Leavitt, Henrietta Swan, 1868-1921

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
ליוויט, הנרייטה, 1868-1921
Name (Latin)
Leavitt, Henrietta Swan, 1868-1921
Other forms of name
Leavitt, Henrietta S. (Henrietta Swan), 1868-1921
Date of birth
1868-07-04
Date of death
1921-12-12
Place of birth
Lancaster (Mass.)
Place of death
Cambridge (Mass.)
Field of activity
Astronomy
Associate group
Radcliffe College
Occupation
Astronomers
Associated Language
eng
Gender
female
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 47876856
Wikidata: Q110181
Library of congress: n 2005006653
HAI10: 000600078
Sources of Information
  • Johnson, George. Miss Leavitt's stars, c2005:CIP galley text (Henrietta Swan Leavitt; b. July 4, 1868; d. 1921)
  • LC database, Jan. 31, 2005(hdg.: Leavitt, Henrietta S.; [no usage])
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Wikipedia description:

Henrietta Swan Leavitt (; July 4, 1868 – December 12, 1921) was an American astronomer. Her discovery of how to effectively measure vast distances to remote galaxies led to a shift in the scale and understanding of the scale and the nature of the universe. Nomination of Leavitt for the Nobel Prize had to be halted because of her death. A graduate of Radcliffe College, she worked at the Harvard College Observatory as a human computer, tasked with measuring photographic plates to catalog the positions and brightness of stars. This work led her to discover the relation between the luminosity and the period of Cepheid variables. Leavitt's discovery provided astronomers with the first standard candle with which to measure the distance to other galaxies. Before Leavitt discovered the period-luminosity relationship for Cepheid variables (sometimes referred to as Leavitt's Law), the only techniques available to astronomers for measuring the distance to a star were based on stellar parallax. Such techniques can only be used for measuring distances out to several hundred light years. Leavitt's great insight was that while no one knew the distance to the Small Magellanic Cloud, all its stars must be roughly the same distance from Earth. Therefore, a relationship she discovered in it, between the period of certain variable stars (Cepheids) and their apparent brightness, reflected a relationship in their absolute brightness. Once calibrated by measuring the distance to a nearby star of the same type via parallax, her discovery became a measuring stick with vastly greater reach. After Leavitt's death, Edwin Hubble found Cepheids in several nebulae, including the Andromeda Nebula, and, using Leavitt's Law, calculated that their distance was far too great to be part of the Milky Way and were separate galaxies in their own right. This settled astronomy's Great Debate over the size of the universe. Hubble later used Leavitt's Law, together with galactic redshifts, to establish that the universe is expanding (see Hubble's law).

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