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posted by on Sunday January 08 2017, @02:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the before-computers-were-just-circuitry dept.

Ars Technica has an article about the new space race movie Hidden Figures which they describe as "A must-see film about using math to overcome adversity and send humans into orbit". The film centers around a mathematician named Katherine Johnson who played a key role in the Mercury and Apollo projects and the challenges she had to overcome.

There is probably nothing that lifts my spirits more than a movie about heroic scientists sending astronauts into space. Apollo 13 did this masterfully, and The Martian gave it a futuristic twist. And now Hidden Figures has revitalized this quintessentially American tale again, with great success, by focusing on the true story of a group of early NASA mathematicians who plotted Project Mercury's vehicle flight paths in the 1950s and 60s.

Hidden Figures is the perfect title for this film, based on Margot Lee Shetterly's exhaustively researched book of the same name. It deals with an aspect of spaceflight that is generally ignored, namely all the calculations that allow us to shoot objects into orbit and bring them back again. But it's also about the people who are typically offscreen in sweeping tales of the white men who ran the space race. What Hidden Figures reveals, for the first time in Hollywood history, is that John Glenn would never have made it to space without the brilliant mathematical insights of a black woman named Katherine Johnson (played with what can only be called regal geekiness by Taraji Henson from Empire and Person of Interest).

Johnson was part of a group of "colored computers" at Langley Research Center in Atlanta, black women mathematicians who were segregated into their own number-crunching group. They worked on NASA's Project Mercury and Apollo 11, and Johnson was just one of several women in the group whose careers made history.

The movie is in theaters now.


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  • (Score: 2) by Snotnose on Sunday January 08 2017, @03:31AM

    by Snotnose (1623) on Sunday January 08 2017, @03:31AM (#450930)

    I'm gonna guess in the 60's and 70's this didn't matter. Women doing math was good enough until the newfangled calculators and computers showed up in the 80s.

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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 08 2017, @04:01AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 08 2017, @04:01AM (#450935)

    She started out that way.

    From 1953 through 1958, Johnson worked as a "computer", doing analysis for topics such as gust alleviation for aircraft. Originally assigned to the West Area Computers section which was supervised by mathematician Dorothy Vaughan, she was reassigned to the Guidance and Control Division of Langley's Flight Research Division.

    Then she became a steely eyed missile woman. The computer becomes the operator.

    From 1958 until she retired in 1986, she worked as an aerospace technologist, moving during her career to the Spacecraft Controls Branch. She calculated the trajectory for the space flight of Alan Shepard, the first American in space, in 1959. She also calculated the launch window for his 1961 Mercury mission. She plotted backup navigational charts for astronauts in case of electronic failures.[citation needed kept] In 1962, when NASA used electronic computers for the first time to calculate John Glenn's orbit around Earth, officials called on her to verify the computer's numbers because Glenn asked for her personally and refused to fly unless Katherine verified the calculations. Johnson later worked directly with digital computers. Her ability and reputation for accuracy helped to establish confidence in the new technology. She calculated the trajectory for the 1969 Apollo 11 flight to the Moon.

    (Source [wikipedia.org])

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by frojack on Sunday January 08 2017, @04:58AM

    by frojack (1554) on Sunday January 08 2017, @04:58AM (#450946) Journal

    There were already new fangled calculators and computers available at the time. They just took too long to program.

    As for the women, TFS says

    black women Mathematicians who were segregated

    Which didn't happen.

    That was gratuitously thrown into the story to beat the injustice drum.
    They weren't in the control room, but that doesn't mean they were segregated in any sense of the word.

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    • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Sunday January 08 2017, @05:24PM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Sunday January 08 2017, @05:24PM (#451090) Journal

      free gratuities - everyone love 'em, don't they?

    • (Score: 3, Informative) by dry on Monday January 09 2017, @01:13AM

      by dry (223) on Monday January 09 2017, @01:13AM (#451263) Journal

      To quote wiki,

      she was reassigned to the Guidance and Control Division of Langley's Flight Research Division. However, Johnson and other African-American women in the computing pool were also identified as "colored computers" and subject to workplace segregation, working, eating and using restrooms apart from their white peers until the colored computing pool was disbanded in 1958.[10]

      which sounds awfully like segregation to me, something that was usual in those days where black people were often segregated.
      Just because you and whoever upvoted you want to revise history doesn't change the facts
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Johnson [wikipedia.org]