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- From: hathaway@stsci.edu
- Subject: Re: Real Men Astronomers [Was Re: e-mail activated telescope?]
- Message-ID: <1992Nov6.111306.1@stsci.edu>
- Lines: 43
- Sender: news@stsci.edu
- Organization: Space Telescope Science Institute
- References: <1992Nov2.181540.15950@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU> <1992Nov3.104609.1@fnalo.fnal.gov> <1992Nov5.183901.28034@athena.mit.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 16:13:06 GMT
-
- In article <1992Nov5.183901.28034@athena.mit.edu>, hbh@athena.mit.edu (Heidi Hammel) writes:
- > higgins@fnalo.fnal.gov (Bill Higgins-- Beam Jockey) writes:
- >> kent@patience.Stanford.EDU (Mark Kent) writes:
- >> > [query about a remotely controlled telescope]
- >>Seriously, it doesn't seem right to sit in a warm little room pecking
- >>at a keyboard to do observations. Do we need to raise up a generation
- >>of couch-potato observers? Real Men brave the cold and darkness to get
- >>their images!
- >>I know this idea is crude and implies some unfortunate corollaries, such as:
- >>1. Radio astronomers are not Real Men.
- >>2. Anita Cochran, Heidi Hammel, and other lady astronomers *are* Real Men.
- >
- > :-} Well, okay - but just don't tell my SO ;-). Seriously, though, it is
- > tough to find a professional astronomer who does *not* work in a warm room.
- > Most large telescopes are run that way. Even Real Men like me do it :-).
- >
- > Rest assured - many professional astronomers "pay their dues" at smaller
- > telescopes before moving up to the big ones. You only need one winter
- > season of nights at -5 degrees enduring winds of 30 mph to build character
- > and create a sense of humility. You *really* *appreciate* warm rooms
- > afterwards...
-
- [ ...stuff deleted ... ]
- >
- > So do I get to keep my title of "Real Man" astronomer
- > even though I mostly work in a warm room at a computer? ;-)
- >
- > heidi
- > --
- >
- > Heidi B. Hammel (hbh@astron.mit.edu) MIT 54-416 EAPS Dept.
-
- The rooms I've been paid to work in are not in this frigid league
- (college classes and 'for fun' observing gave me enough of a taste
- to invest in a snowmobile suit ...), but rooms with computers haven't
- been warm to me. They usually keep them pretty chilly for the machines
- and I've often worn sweaters in the summer, as this is the time they
- seem to crank up the A/C to accomodate the computers. Picky, picky, picky.
- (At least I haven't had to go on-site to the 'scopes (low-orbit for HST,
- geo-sync for IUE - now _those_ would be cold.))
-
- Wm. Hathaway
-
-