Until Karl Jansky's 1933 discovery of radio noise from the Milky Way,
astronomy was limited to observation by visible light. Radio astronomy
opened a new window on the Universe, leading to the discovery of
quasars, pulsars, the cosmic microwave background, electrical storms on
Jupiter, the first extrasolar planets, and many other unexpected and
unanticipated phenomena. Theory generally played little or no role - or
even pointed in the wrong direction. Some discoveries came as a result
of military or industrial activities, some from academic research
intended for other purposes, some from simply looking with a new
technique. Often it was the right person, in the right place, at the
right time, doing the right thing - or sometimes the wrong thing. Star
Noise tells the story of these discoveries, the men and women who made
them, the circumstances which enabled them, and the surprising ways in
which real-life scientific research works.