Margaret hamilton scientist images einstein
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Margaret Hamilton, Lead Software Engineer of the Apollo Project, Stands Next to Her Code That Took Us to the Moon (1969)
Photo courtesy of MIT Museum
When I first read news of the now-infamous Google memo writer who claimed with a straight face that women are biologically unsuited to work in science and tech, I nearly choked on my cereal. A dozen examples instantly crowded to mind of women who have pioneered the very basis of our current technology while operating at an extreme disadvantage in a culture that explicitly believed they shouldn’t be there, this shouldn’t be happening, women shouldn’t be able to do a “man’s job!”
The memo, as Megan Molteni and Adam Rogers write at Wired, “is a species of discourse peculiar to politically polarized times: cherry-picking scientific evidence to support a pre-existing point of view.” Its specious evolutionary psychology pretends to objectivity even as it ignores reali
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How Margaret Hamilton Wrote the Computer Code That Helped Save the Apollo Moon Landing Mission
From a distance of half a century, we look back on the moon landing as a thoroughly analog affair, an old-school engineering project of the kind seldom even proposed anymore in this digital age. But the Apollo 11 mission could never have happened without computers and the people who program them, a fact that has become better-known in recent years thanks to public interest in the work of Margaret Hamilton, director of the Software Engineering Division of MIT’s Instrumentation Laboratory when it developed on-board flight software for NASA’s Apollo space program. You can learn more about Hamilton, whom we’ve previously featured here on Open Culture, from the short MAKERS profile video above.
Today we consider software engineering a perfectly viable field, but back in the mid-1960s, when Hamilton first joined the A
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First-ever image of what a black hole looks like revealed bygd scientists
Scientists have obtained the first image of a 'supermassive' black hole, while studying and observing the center of the M87, a galaxy 55 million light years away, using Event Horizon Telescope (EHT).
Credit: Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration
The ETH is a network of eight radio telescopes spanning locations from volcanoes in Hawaii and Mexico, to mountains in Arizona and the Spanish Sierra Nevada, to Antarctica.
Each telescope of the EHT produced enormous amounts of data — roughly 350 terabytes per day — which was stored on high-performance helium-filled hard drives.
The first-ever image of the black home shows a bright ring formed as light bends in the intense gravity around a black hole that is 6.5 billion times more massive than the sun, according to Event Horizon Telescope's official Twitter account.
Black holes were first predicted by Einstein’s theory of relativity and since then, astronomers