(Ftr, this photo is from 8 years ago. Posted because it came up in a conversation and was at the top of my Photos app. At the time, there were lots of neighborhood posts about the resident coyote often seen on the beach, but iirc there were no reports of attacks or anything.)
@Lizette603_23 I leave the novel writing to my wife, but if I ever do write a book I will talk about it so much on here that people will ask me to stop :)
Humason was widely considered by his peers to be an outstanding observer, and was responsible for the data behind what is arguably the most famous result of 20th century astronomy.
Not bad for a kid who quit school at 14 to go live on a mountain.
Here's the velocity-distance plot from Humason’s 1931 paper with Hubble. The dots near the origin are the data used in Hubble's 1929 paper.
(Hubble relied on Humason's expertise to obtain the data for the 1929 paper as well, though he was the lone author on that one. Imo it’s proper to credit them both for that work.)
Humason had a knack for difficult measurements and became an expert at establishing the redshift of distant galaxies.
He measured the redshifts of over 600 galaxies, data that Hubble used in his work on the relationship between distance and radial velocity. Later measurements then supported Hubble's proposed relation.
Humason worked there for 5 years. After marrying Helen Dowd, daughter of the observatory's chief engineer, he took a job as a ranch hand. But he missed the mountain and observatory. When the opportunity arose he took a job there as janitor.
From there he applied for a job as "night assistant" helping astronomers run the equipment and dome. He became very good at it. In fact, he was so good at running the equipment that George Hale, the observatory's director, promoted him to scientific staff.
Humason was born in Minnesota but moved to California with his family as a teenager. At 14 they sent him to summer camp on Mount Wilson. He loved mountain life, and it was an exciting time to be there. Preparations for a new observatory were underway.
Humason took a year off to work on the mountain. He never went back to school – his last year was 8th grade. He took a job leading wagons up the mountain. Drawn by mules, they carried lumber for buildings and parts for the massive 100" telescope.
He dropped out of the *eighth grade* and had little formal education, but a knack for difficult observations helped him collect much of the data used to establish what we now call Hubble’s Law.