-
How Vera Rubin Found the First Direct Evidence for Dark Matter | Great Minds
Vera Rubin graphed the rotation curves of galaxies, helping astronomers better understand the accelerated orbits of stars on the outskirts of galaxies. Her life's work generated some of the first solid evidence for dark matter in the universe.
Thumbnail Credit: Vera Rubin - Courtesy, Carnegie Institution of Washington
http://hq-filemaker1.carnegiescience.edu/images_archives_search.php
Hosted by: Reid Reimers
----------
Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters—Kevin Bealer, Mark Terrio-Cameron, KatieMarie Magnone, Patrick Merrithew, Charles Southerland, Fatima Iqbal, Sultan Alkhulaifi, Tim Curwick, Scott Satovsky Jr, Philippe von Bergen, Bella Nash, Chris Peters, Patrick D. Ashmore,...
published: 04 Jul 2017
-
Vera Rubin Lives on in Lives of the Women She Helped in Astronomy
The "Mother of Dark Matter" was a force of nature—and a forceful advocate for other women who also wanted to dedicate their careers to the cosmos.
published: 31 Mar 2023
-
Vera Rubin - Astronomer and Inspiration
Vera Rubin was an accomplished astronomer who provided convincing evidence for the existence of dark matter. She was a source of support for many students and advocated for women in science. We’re proud to be named in her honor!
Ve este video en Español: https://youtu.be/FwRmsAIK7_k
----
Video music:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Video voice: Sarah Partridge, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0664064/
----
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/VRubinObs
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubin_observatory
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VRubinObs
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/compnay/rubinobservatory
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory
Rubin Observatory is a joint initiative of the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the D...
published: 14 Sep 2022
-
The most ambitious astronomy project EVER | The Vera Rubin Observatory
AD | Huge thanks to KiwiCo for sponsoring today’s video. Go to https://www.kiwico.com/astrodrbecky and use code ASTRODRBECKY for 50% off your first month of monthly lines. | Move over JWST, move over Euclid, the eyes of the astronomy world are all moving to look at the Vera Rubin Observatory which is getting closer and closer to what’s known as “first light” in August 2024 - when after 13 years of construction in the Chilean desert, for the first time light will be collected by the 8.4m mirror and travel through the telescope’s optical system. Rubin is one of the most ambitious astronomy projects we’ve ever seen - yes its seen all the usual technological advancements that come with a new observatory - but Rubin stands out due to the sheer scale of what its going to attempt to do. You see, ...
published: 09 Aug 2024
-
Vera Rubin - Astrónoma e inspiración
Vera Rubin fue una astrónoma connotada que proporcionó pruebas convincentes de la existencia de la materia oscura. Fue una fuente de apoyo para muchos estudiantes y abogó por las mujeres en la ciencia. ¡Estamos orgullosos de ser nombrados en su honor!
Watch this video in English: https://youtu.be/wd2hL3yI_-E
----
Música del video:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Narración del video:
Jacqueline V., https://www.voicecrafters.com/spanish-latin-american-voice-over-talent/jacqueline-v/
----
Síguenos en las redes sociales:
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/VRubinObs
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubin_observatory
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VRubinObs
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/compnay/rubinobservatory
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory...
published: 11 Oct 2022
-
What is the Vera Rubin Observatory?
The Vera Rubin Observatory is almost ready to begin its groundbreaking studies taking pictures of the entire Southern Hemisphere sky for 10 years. Aaron Roodman is the Deputy Director of the Vera Rubin Observatory: 30 years in the making, this new observatory will revolutionize our view of the universe by capturing over 20 billion galaxies and identifying millions of cosmic changes every night.
Learn more at https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/research/slac-science-explained/lsst-camera
For updates go to: https://rubinobservatory.org/about/construction
Video is produced by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory where the LSST camera is built.
Written, edited and produced by Olivier Bonin.
