“Measuring the Cosmos”
Dr. Mark Reid
Harvard/Smithsonian CfA |
| Over 2000 years ago, Hipparcus measured the distance to the Moon
by triangulation from two locations across the Mediterranean Sea.
However, determining distances to stars proved much more difficult.
Many of the best scientists of the 16th through 18th centuries attempted
to measure stellar parallax, not only to determine the scale of the
cosmos but also to test the Heliocentric cosmology. While these
efforts failed, along the way they lead to many discoveries, including
atmospheric refraction, precession, and aberration of light. It was not
until the 19th century that Bessel measured the first stellar parallax.
Distance measurement in astronomy remained a difficult problem even
into the early 20th century, when the nature of galaxies ("spiral
nebulae") was still debated. While we now know the distances of
galaxies at the edge of the Universe, we have only just begun to measure
distances accurately throughout the Milky Way. I will present new
results on parallaxes and motions of star forming regions and the
compact object at the center of the Milky Way. These measurements
address fundamental problems in astrophysics, including evidence for
supermassive black holes and the mass of the dark matter halo of the
Milky Way.
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