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"contents": "Astronomers, maybe more than anyone, appreciate what an island of perfection our Earth is. Our orbit may put us at a perfect distance from the sun for life to flourish, but it is too small to easily help astronomers determine how big the universe is.\r\n\r\nLate Renaissance scholar <a href=\"https://www.space.com/15684-nicolaus-copernicus.html\">Nicolaus Copernicus</a> suggested that <a href=\"https://www.britannica.com/science/universe/The-Copernican-revolution\">the Earth orbits the sun in 1543</a>, but it took 300 years to prove it.\r\n\r\nIn 1838, a nearby star appeared to wobble because our viewpoint on Earth was moving <a href=\"https://archive.org/details/parallaxracetome0000hirs_i6r5\">due to our planet being in orbit around the sun</a>. Such apparent motion is called “<a href=\"https://www.space.com/30417-parallax.html\">parallax</a>.”\r\n\r\nWe can use only indirect means to find out how far away any external galaxy lies. <a href=\"https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Gaia\">Recent space missions</a> allow us to see the apparent motion of billions of stars, but that still covers only a corner of our huge galaxy.\r\n<div class=\"slot clear\" data-id=\"17\">\r\n<div class=\"promo\">\r\n<div class=\"lazyload-wrapper \">\r\n<div class=\"MuiBoxroot-0-1-85 MuiBoxroot-0-1-86 makeStylesbox-0-1-84\">\r\n\r\nUntil 100 years ago, it was greatly disputed whether <a href=\"https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/space-science/edwin-hubble\">other galaxies even existed</a>, or if the Milky Way was the whole universe.\r\n\r\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"wp-image-2242212 size-full\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/4305139.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"3500\" height=\"2317\" /> An image of Andromeda Galaxy or Great Andromeda Nebula (M31, NGC 224) made of several photos taken from the vicinity of Salgotarjan, 109 kms northeast of Budapest, Hungary, and compiled by a computer program, 07 February 2015. The photos of the spiral galaxy located some 2.5 million light-years from Earth were taken with an astronomical telescope 15cm in diameter and with a focal length of 1,200mm. EPA/PETER KOMKA</p>\r\n<h4><strong>Explaining the universe</strong></h4>\r\nThe German philosopher <a href=\"https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant/\">Immanuel Kant</a> published <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139014380.007\"><em>Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens</em></a> in 1755, speculating that certain small dim patches in the sky might be analogues of our Milky Way. These “nebulae” (the word means cloud) were usually viewed as nuisances, confusing comet hunters. Only with the development of large telescopes in the early 19th century were some of them seen to have a spiral form.\r\n\r\nSeeking, much like Kant, a mechanical explanation for the universe and the formation of the solar system, the French mathematical astronomer <a href=\"https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Laplace/\">Pierre Simon Laplace</a> published <a href=\"https://www.loc.gov/item/17002967/\"><em>Exposition du Système du Monde</em></a> in 1796. Laplace survived the French Revolution to become a government minister under Napoleon, and eventually minor nobility when royalty returned to France: this enabled him to publish several editions of his influential book.\r\n\r\nIn it, Laplace describes the collapse of a gas cloud to form a star and solar system, a process for which we now have direct evidence. It was perhaps natural that the spiralling of material to form a star became a preferred theory to explain the spiral nebulae.\r\n\r\nThere was no way to tell whether these spirals were new stars forming or Kant’s “island universes” until <a href=\"https://science.nasa.gov/people/edwin-hubble/\">Edwin Hubble</a> observed a star not wobbling, but instead, varying in brightness in a nearby galaxy; <a href=\"https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/january-1-1925-the-day-we-discovered-the-universe\">Hubble presented his findings in January 1925</a>.\r\n<h4><strong>Distance and luminosity</strong></h4>\r\nThe Milky Way has <a href=\"https://earthsky.org/clusters-nebulae-galaxies/what-is-the-local-group/\">several neighbouring galaxies</a>. The <a href=\"https://www.google.com/sky/#latitude=41.39981564913579&longitude=-169.13732213378003&zoom=9&Spitzer=0.00&ChandraXO=0.00&Galex=0.00&IRAS=0.00&WMAP=0.00&Cassini=0.00&slide=1&mI=-1&oI=-1\">Andromeda spiral (M31)</a> resembles it, but the smaller, irregular pair of dwarf galaxies known as the Magellanic Clouds, visible only from southerly latitudes, are closer. Due to their huge distance from us, no outside galaxy can be seen to wobble (have parallax) due to Earth’s motion and another method is needed to find their distances.