I bought those books! And I couldn't agree more with your assessment! There are at least two volumes, huge, heavy and terrifically unwieldy, with large, blurry, black and white photos. Those books and photos must have been great at their time, but now the're fit for the scrapheap, I'm sorry.heehaw wrote:The late Alan Sandage of cosmology fame was at Johns Hopkins briefly about the time he published his
https://www.amazon.com/Hubble-Atlas-Gal ... 0872796299
Please don't buy this Atlas: it is incredibly antique, with black-and-white photos of galaxies. How things have changed!
Alan engaged in a HUGE battle over the value of the Hubble parameter: Alan argued for (hold your breath) 42, while De Vaucouleurs argued for 100. There was an historic debate in DC, not between those two, who despised each other, but between stand-ins (for De Vaucouleurs, my Masters thesis advisor, Sidney van den Bergh, and for Alan, Gustav Tamman). It was a draw (I was there). Of course the current value is about half way between the two, but slightly closer to Alan's value I guess. I was enjoying drinks at a table in Italy when Alan invited Gus to join him in California....
NGC 4302... NGC 4298... M94... M33... NGC 891... M81 - oh, too small... M82...
Ann