The Day We Found the UniverseKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 9 mars 2010 - 368 pages The riveting and mesmerizing story behind a watershed period in human history, the discovery of the startling size and true nature of our universe. On New Years Day in 1925, a young Edwin Hubble released his finding that our Universe was far bigger, eventually measured as a thousand trillion times larger than previously believed. Hubble’s proclamation sent shock waves through the scientific community. Six years later, in a series of meetings at Mount Wilson Observatory, Hubble and others convinced Albert Einstein that the Universe was not static but in fact expanding. Here Marcia Bartusiak reveals the key players, battles of will, clever insights, incredible technology, ground-breaking research, and wrong turns made by the early investigators of the heavens as they raced to uncover what many consider one of most significant discoveries in scientific history. |
Table des matières
The Little Republic of Science | 3 |
A Rather Remarkable Number of Nebulae | 13 |
Grander Than the Truth | 36 |
Such Is the Progress of Astronomy in the Wild and Wooly West | 56 |
My Regards to the Squashes | 70 |
It Is Worthy of Notice | 90 |
Exploration | 101 |
Empire Builder | 103 |
Adonis | 169 |
On the Brink of a Big Discoveryor Maybe a Big Paradox | 182 |
Countless Whole Worlds Strewn All Over the Sky | 199 |
Using the 100Inch Telescope the Way It Should Be Used | 225 |
Your Calculations Are Correct but Your Physical Insight | 239 |
Started Off with a Bang | 250 |
Whatever Happened to | 262 |
Notes | 271 |
The Solar System Is Off Center and Consequently Man Is Too | 114 |
He Surely Looks Like the Fourth Dimension | 135 |
Go at Each Other Hammer and Tongs | 149 |
Acknowledgments | 309 |
| 327 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
100-inch telescope Andromeda nebula Archives Astronomical Society Astrophysical Journal California Campbell celestial objects Cepheids cosmic cosmological cosmos Crossley reflector director discovery distance dome Eddington Edwin Hubble Einstein faint galactic galaxies globular clusters Hale Hale's Harlow Shapley Harvard heavens Heber Curtis Herschel Hubble's Humason Ibid interview island universes James Keeler Keeler later Leavitt Lemaître Lemaître's Lick astronomer Lick Observatory Lick's light light-years look Lowell Observatory Lundmark Maanen Magellanic Cloud matter measured Milky Milton Humason mirror motion Mount Wilson Mount Wilson Observatory mountain night novae observations once Osterbrock 1984 paper planets redshifts refractor relativity reported Ritchey rotation Russell Sandage scientific Shapley's shift Sitter Slipher solar system soon space space-time spectral spectrograph spectrum speed spiral nebulae stellar system tion took universe's variable stars velocity Vesto Slipher Walter Adams wrote Yerkes
