CARL SAGAN
G'day folks,
Carl
Sagan was probably the most well-known scientist of the 1970s and 1980s. He
studied extraterrestrial intelligence, advocated for nuclear disarmament, and
co-wrote and hosted 'Cosmos: A Personal Voyage.'
“Imagination
will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it, we go nowhere.”
—Carl
Sagan
Astronomer
Carl Sagan was born on November 9, 1934, in Brooklyn, New York. He graduated
from the University of Chicago, where he studied planets and explored theories of
extra-terrestrial intelligence. He was named director of Cornell’s Laboratory
for Planetary Studies in 1968 and worked with NASA on several projects. An
anti-nuclear activist, Sagan introduced the idea of “nuclear winter” in 1983.
He wrote one novel, several books and academic papers and the TV series Cosmos,
which was reborn on TV in 2014, before his 1996 death.
Early Years
Carl
Sagan was born on November 9, 1934, in Brooklyn, New York, the first of
two children. Sagan’s interest in astronomy began early on, and when he was
five his mother sent him to the library to find books on the stars. Soon after,
his parents took him to the New York World’s Fair, where visions of the future
piqued his interest further. He also quickly became a fan of the prevalent
1940s science-fiction stories in pulp magazines and was drawn in by reports of
flying saucers that suggested extraterrestrial life.
Sagan
graduated high school in 1951 at age 16 and headed to the University of
Chicago, where experiments he conducted drove his fascination with the
possibility of alien life. In 1955 Sagan graduated with a BA in physics, and he
took his master’s a year later. Four years later, Sagan moved to California
after obtaining a PhD in astronomy and astrophysics, landing at the University
of California, Berkeley, as a fellow in astronomy. There, he helped a team
develop an infrared radiometer for NASA’s Mariner 2 robotic probe.
Further Work With NASA and Fringe Science
The 1960s
found Sagan at Harvard University and the Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory, where his work centered on the physical conditions of the planets,
particularly those of Venus and Jupiter. In 1968 Sagan became the director of
Cornell University’s Laboratory for Planetary Studies, and three years later he
became a full professor. Working again with NASA, Sagan helped choose where the
Viking probes would touch down on Mars and helped craft the messages
from Earth that were sent out with the Pioneer and Voyager probes
sent beyond our solar system.
While
still in his 30s, Sagan began speaking out on a range of fringe issues, issues
that would gain him much attention, such as the feasibility of interstellar
flight, the idea that aliens visited the Earth thousands of years ago and that
creatures resembling “gas bags” live high in Venus’ atmosphere. He also
testified before Congress during this period about UFOs, which had captured the
minds of the newspaper-reading populous, and proposed terraforming Venus into a
habitable world.
The Rare Celebrity Scientist
In 1968,
now a well-known quantity in the scientific realm, Sagan briefly served as a
consultant on the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey, although a
clash of personalities ensured the gig was short-lived. In the 1970s and 1980s,
Sagan was the most well-known scientist in the United States, helped in no
small part by the books he wrote. Works such as The Cosmic Connection: An
Extraterrestrial Perspective (1973), Other Worlds (1975), The
Dragons of Eden: Speculations on the Evolution of Human Intelligence (1977;
Pulitzer Prize winner) and his 1985 novel, Contact (made into a film
starring Jodie Fosterin 1997), all grabbed the attention of the scientific
community and general audiences.
Later Career
In 1980,
Sagan co-founded the Planetary Society, an international nonprofit organization
focusing on space exploration, and also launched the hugely influential TV
series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage, which he wrote and hosted. He also
wrote a companion book of the same name to accompany the series. Another
of his famous works, Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space (1994),
was the sequel to Cosmos and was inspired by the famous Pale Blue Dot
photograph, which shows Earth as a mere speck in space. Sagan uses the Voyager
1 probe photo as a leaping-off point to discus humanity's place in
the vast universe and his vision of the future.
Over the course of Sagan’s career, he was honoured several times, notably receiving NASA’s Distinguished Public Service Medal (1977, 1981) and the National Academy of Sciences’ Public Welfare Medal (1994), among dozens of others.
He died of pneumonia, a complication of the bone-marrow disease myelodysplasia, on December 20, 1996, at age 62. Eighteen years later, Cosmos was brought back to TV, this time with Neil DeGrasse Tyson taking on hosting duties and getting a whole new generation of viewers excited about what lies beyond the boundaries of Earth's atmosphere.
Clancy's comment: Mm ... Some people adored him. Me? I'd never heard of him until three years ago.
I'm ...
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