121
See also: The sun’s spectrum 112 ■ The characteristics of stars 122–27 ■
Classifying star spectra 128 ■ Measuring the universe 130–37
THE RISE OF ASTROPHYSICS
the naked eye as a means of
comparing one star’s brightness
with that of another. The wedge
photometer was much more
objective; the observer viewed
a target star alongside one of
several stars with an accepted
brightness and then edged a
wedge of calcite in front of the
known source, diminishing its
magnitude in increments until
the two sources looked to have
the same brightness.
In 1886, Mary Draper, the
widow of spectral photography
pioneer Henry Draper, agreed
to fund Pickering’s work in her
husband’s name. In 1890, the first
Draper Catalogue of Stellar Spectra
was published. Pickering then
opened an observatory in Arequipa,
I do not know if God
is a mathematician,
but mathematics is the
loom on which God
weaves the universe.
Edward C. Pickering Edward C. Pickering
Edward C. Pickering was the
dominant figure of American
astronomy at the turn of the
20th century. Many of the
first steps in the development
of today’s astrophysics and
cosmology were made by
people he employed at the
Harvard College Observatory.
Known as a progressive for
his attitudes to the education
of women and their role in
research, Pickering nonetheless
asserted a rigid authority
over his team. On more than
one occasion, he forced out
researchers with whom he
did not agree, only for them
later to be proved right; one
example of this is Antonia
Maury, whose work on stellar
spectra Pickering dismissed.
Pickering spent his whole
career in academia, but was
also an avid outdoorsman, and
was a founding member of the
Appalachian Mountain Club.
The club became a leading
voice in the movement to
preserve wilderness areas.
Key works
1886 An Investigation in
Stellar Photography
1890 Draper Catalogue of
Stellar Spectra
1918 Henry Draper Catalogue
Peru, to survey the southern
sky and produce the first all-sky
photographic map.
In combination with the
work of the Harvard computers,
Pickering’s data was the basis
for the Henry Draper Catalogue
published in 1918, which contained
spectral classifications for 225,300
stars across the entire sky. ■
Many of the Harvard computers
were trained in astronomy, but as
women, they were excluded from
academic positions. Their wages were
similar to those of unskilled workers.