In the early 1900s, the universe seemed to be a much, much smaller place. Back then, astronomers believed the Milky Way galaxy was all there was. They didnt know there were billions of other galaxies; they didnt know how small we really are.
They didnt know this because they couldnt measure distances to far-flung stars. Why? There was a pretty simple problem in astronomy: A bright, faraway star looks almost the same as a dim star thats close by.
Its the same here on Earth. Imagine youre on the beach at night and see two lighthouse lights glowing in the distance, but one seems brighter than the other. If you knew both lighthouses used the same lightbulb, you could conclude that the dimmer light is farther away. But its also possible that the dimmer light just comes from a lower-wattage lightbulb, perhaps nearer to you.
Scientists needed a way to find out the intrinsic brightness of stars to figure out their wattage, so to speak. Thats when Henrietta Leavitt, a Massachusetts-born computer who worked at the Harvard College Observatory, came along. In 1908, she published a discovery that may sound small but is one of the most important in the history of astronomy. It cracked open the universe.
Before Henrietta Leavitt, many astronomers looked at the stars in whats today known as the Andromeda galaxy some 2.5 million light-years away and mistakenly thought they were part of our own Milky Way galaxy (which is only around 100,000 light-years in diameter).
Those Andromeda stars were orders of magnitude further away. Scientists just didnt know it.
At the time, astronomers had some methods to figure out distances to stars, but they only worked for stars relatively close to Earth. Leavitts discovery linking the pulse of one type of star to their actual brightness, as described in the graphic above was the key to measuring objects farther and farther out into space.
If astronomers wanted to measure faraway things, Leavitts discovery showed, they just had to look out for cepheids. Her formula led astronomers to chart out relative distances to stars: They could use it to compare two stars and figure out which one was closer.
It took some more work by other scientists to calibrate this yardstick, to put concrete numbers on it. But once they did, and started measuring with it, the cosmos grew and grew.
Fifteen years after Henrietta Leavitts discovery, the preeminent astronomers Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis were locked in a heated debate.
Curtis believed that Andromeda was a separate galaxy far, far away from the Milky Way. At the time, this was an outlandish idea. Shapley represented the more mainstream view that Andromeda was just a hazy, cloudy region within our galaxy, which he had recently estimated to be around 300,000 light-years across. That was also the assumed size of the entire universe.
If Curtis was right, it would mean the universe was double or triple the size that Shapley estimated at least.
To settle the debate, Edwin Hubble the namesake of the famous space telescope looked for Cepheid stars in Andromeda. Night after night, he took photographs of Andromeda, searching for cepheids. In October 1923, he found one, blinking in one of Andromedas spiral arms. Another week of observations allowed him to follow Leavitts formula and determine its distance.
Hubble estimated it to be around a million light-years from Earth well outside the boundaries of Shapleys universe. (Hubble was a little off: Andromeda is closer to 2.5 million light-years away.) After reading about Hubbles finding, Shapley reportedly said: Here is the letter that destroyed my universe.
Scientists kept building on Leavitts ruler to measure the universe. And as they used these measuring tools, their understanding of the universe evolved. They realized it was far bigger than previously thought, there are billions of galaxies, and its expanding: Those galaxies are moving further and further away from one another.
Astronomers also realized that the universe had a beginning. If galaxies are moving away from one another now, it means they were closer together in the past which led scientists to the idea of the Big Bang.
It also led them to realize that the universe may, eventually, end.
This weeks episode of Unexplainable, Voxs podcast about unanswered questions in science, tells that story and more.
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How big is the universe? Henrietta Leavitt led Edwin Hubble to a better, bigger answer. - Vox.com
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