Title: Harlow Shapley
1Harlow Shapley
November 1885 - October 1972
2- Major Discovery Milky Way Galaxy exponentially
larger than previously believed - Focus on globular clusters
- gigantic spheroidal agglomerations of stars that
orbit the Milky Way
Before, the Milky Way was believed to have a
diameter of 15 - 20,000 light years Now, Shapley
concluded that its diameter was, in fact, nearly
300,000 light years with the Sun located near the
edge
3- Error although the Milky Way is much larger
than anyone imagined, his estimate of its
diameter was too large by an approximate factor
of 3. - As a result, his belief that the Milky Way was
so enormous that the spiral nebulae must be mere
satellites around it, spiral counterparts of the
globularwas false.
4The Great Debate Date April 26th,
1920 Players Heber D. Curtis vs. Harlow
Shapley Location National Academy of Sciences
in Washington Controversy the nature of spiral
nebulae and galaxies the size of the
universe Shapley (left) Sun not at
center of Galaxy Globular clusters and spiral
nebulae are within the Milky Way Curtis (right)
Sun near the center of our Galaxy Belief in
external universes or the island universe
hypothesis
5Shortly after the famed Debate, Harlow Shapley
has the opportunity to replace Edward Charles
Pickering as director of Harvard College
Observatory. He works there from 1921 -
1952. During this part of his career, he hires
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin -- a woman who holds the
distinguished honor of being the first person to
earn a doctorate at Harvard University in the
field of Astronomy.
6Recognition Awards
- - Henry Draper Medal (1926)
- - Gold Medal of Royal Astronomical Society (1934)
- - Bruce Medal (1939)
- Henry Norris Russel Lectureship (1950)
- - Shapley Crater on the moon
- - Asteroid 1123 Shapleya
- - Harlow Shapley Visiting Lectureships in
Astronomy - - American Astronomical Society
7Harlow Shapleys Fun Facts
- Shapleys famed interest myrmecology (otherwise
known as the study of ants) - Grandfather to Tracey Shapley, a best-selling
author and to Christopher Shapley, a Pulitzer
Prize Winning Accountant