\r\n\r\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2242214\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/GettyImages-1982472.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"720\" height=\"826\" /> This NASA photo released May 8, 2003 was made from 250 separate exposures taken by the Hubble Space Telescope from December 2, 2002 to January 11, 2003 and shows the nearest neighbouring spiral galaxy, Andromeda. According to NASA, this is the deepest visible-light image ever taken of the sky and shows approximately 300,000 stars in the halo of the Andromeda galaxy. (Photo by NASA/Getty Images)</p>\r\n\r\nCertain stars vary in brightness, and <a href=\"https://www.atnf.csiro.au/outreach/education/senior/astrophysics/variable_cepheids.html\">those called Cepheids</a> are useful for indicating distance due to a relation between how much light they give off and their period of variation (in days).\r\n\r\nThis “period-luminosity” relation for Cepheids was discovered by pioneering astronomer <a href=\"https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/remembering-astronomer-henrietta-swan-leavitt\">Henrietta Leavitt</a> using the <a href=\"https://www.britannica.com/topic/Magellanic-Cloud\">Magellanic Clouds</a>.\r\n\r\nCalibration of Cepheids for use in any galaxy was done by American scientist <a href=\"https://sciencephilanthropyalliance.org/harlow-shapley-from-a-brilliant-man-dedicated-to-science-to-a-brilliant-scientist-devoted-to-man/\">Harlow Shapley</a>, who had become famous by showing that the sun was not in the centre of the Milky Way. Ironically, Shapley did not believe that external galaxies existed.\r\n\r\nA lesser-known figure, <a href=\"https://www.lindahall.org/about/news/scientist-of-the-day/vesto-slipher/\">American astronomer Vesto Slipher</a>, worked at <a href=\"https://lowell.edu/\">Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz.</a>, built by the millionaire astronomer Percival Lowell to further his ideas about life on Mars and the presence of a then-unknown ninth planet (<a href=\"https://lowell.edu/discover/history-of-pluto/\">Pluto, discovered in 1930 before being demoted in 2006</a>).\r\n\r\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"size-full wp-image-2242220\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Pluto_discovery_plates.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"401\" height=\"248\" /> The original plates from Clyde Tombaugh’s discovery of Pluto in 1930. (Lowell Observatory Archives/Wikimedia Commons)</p>\r\n\r\nSlipher, working with a small telescope equipped with ingenious spectroscopes, had found that spiral nebulae move at high speeds, mostly away from us — which is usually regarded as Hubble’s second breakthrough. Slipher also found that they spin at high speed, which made such an impression that some leading astronomers claimed to see the motion (over years), proving the spiral nebulae to be nearby.\r\n\r\nIt took the world’s largest telescope, <a href=\"https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bahubb.html\">painstakingly used by Edwin Hubble</a>, to resolve the question.\r\n<h4><strong>Measuring distance</strong></h4>\r\nMount Wilson looms about 1.7 km above the Los Angeles basin. Before light pollution from the city became excessive, the mountainside was a suitable location for the <a href=\"https://www.mtwilson.edu/building-the-100-inch-telescope/\">Hooker telescope</a>, finished in 1917. It was a powerful tool for the young Hubble, hired at the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1919 after serving in the military.\r\n\r\nThe apparent large size of the Andromeda nebula — many times larger than the moon if photographed to show the faint outer regions — meant it was nearby and might resolve the spiral nebula question if studied properly. Hubble initially studied novae — exploding stars that can be picked out due to their brightness.\r\n\r\nHubble had to work past the confusion that in 1885, Andromeda had hosted a <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1086/185246\">supernova</a>, something so unfamiliar at the time that it was thought to prove the Laplace collapse theory since the spiral seemed to have formed a new star near its centre. To make matters worse, among novae there is a lot of variation in brightness, so they are not good indicators of distance.\r\n\r\nNevertheless, Hubble monitored them systematically. On a photograph taken in late 1923, he realized that one of his “novae” was fading in and out, and was in fact a Cepheid variable star, able to be used to determine distances accurately.\r\n<blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\">\r\n<p dir=\"ltr\" lang=\"en\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/OTD?