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FINDING OUR PLACE IN THE UNIVERSE
By Ronald D. Ferdie, Tim Hunter, and James McGaha
Where are we in the Universe?
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Observational results from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and
advances in other satellite and ground-based astronomy have
greatly enhanced our ability for determining distances in the
Universe compared to prior times when the largest functional
telescope in the world was the Mount Palomar 200-inch. One
hundred years ago, the known Universe was the Milky Way. Thirty
years age, the known Universe stretched around us some five
billion light years with cautious suspicion it stretched perhaps
thirteen to fifteen billion light years in space as well as
time. Twenty years ago, quasars were considered enigmatic super
energy structures. Today, we feel they formed early in the
history of the Universe and are energetic galaxy nuclei.
This article summarizes how we determine our place in the
Universe by building upon different overlapping yardsticks to
measure distances. However, these yardsticks are still built
upon a "house of cards" wherein parallax methods used to
directly and precisely determine “close” distances to earth are
then in turn used to support other increasingly less precise
yardsticks for determining distances to far away Milky Way stars
and nearby galaxies (Cepheid variable stars, supernova
explosions, and planetary nebulae brightness) which in turn are
used to support other yardsticks (spiral galaxy surface
brightness fluctuations, elliptical galaxy fundamental plane and
red shift determinations) for determining distances to remote
galaxy clusters and quasars (Sky & Telescope December 1983,
pages 516; Sky &Telescope February 2002, pages 18-19).
This house of cards technique for overlapping distance scales
allows us to literally take a ruler to the Universe. However, it
is fraught with uncertainty and must constantly be re-evaluated.
If you change or modify a parameter anywhere in one method of
determining distances, then the downstream distance scales are
changed, and our view of the Universe can radically change,
particularly at its distant fringes.
Also, each method is limited to a certain scale;
for example, if the stars of a particular galaxy cannot be
individually resolved, the technique for measuring distance by
using the spectral classification or absolute magnitude of
selected stars in the galaxy cannot be used for this galaxy, and
its distance must be inferred by the next, more indirect and
less precise method in the chain of distance scales.
The methods for finding our place in the Universe are summarized
in an overlapping set of scales: ( see http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~jh8h/glossary/distanceladder.htm) |
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