- Galactocentrism
In
astronomy , Galactocentrism is the theory that our sun is at or near the center of thegalaxy . Observations byWilliam Herschel in 1785 indicated that theMilky Way was a separate disk-shaped galaxy with the sun in a central position. Although proved incorrect byHarlow Shapley in 1918, the theory was a major step forward in the development ofcosmological models as the speculation of the existence of other galaxies, comparable in size and structure to our own, placed the earth in its proper perspective with respect to the rest of theuniverse .History
Work by Thomas Wright and Kant indicated that fuzzy patches of light called nebulae were actually distant "island universes" consisting of many stellar systems.Citation |year=2000 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=67-71 |isbn=052166148X |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-8PJbcA2lLoC&pg=PA71&lpg=PA71&dq=galactocentric+theory&source=web&ots=T2eSL0CQxY&sig=PPvLV1AZao-OCIAMmUyTudBYxyU#PPA71,M1 |title=Cosmology: The Science of the Universe |first=Edward Robert |last= Harrison ] The shape of our own galaxy was expected to resemble that of the nebulae. In 1783, amateur
astronomer William Herschel attempted to determine the shape of the galaxy by examining stars through his handmadetelescope . Seeing that the stars belonging to theMilky Way galaxy appeared to encircle the Earth, Herschel guessed thegalaxy was arranged like a flattened disk.Citation |url=http://www.pbs.org/seeinginthedark/meet-the-stargazers/in-history.html |title=Stargazers in History |publisher=PBS ] He carefully counted stars of given apparent magnitudes, and after finding the numbers were the same in all directions, concluded Earth must be close to the center of the galaxy. However, there were two flaws in Herschel'smethodology : magnitude is not a reliable index to the distance of stars, and some of the areas that he mistook for empty space were actually dark, obscuring nebulae that blocked his view toward the center of the Milky Way. [Citation |title=Coming of Age in the Milky Way |pages=150-159
first= Timothy |last=Ferris |year=2003 |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=0060535954 |url=http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=k0vCHGD5Y00C&oi=fnd&pg=PA17&dq=Coming+of+Age+in+the+Milky+Way&ots=SHQju_rsg7&sig=IgiquwsL-ETg0RLhs2RxFIyaxNc#PPA158,M1]The Herschel model remained relatively unchallenged for the next hundred years, with minor refinements.
Jacobus Kapteyn introduced motion,density , andluminosity to Herschel's star counts, which still implied a near-central location of the Sun.Citation |url=http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu//full/1965PASP...77..325V/0000325.000.html |title=The Galactocentric Revolution, A Reminiscent Narrative |date=October 1965 |year=1965
last=van de Kamp |first=Peter |journal=Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific |volume=77 |number=458 |pages=324-328 ] In 1918, as Kapteyn was refining his model, the galactocentric theory was overthrown following astronomerHarlow Shapley 's work onglobular cluster s.Shapley had been studying the asymmetrical distribution of globular clusters, estimating the distance and location of individual objects by using
variable stars asstandard candle s. Globular clusters contain manycepheid variable s stars, whose precise relationship between luminosity and variability period was established by Henrietta Leavitt in 1908. Using cepheid andRR Lyrae variable s to systematically chart the distribution of globular clusters, Shapley discovered that the stars in the Milky Way orbited a common center thousands of light years away from theSun .Citation |url=http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/htmltest/gifcity/shapley_obit.html |title= `Great Debate:' Obituary of Harlow Shapley |publisher=NASA |journal=Nature |year=1972 |last=Kopal |first=Z. |pages=429-430 |volume=240] The galactic center was determined to be in the direction of the Sagittarius constellation, approximately 50,000light-year s from us.When astronomers realized that starlight can be absorbed by clouds of gas and dust,
infrared radiation was used to penetrate the dust clouds and locate our solar system at 15 to 9 thousand parsecs from the center of the Milky Way galaxy.References
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