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How a janitor at the Mount Wilson Observatory measured the size of the universe

Milton Humason, a high-school dropout who worked as a mule driver and then a janitor at the Mount Wilson Observatory in California, worked his way up to become the assistant of Edwin Hubble, whom he helped to study the spectral redshift of hundreds of galaxies.

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Courtesy Astronomical Society of the Pacific / Newscom / File
Edwin Hubble American astronomer who in 1929 formulated the Redshift Distance Law of galaxies, which explained the relationship between a galaxy's distance from the Earth and the velocity at which it is receding. He was aided by Milton Humason, who had previously worked as a mule driver and janitor at the Mount Wilson Observatory.

At , we always have a soft spot for the 鈥渦nderdog astronomer鈥. Someone who overcomes circumstance to make great astronomical discoveries with skill and curiosity and raw enthusiasm.

We鈥檝e already looked at the remarkable stories of and .

Today, a snapshot of Milton Humason, a former mule driver and janitor who rose to work with Edwin Hubble to establish the distance scale of the universe and become one of the best-known American astronomers of the 20th century.

IN PICTURES: Images from the Hubble telescope

Milton Humason was born in Dodge Center, Minnesota in 1891. When he was 14 years old, his parents sent him to a summer camp on Mount Wilson, near Los Angeles. The mountain鈥檚 forests and soaring views of southern California stole the heart of the prairie boy. He convinced his parents to let him take a year off school to stay on the mountain and find work.

He never returned to school.

Instead, Humason took up work as a mule driver, hauling lumber up a trail from the Sierra Madre to Mount Wilson to build the new astronomical observatory鈥 an enormous project organized by the astronomy pioneer George Ellery Hale.

In 1911, Humason鈥檚 heart was stolen once more: he became engaged to Helen Dowd, the daughter of the chief engineer of the observatory on Mount Wilson. They married shortly after. He left to work as a foreman on a ranch in nearby LaVerne. But he missed the mountain. In 1917, Humason saw his chance to return and to impress his father-in-law: he took a position as observatory janitor. This was a big step up from mule driver and ranch hand.

Soon after, the new observatory posted a position for 鈥渘ight assistant鈥, which is essentially a helper for astronomers who need to operate the telescope and observatory dome. Humason took up the role. His patience and skill and diligence brought him to the attention of Hale himself. In 1919, in the face of stern protests, Hale appointed Humason鈥 a high-school dropout鈥 to the scientific staff of the observatory. Humason remained in the role until 1954.

Humason worked with Hubble, and later Hubble鈥檚 protege, Allan Sandage, to study the spectral redshift of hundreds of galaxies to determine how fast they were receding鈥 their so-called 鈥渞adial velocity鈥. Hubble (correctly) believed the radial velocity of a galaxy was related to its distance, a relationship now known as 鈥淗ubble鈥檚 Law鈥.

But these far-away galaxies had low surface brightness, and were notoriously hard to measure. So Humason developed techniques to optimize the photographic exposures and plate measurements. He determined the radial velocities of 620 galaxies, and helped set the distance scale and age of the universe. Much of Hubble鈥檚 success was attributed to Humason鈥檚 painstaking measurements.

For his achievements, Humason was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Lund in Sweden. He retired in 1957, and died in Mendocino, California, in 1972 at the age of 80.

In 2005, Humason鈥檚 life was the subject of the musical by the writer Stan Peal.

Brian Ventrudo blogs at .

View all of the One-Minute Astronomer posts on the Monitor.

IN PICTURES: Images from the Hubble telescope

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