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#OTD</a> 100 years ago, Carnegie astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered the existence of the universe beyond our own Milky Way galaxy LEARN MORE abou the famous VAR! plate where he recorded this breakthrough: <a href=\"https://t.co/AI7RXLmkng\">https://t.co/AI7RXLmkng</a> <a href=\"https://t.co/G384lPiWmt\">pic.twitter.com/G384lPiWmt</a></p>\r\n— Carnegie Science (@carnegiescience) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/carnegiescience/status/1709948533577863623?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">October 5, 2023</a></blockquote>\r\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\r\n<div class=\"grid-ten large-grid-nine grid-last content-body content entry-content instapaper_body inline-promos\">\r\n\r\nIn 1924, Hubble found many more Cepheids, all able to have their actual luminosity determined. Knowing this and how faint they appeared as seen from Earth, Hubble was able to demonstrate that the Andromeda nebula was roughly two million light years away: a neighbouring spiral galaxy. Previously thought to be part of our own galaxy, Andromeda was in fact about one thousand times further away.\r\n\r\nThe new perception of the size of the universe allowed Hubble, several years later, to go further and propose <a href=\"https://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/features/yba/M31_velocity/hubble_law/hubble_meaning.html\">Hubble’s Law</a>, a theory of the expansion of the universe, yet later shown to have begun with <a href=\"https://www.exploratorium.edu/explore/origins/big-bang\">the Big Bang 13.6 billion years ago</a>.\r\n\r\nBut, at least in astronomy, 1924 was the year that the universe exploded. <strong>DM <iframe style=\"border: none !important;\" src=\"https://counter.theconversation.com/content/225865/count.gif?distributor=republish-lightbox-advanced\" width=\"1\" height=\"1\"></iframe></strong>\r\n\r\n</div>\r\n<div class=\"grid-ten grid-prepend-two large-grid-nine grid-last content-topics topic-list\"><a href=\"https://theconversation.com/100-years-ago-our-understanding-of-the-universe-exploded-225865\"><em>This story was first published in</em> The Conversation</a>. <em>Martin Connors is a Professor of Space Science and Physics at Athabasca University.</em></div>\r\n<figure class=\"align-center zoomable\"></figure>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>",
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"description": "Astronomers, maybe more than anyone, appreciate what an island of perfection our Earth is. Our orbit may put us at a perfect distance from the sun for life to flourish, but it is too small to easily help astronomers determine how big the universe is.\r\n\r\nLate Renaissance scholar <a href=\"https://www.space.com/15684-nicolaus-copernicus.html\">Nicolaus Copernicus</a> suggested that <a href=\"https://www.britannica.com/science/universe/The-Copernican-revolution\">the Earth orbits the sun in 1543</a>, but it took 300 years to prove it.\r\n\r\nIn 1838, a nearby star appeared to wobble because our viewpoint on Earth was moving <a href=\"https://archive.org/details/parallaxracetome0000hirs_i6r5\">due to our planet being in orbit around the sun</a>. Such apparent motion is called “<a href=\"https://www.space.com/30417-parallax.html\">parallax</a>.”\r\n\r\nWe can use only indirect means to find out how far away any external galaxy lies. <a href=\"https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Gaia\">Recent space missions</a> allow us to see the apparent motion of billions of stars, but that still covers only a corner of our huge galaxy.\r\n<div class=\"slot clear\" data-id=\"17\">\r\n<div class=\"promo\">\r\n<div class=\"lazyload-wrapper \">\r\n<div class=\"MuiBoxroot-0-1-85 MuiBoxroot-0-1-86 makeStylesbox-0-1-84\">\r\n\r\nUntil 100 years ago, it was greatly disputed whether <a href=\"https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/space-science/edwin-hubble\">other galaxies even existed</a>, or if the Milky Way was the whole universe.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2242212\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"3500\"]<img class=\"wp-image-2242212 size-full\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/4305139.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"3500\" height=\"2317\" /> An image of Andromeda Galaxy or Great Andromeda Nebula (M31, NGC 224) made of several photos taken from the vicinity of Salgotarjan, 109 kms northeast of Budapest, Hungary, and compiled by a computer program, 07 February 2015. The photos of the spiral galaxy located some 2.5 million light-years from Earth were taken with an astronomical telescope 15cm in diameter and with a focal length of 1,200mm. EPA/PETER KOMKA[/caption]\r\n<h4><strong>Explaining the universe</strong></h4>\r\nThe German philosopher <a href=\"https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant/\">Immanuel Kant</a> published <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139014380.007\"><em>Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens</em></a> in 1755, speculating that certain small dim patches in the sky might be analogues of our Milky Way. These “nebulae” (the word means cloud) were usually viewed as nuisances, confusing comet hunters. Only with the development of large telescopes in the early 19th century were some of them seen to have a spiral form.