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The Shapley – Curtis Debate 26 Apr 1920 Center of the GalaxyHow big is the universe Nebula vs. GalaxiesAre “nebula” local or distant
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Question of Scale—How big is the Galaxy or the Universe?
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Are “Nebula” Local or Distant?
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Heber Curtis Degree in Classical Languages Amateur Astronomer @ Napa College Ph.D. in Astro from UVa in 1902 Director of Allegheny Observatory @ Pitt
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Heber Curtis Sun is at the center of the Milky Way—oops Cepheids are not good for distance measurements—oops Milky Way size about 10K parsecs—oops Nebula are Galaxies beyond the MW--yea
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Harlow Shapley Missouri to study journalism Switched to astronomy Ph.D. 1913 @ Princeton under H.N. Russell Director of Harvard Observatory Founder of UNESCO FBI Investigation
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Harlow Shapley Galaxy 100K parsecs— oops (too big) Sun is 20K parsecs from the center—yea Nebula minor gaseous populations in the Milky Way--oops
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The Distance Ladder Photometric parallax-- using geometry to measure distance to nearby stars Standard Candles— using decreasing brightness from certain stars to measure distance to nearby galaxies
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Cepheid Variables Class of stars whose brightness varies with time Period is proportional to intrinsic brightness Using inverse square law and knowing period distance can be calculated
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Cepheid Variables Period vs. luminosity discovered by Henrietta Swan Leavitt Worked at Harvard classifying stars Opened the way for Hubble, Hurtzsprung and Russell
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The Great Debate--Resolved Edwin Hubble Used Cepheids to show Andromeda was beyond the Milky Way Discovered “Red Shift”—evidence of an expanding universe Erased Einstein’s “Cosmological Constant ”
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Structure of Galaxies Hubble’s work led to understanding the structure of galaxies
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And to Types of Galaxies
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