Hubble's Expanding Universe and Lemaître's Primeval Atom
It was here in Washington on
New Years Day of 1925, at a joint meeting of the AAAS and the American
Astronomical Society that Edwin Hubble (in absentia) announced that he had
established the distance of the Andromeda Nebula as 930,000 light-years. Within a few more years, he established
something even more remarkable, that the fainter the spiral nebula, the greater
its spectral Doppler shift. In other
words, the farther the spiral nebula, the faster it appeared to be receding
from us.
Within a year of Hubbles
announcement what was to become the big bang cosmology was born, largely in the
hands of a young Belgium priest, Georges Lemaître. He envisioned the universe as exploding out of a primeval atom
into an expanding universe, but he never really described that opening
moment. Instead, he mused that
Standing on a well-chilled cinder, we see the slow fading of suns, and we try
to recall the vanished brilliance of the origin of the worlds.
Perhaps the California poet
Robinson Jeffers, brother of the Lick Observatory astronomer Hamilton Jeffers,
came closer to the indescribable with his lines from The Great Explosion:
There is no way to express that explosion...
All that exists
Roars into flame, the tortured fragments rush away from
each other into
all the sky, new universes
Jewel the black
breast of night; and far off the outer nebulae
like charging spearmen
again
Invade
emptiness.
Whether Lemaîtres Catholic
background played any role in motivating his creation cosmology is hard to
guage. In 1933 he wrote, Hundreds of
professional and amateur scientists actually believe the Bible pretends to teach
science. This is a good deal like
assuming that there must be authentic religious dogma in the binomial theorem. At a Solvay Conference 25 years later he
declared, As far as I can see, such a theory [of the pimeval atom] remains
entirely outside any metaphysical or religious question.
In the 1930s Hubble
continued to explore the red shifts and distances of the galaxies and by 1936,
in his book The Realm of the Nebulae,
he was able to plot 34 points on his velocity-distance relation for these nebulae,
going out to a distance of 6.5 million light-years. He determined what is today called the Hubble constant or Hubble
parameter, whose reciprocal is related to the expansion age of the universe. Today it seems quite astonishing that he
could get a value eight times too large, and a reciprocal value for the age of
the expanding universe eight times too small.
What went wrong?
Hubble himself held some
suspicions that the number had problems.
Writing in 1937, he stated that the observations as they stand lead to
the anomaly of a closed universe, curiously small and dense, and, it may be
added, suspiciously young. Part of the answer as to what went wrong,
but only part, was an error in the calibration of the cepheid variable stars
that had been used to establish the distance scale. As Walter Baade was to show in a brilliant piece of astronomical
detective work in the early 1950s, and this contributed just over a factor of
two in the discrepancy. Simply doubling the distances of the fainter
galaxies was of course not enough to reduce the Hubble constant by a factor of
eight. Using the 200-inch Hale
reflector as well as red-sensitive plates, Allan Sandage recognized that many
of the stars in the faint nebulae that Hubble had measured with the 100-inch
were in fact much more luminous H II regions. This discovery had an even
greater impact on the Hubble constant than Baades recalibration of the
distance scale. By 1959 Sandage had
established a Hubble constant reasonably close to the value widely accepted
today.
Contributed by: Dr. Owen Gingerich
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