\r\n\r\nSeeking, much like Kant, a mechanical explanation for the universe and the formation of the solar system, the French mathematical astronomer <a href=\"https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Laplace/\">Pierre Simon Laplace</a> published <a href=\"https://www.loc.gov/item/17002967/\"><em>Exposition du Système du Monde</em></a> in 1796. Laplace survived the French Revolution to become a government minister under Napoleon, and eventually minor nobility when royalty returned to France: this enabled him to publish several editions of his influential book.\r\n\r\nIn it, Laplace describes the collapse of a gas cloud to form a star and solar system, a process for which we now have direct evidence. It was perhaps natural that the spiralling of material to form a star became a preferred theory to explain the spiral nebulae.\r\n\r\nThere was no way to tell whether these spirals were new stars forming or Kant’s “island universes” until <a href=\"https://science.nasa.gov/people/edwin-hubble/\">Edwin Hubble</a> observed a star not wobbling, but instead, varying in brightness in a nearby galaxy; <a href=\"https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/january-1-1925-the-day-we-discovered-the-universe\">Hubble presented his findings in January 1925</a>.\r\n<h4><strong>Distance and luminosity</strong></h4>\r\nThe Milky Way has <a href=\"https://earthsky.org/clusters-nebulae-galaxies/what-is-the-local-group/\">several neighbouring galaxies</a>. The <a href=\"https://www.google.com/sky/#latitude=41.39981564913579&longitude=-169.13732213378003&zoom=9&Spitzer=0.00&ChandraXO=0.00&Galex=0.00&IRAS=0.00&WMAP=0.00&Cassini=0.00&slide=1&mI=-1&oI=-1\">Andromeda spiral (M31)</a> resembles it, but the smaller, irregular pair of dwarf galaxies known as the Magellanic Clouds, visible only from southerly latitudes, are closer. Due to their huge distance from us, no outside galaxy can be seen to wobble (have parallax) due to Earth’s motion and another method is needed to find their distances.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2242214\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"720\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-2242214\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/GettyImages-1982472.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"720\" height=\"826\" /> This NASA photo released May 8, 2003 was made from 250 separate exposures taken by the Hubble Space Telescope from December 2, 2002 to January 11, 2003 and shows the nearest neighbouring spiral galaxy, Andromeda. According to NASA, this is the deepest visible-light image ever taken of the sky and shows approximately 300,000 stars in the halo of the Andromeda galaxy. (Photo by NASA/Getty Images)[/caption]\r\n\r\nCertain stars vary in brightness, and <a href=\"https://www.atnf.csiro.au/outreach/education/senior/astrophysics/variable_cepheids.html\">those called Cepheids</a> are useful for indicating distance due to a relation between how much light they give off and their period of variation (in days).\r\n\r\nThis “period-luminosity” relation for Cepheids was discovered by pioneering astronomer <a href=\"https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/remembering-astronomer-henrietta-swan-leavitt\">Henrietta Leavitt</a> using the <a href=\"https://www.britannica.com/topic/Magellanic-Cloud\">Magellanic Clouds</a>.\r\n\r\nCalibration of Cepheids for use in any galaxy was done by American scientist <a href=\"https://sciencephilanthropyalliance.org/harlow-shapley-from-a-brilliant-man-dedicated-to-science-to-a-brilliant-scientist-devoted-to-man/\">Harlow Shapley</a>, who had become famous by showing that the sun was not in the centre of the Milky Way. Ironically, Shapley did not believe that external galaxies existed.\r\n\r\nA lesser-known figure, <a href=\"https://www.lindahall.org/about/news/scientist-of-the-day/vesto-slipher/\">American astronomer Vesto Slipher</a>, worked at <a href=\"https://lowell.edu/\">Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz.</a>, built by the millionaire astronomer Percival Lowell to further his ideas about life on Mars and the presence of a then-unknown ninth planet (<a href=\"https://lowell.edu/discover/history-of-pluto/\">Pluto, discovered in 1930 before being demoted in 2006</a>).\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_2242220\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"401\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-2242220\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Pluto_discovery_plates.