Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond: The Life of Astronomer Vera Rubin

Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond: The Life of Astronomer Vera Rubin

by Ashley Jean Yeager
Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond: The Life of Astronomer Vera Rubin

Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond: The Life of Astronomer Vera Rubin

by Ashley Jean Yeager

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Overview

How Vera Rubin convinced the scientific community that dark matter might exist, persevering despite early dismissals of her work.
 


We now know that the universe is mostly dark, made up of particles and forces that are undetectable even by our most powerful telescopes. The discovery of the possible existence of dark matter and dark energy signaled a Copernican-like revolution in astronomy: not only are we not the center of the universe, neither is the stuff of which we’re made. Astronomer Vera Rubin (1928–2016) played a pivotal role in this discovery. By showing that some astronomical objects seem to defy gravity’s grip, Rubin helped convince the scientific community of the possibility of dark matter. In Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond, Ashley Jean Yeager tells the story of Rubin’s life and work, recounting her persistence despite early dismissals of her work and widespread sexism in science.
 
Yeager describes Rubin’s childhood fascination with stars, her education at Vassar and Cornell, and her marriage to a fellow scientist. At first, Rubin wasn’t taken seriously; she was a rarity, a woman in science, and her findings seemed almost incredible. Some observatories in midcentury America restricted women from using their large telescopes; Rubin was unable to collect her own data until a decade after she had earned her PhD. Still, she continued her groundbreaking work, driving a scientific revolution. She received the National Medal of Science in 1993, but never the Nobel Prize—perhaps overlooked because of her gender. She’s since been memorialized with a ridge on Mars, an asteroid, a galaxy, and most recently, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory—the first national observatory named after a woman.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262366878
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 08/17/2021
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

Ashley Jean Yeager is Associate News Editor at Science News. She has written for Quanta, Science News, Nature, Astronomy, Sky & Telescope, The Scientist, and other publications.
 

Table of Contents

Prologue
1 Stellar Tales
2 Dark Matter's Debut
3 Waiting on the Stars
4 Threads of Research: A Rotating Universe and Radio Astronomy
5 Chasing Stars
6 A Clumpy Cosmos
7 Career Challenges and Galactic Questions
8 A Taste of Astronomy
9 At Last, a Real Astronomer
10 Andromeda's Young, Hot Stars
11 The Matter we Cannot See
12 More Matter Than Meets the Eye
13 Diving into Dark Matter
14 Gender Equality in Astronomy: A Darker Universe?
15 The Final Nights
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A mesmerizing and worthy complement to Rubin’s own Bright Galaxies, Dark Matters, Yeager’s tender portrait illuminates the scientific soul of one of history’s most brilliant navigators of the heavens.”
Brian Keating, Chancellor’s Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of California, San Diego; author of Losing the Nobel Prize

In this meticulously researched and beautifully written biography, Ashley Yeager elucidates the determination with which Vera Rubin swung at a cosmological piñata until its treasures burst forth. She also deftly explicates the importance of Rubin’s pioneering work.”
Linda Schweizer, astronomer; author of Cosmic Odyssey

“Yeager explains the science of the unseen mass that holds galaxies together with sprightly, accessible language and shows Vera Rubin to be a luminary and binding force of the global community of dark-matter astrophysicists."
Emily Lakdawalla, space journalist; author of The Design and Engineering of Curiosity

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