>
The Milky Way Galaxy and Statistical Cosmology, 1890–1924

The Milky Way Galaxy and Statistical Cosmology, 1890–1924

  • £4.39
  • Save £89


Erich Robert Paul
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 11/26/1993
EAN 9780521353632, ISBN10: 0521353637

Hardcover, 280 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Between the years 1890 and 1924, the dominant view of the universe suggested a cosmology largely foreign to contemporary ideas. First, astronomers believed they had confirmed that the sun was roughly in the centre of the Milky Way galaxy. Second, considerable evidence indicated that the size of the galaxy was only about one-third the value now accepted by today's astronomers. Third, it was thought that interstellar space was completely transparent, that there was no absorbing material between the stars. Fourth, astronomers believed that the universe was composed of numerous star systems comparable to the Milky Way galaxy. The method that provided this picture and came to dominate cosmology was 'statistical' in nature, because it was based on the counts of stars and their positions, motions, brightnesses and stellar spectra. Professor Paul describes the rise of this statistical cosmology in light of developments in nineteenth-century astronomy and explains how this cosmology set the stage for many of the most significant developments of twentieth-century astronomy.

List of illustrations
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations of manuscript sources
Introduction
Part I. The Nineteenth-Century Background
1. Early nineteenth-century statistical astronomy
2. Statistical astronomy and the Milky Way Galaxy
Part II. Statistical Cosmology, 1890–1924
3. Seeliger and stellar density
4. Kapteyn and the distribution of stars
5. Statistical astronomy as a research program, 1900–15
6. Statistical cosmology as a research program, 1915–22
7. Internationalization of astronomy
Part III. Statistical Cosmology and the Second Astronomical Revolution
8. The decline of a research program
9. Conclusion
research programs in transition
Appendix 1
Seeliger's star-ratio function
Appendix 2
Seeliger's density theorem
Bibliographical notes
Index.