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"401\" height=\"248\" /> The original plates from Clyde Tombaugh’s discovery of Pluto in 1930. (Lowell Observatory Archives/Wikimedia Commons)[/caption]\r\n\r\nSlipher, working with a small telescope equipped with ingenious spectroscopes, had found that spiral nebulae move at high speeds, mostly away from us — which is usually regarded as Hubble’s second breakthrough. Slipher also found that they spin at high speed, which made such an impression that some leading astronomers claimed to see the motion (over years), proving the spiral nebulae to be nearby.\r\n\r\nIt took the world’s largest telescope, <a href=\"https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bahubb.html\">painstakingly used by Edwin Hubble</a>, to resolve the question.\r\n<h4><strong>Measuring distance</strong></h4>\r\nMount Wilson looms about 1.7 km above the Los Angeles basin. Before light pollution from the city became excessive, the mountainside was a suitable location for the <a href=\"https://www.mtwilson.edu/building-the-100-inch-telescope/\">Hooker telescope</a>, finished in 1917. It was a powerful tool for the young Hubble, hired at the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1919 after serving in the military.\r\n\r\nThe apparent large size of the Andromeda nebula — many times larger than the moon if photographed to show the faint outer regions — meant it was nearby and might resolve the spiral nebula question if studied properly. Hubble initially studied novae — exploding stars that can be picked out due to their brightness.\r\n\r\nHubble had to work past the confusion that in 1885, Andromeda had hosted a <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1086/185246\">supernova</a>, something so unfamiliar at the time that it was thought to prove the Laplace collapse theory since the spiral seemed to have formed a new star near its centre. To make matters worse, among novae there is a lot of variation in brightness, so they are not good indicators of distance.\r\n\r\nNevertheless, Hubble monitored them systematically. On a photograph taken in late 1923, he realized that one of his “novae” was fading in and out, and was in fact a Cepheid variable star, able to be used to determine distances accurately.\r\n<blockquote class=\"twitter-tweet\">\r\n<p dir=\"ltr\" lang=\"en\"><a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/OTD?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#OTD</a> 100 years ago, Carnegie astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered the existence of the universe beyond our own Milky Way galaxy LEARN MORE abou the famous VAR! plate where he recorded this breakthrough: <a href=\"https://t.co/AI7RXLmkng\">https://t.co/AI7RXLmkng</a> <a href=\"https://t.co/G384lPiWmt\">pic.twitter.com/G384lPiWmt</a></p>\r\n— Carnegie Science (@carnegiescience) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/carnegiescience/status/1709948533577863623?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">October 5, 2023</a></blockquote>\r\n<script async src=\"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js\" charset=\"utf-8\"></script>\r\n<div class=\"grid-ten large-grid-nine grid-last content-body content entry-content instapaper_body inline-promos\">\r\n\r\nIn 1924, Hubble found many more Cepheids, all able to have their actual luminosity determined. Knowing this and how faint they appeared as seen from Earth, Hubble was able to demonstrate that the Andromeda nebula was roughly two million light years away: a neighbouring spiral galaxy. Previously thought to be part of our own galaxy, Andromeda was in fact about one thousand times further away.\r\n\r\nThe new perception of the size of the universe allowed Hubble, several years later, to go further and propose <a href=\"https://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/features/yba/M31_velocity/hubble_law/hubble_meaning.html\">Hubble’s Law</a>, a theory of the expansion of the universe, yet later shown to have begun with <a href=\"https://www.exploratorium.edu/explore/origins/big-bang\">the Big Bang 13.6 billion years ago</a>.\r\n\r\nBut, at least in astronomy, 1924 was the year that the universe exploded. <strong>DM <iframe style=\"border: none !important;\" src=\"https://counter.theconversation.com/content/225865/count.gif?distributor=republish-lightbox-advanced\" width=\"1\" height=\"1\"></iframe></strong>\r\n\r\n</div>\r\n<div class=\"grid-ten grid-prepend-two large-grid-nine grid-last content-topics topic-list\"><a href=\"https://theconversation.com/100-years-ago-our-understanding-of-the-universe-exploded-225865\"><em>This story was first published in</em> The Conversation</a>. <em>Martin Connors is a Professor of Space Science and Physics at Athabasca University.</em></div>\r\n<figure class=\"align-center zoomable\"></figure>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>\r\n</div>",
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