Article ID: CBB001180127

If we build it, who will come? Radio astronomy and the limitations of “national” laboratories in cold war America (2003)

unapi

Munns, David (Author)


Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Volume: 34, no. 1
Issue: 1
Pages: 95-113
Publication date: 2003
Language: English


Description The history of big science, especially physics, informs historians that the instrument is at the heart of Cold War science. This article presents the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), which was consciously modeled on the Brookhaven National Laboratory and where the choice of instrument was of only secondary importance. During the planning for the NRAO, which took place from 1954 until 1956, mostly in offices in Washington, D.C. and New York, an extended debate emerged over the place of “national” facilities in science, and their relationship to established university programs, particularly those concerned with graduate student instruction. The case of the NRAO reveals the resilience of notions of dispersed scientific community, emphasizing smaller programs in many universities, as well as the perceived necessity of continued participation from a wide disciplinary array of practitioners who, cooperatively, forged radio astronomy. This essay illustrates substantial resistance to the model of scientific practice advocated by the national laboratories when applied to radio astronomy. Critics of a national facility for radio astronomy charged that the substantial funds could be better utilized within existing university-based programs, which would need to be expanded in any event to provide the researchers for the national facility. The senior researchers in radio astronomy were not American, highlighting the fallacy of the notion of national science. (from abstract at http://www.jstor.org/pss/10.1525/hsps.2003.34.1.95)


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Authors & Contributors
Crease, Robert P.
Bridger, Sarah
Balser, Dana Scott
Bouton, Ellen N.
Davis, John
Elbers, Astrid
Journals
Physics in Perspective
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
American Scientist
Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Historical Records of Australian Science
Publishers
Columbia University
Harvard University Press
Harwood Academic Publishers
MIT Press
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
Springer International Publishing
Concepts
Physics
Radio astronomy
Cold War
Science and war; science and the military
Astronomy
Government sponsored science
People
Berkner, Lloyd Viel
Brown, Robert Hanbury
Time Periods
20th century
20th century, late
Places
United States
Australia
Netherlands
Great Britain
Soviet Union
Switzerland
Institutions
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (U.S.)
Brookhaven National Laboratory (United States)
Strategic Defense Initiative
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) (Australia)
United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
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