Hubble's Discovery of Cepheid Variable Stars in Galaxies

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Hubble's discovery of Cepheid variable stars in distant galaxies, particularly in the Andromeda galaxy, marked a significant advancement in astronomy during the early 1900s. He utilized these stars as "standard candles" to measure cosmic distances, demonstrating that galaxies beyond the Milky Way existed. Despite the limitations of his instruments, Hubble was able to detect Cepheids at about 3 million light years away, which was near the edge of their detectability at the time. Modern technology has expanded this capability, allowing Cepheids to be observed up to 60 million light years away. Ongoing research continues to explore the role of metallicity in the luminosity of Cepheids and refine distance measurements.
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Cepheid variable star?

How was Hubble able to determine that one of these stars was within what was then called a nebula?

You're telling me that back in the early 1900's, he was able to detect a single star within a distant galaxy?
 
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A supernova explosion is so bright that it can outshine entire galaxy. Not only that, it can shine for a couple of weeks before dimming. That can give an astronomer plenty of time to find it in the sky and analyze it.
 
Didn't Hubble use Cepheids, and not supernovas, to deduce the distance to galaxies?
 
Well, since Cepheids are variable stars, some of them are very big and get very bright, which yes, was visible with telescopes in the early 1900's. I imagine that after noticing the predictable period, he discerned it was a Cepheid and was able to use it as a "standard candle"
 
Here are a couple of links that show images that Hubble used:
http://ircamera.as.arizona.edu/NatSci102/NatSci102/lectures/galaxies.htm"
http://www.ottawa.rasc.ca/features/marchHubble/index.html"
 
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matt.o said:
Here are a couple of links that show images that Hubble used:
http://ircamera.as.arizona.edu/NatSci102/NatSci102/lectures/galaxies.htm"
http://www.ottawa.rasc.ca/features/marchHubble/index.html"

Great links, thanks.
 
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Hubble made an amazing discovery with relatively weak instruments - that other galaxies aside from the MW exist. Cepheids in the Andromeda galaxy [at a distance of about 3 million light years] were near the limit of detectability by instruments available to Hubble in the early 20th century. Modern instruments can detect cepheids out to around 60 million light years. It's still an exciting area of research. Studies indicate metallicity is an important variable in the absolute luminosity of Cepheids. Other distance indicators have helped calibrate Cepheid derived distances.
 

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