据与哈勃太空望远镜、康普顿伽马射线天文台和钱德拉x射线天文台的数据相辅相成。由政府、工业界和大学利益相关者设计和运营的SITF观测了16年的宇宙,并为许多发现做出了贡献,包括土星周围的巨大环,并证实了天基红外天文台的价值。《使不可见成为可见》聚焦于望远镜发射前的30多年,重点是这个项目的规划和管理。罗特纳展示了决策者和项目经理如何通过不断变化的政治和经济环境实现SITF。她介绍了他们在科技发展背景下的讨论、辩论和决定,包括红外天文学领域的合法化和发展,以及美国宇航局航天飞机计划的开始。主要参与者的简短传记生动并丰富了SITF的时间顺序,因为Rottner使个人经历和个性塑造项目的方式变得清晰可见。Rottner平衡了书面文件和第一手资料,重建了SITF的起源和管理。除了梳理会议纪要、会议记录、项目简报和政府报告外,她还与29位科技创新基金的撰稿人进行了口述历史访谈。《让不可见变为可见》收录了这些访谈的大量节选。Rottner允许参与者根据他们对事件的理解将他们的工作置于更广泛的背景下。将相关的学术研究与这些回忆进行对话,以加强或挑战它们,将加强分析。1111100 jha0010.1177 /00218286221111100天文学史书评书刊评论2022
期刊介绍:
Science History Publications Ltd is an academic publishing company established in 1971 and based in Cambridge, England. We specialize in journals in history of science and in particular history of astronomy.