‘This is a wonderful book, accessible to most college undergraduates! Its photographs and biographical sketches introduce some of the world’s most competent, best-informed radio astronomers, and reveal how these researchers almost always lost their way, repeatedly, before ultimately arriving at a deeper understanding of the Universe. In describing this process, Kellermann and Bouton also depict the Cosmos, as observed today, and sketch how it may have evolved over the eons.’
Martin Harwit - Professor Emeritus of Astronomy, Cornell University
‘This book presents a history of radio astronomy from the unique perspective of authors close to important developments in the field. It not only describes the historical developments but provides a wealth of entertaining stories. Kellermann was on the scene or one degree removed from the events described as a PhD student of John Bolton, a leading pioneers in radio astronomy after World War II. These stories, which are related in colorful detail and accompanied by copious photographs, are told with such a flourish that makes the book hard to put down. The conclusions provide an object lesson about the nature of scientific discovery and how science really works. Scientists, students, and people who influence which instruments are built and who gets to use them will enjoy and benefit from reading this book.’
James M. Moran - D. H. Menzel Professor of Astrophysics Emeritus, Harvard University and Senior Scientist, SAO
‘Respected radio astronomer Kellermann and archivist/historian Bouton make the ideal team to write a history of radio astronomy that is not only well informed and accurate but goes further in revealing the twists and turns of discoveries that were often accidental and unrecognized at the time. … Highly recommended.’
K. D. Stephan
Source: Choice
‘… a useful and entertaining history of radio astronomy from the earliest days up to the present … full of colourful detail, often including anecdotes which have not been told before and do not appear in the scientific journals. … Altogether a fascinating and enjoyable book especially for one who has been involved or a spectator in the whole subject.’
Francis Graham-Smith
Source: The Observatory
‘An important and substantial contribution to the history of what is known today as multi-messenger astronomy.’
Stephen J. Dick
Source: Metascience