Musicbed: MB01INLBMNDUSUZ
published: 06 Mar 2024
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Interview with Ece Eser on pioneering astronomer Vera Rubin
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7fWeaHhqgM4Ry-RMpM2YYw?sub_confirmation=1
Livestream: http://www.youtube.com/c/trtworld/live
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TRTWorld
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TRTWorld
Visit our website: http://www.trtworld.com/
published: 27 Dec 2016
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Vera Rubin and Dark Matter | AMS OpenMind
Over the years, there have always been things astronomers didn’t understand. 🌌 In the early 20th century, they started using a term for small anomalies that made no sense unless there was something they couldn’t see: dark matter. 🌑
This is Vera Rubin. At 14, she built her own telescope. 🔭 She pursued a career in astronomy and faced significant challenges as a woman in academia. She learned two crucial things: first, being a woman would complicate her academic life, and second, the Doppler effect. 🌈
The Doppler effect means light is bluer when the source moves towards the observer and redder when it moves away. When a light source rotates, one half is bluer, and the other half is redder. This should also apply to galaxies, with the center rotating faster than the edges. However, when Rubi...
published: 23 Dec 2017
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Episode 434: Surveying the sky with one of the world's most advanced telescopes
Astronomers with the University of Arizona-backed Vera Rubin Observatory are on track to start their work early next year. Project outreach and education director Alan Strauss discusses how they will use the largest camera ever built to take a highly-detailed time-lapse look at our universe.
published: 18 Oct 2024
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Vera Rubin (1928 - 2016) - Space Today TV Ep.550
🚀Aprenda Astronomia no maior Curso de Astronomia do Brasil: https://academyspace.com.br/bigbang
Acaba logo 2016, você certamente já ouviu esse clamor esse ano, certo?
Seja na área que for, política, econômica, desastres como o da Chape, mortes na música, o ano não está fácil.
E na ciência, particularmente na astronomia/astronáutica, também não.
Há duas semanas morreu o John Glenn, um dos heróis da exploração espacial, e no dia 25 morreu uma figura icônica, principalmente para quem estuda, lê ou se interessa pela famosa matéria escura.
A astrônoma Vera Rubin, nos deixou com 88 anos.
A história dela é fantástica. Ela contou que quando criança sua cama fica de frente para uma janela, e dali ela começou a observar as estrelas.
Disse que quando tinha chuva de meteoros, no dia seguinte ela...
published: 27 Dec 2016
5:05
How Vera Rubin Found the First Direct Evidence for Dark Matter | Great Minds
Vera Rubin graphed the rotation curves of galaxies, helping astronomers better understand the accelerated orbits of stars on the outskirts of galaxies. Her life...
Vera Rubin graphed the rotation curves of galaxies, helping astronomers better understand the accelerated orbits of stars on the outskirts of galaxies. Her life's work generated some of the first solid evidence for dark matter in the universe.
Thumbnail Credit: Vera Rubin - Courtesy, Carnegie Institution of Washington
http://hq-filemaker1.carnegiescience.edu/images_archives_search.php
Hosted by: Reid Reimers
----------
Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters—Kevin Bealer, Mark Terrio-Cameron, KatieMarie Magnone, Patrick Merrithew, Charles Southerland, Fatima Iqbal, Sultan Alkhulaifi, Tim Curwick, Scott Satovsky Jr, Philippe von Bergen, Bella Nash, Chris Peters, Patrick D. Ashmore, Piya Shedden, Charles George
----------
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----------
Sources:
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/295/5557/960.full.pdf?ck=nck
https://www.aps.org/programs/outreach/history/historicsites/carnegie.cfm
http://www.marciabartusiak.com/uploads/8/5/8/9/8589314/spins_the_stars.pdf
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/vera-rubin-didnt-discover-dark-matter/
http://www.astronomy.com/news/2016/10/vera-rubin
Images:
https://carnegiescience.edu/sites/carnegiescience.edu/files/RubinAtLowellObs1965.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:GOODS_South_field.jpg
http://hq-filemaker1.carnegiescience.edu/images_archives_search.php
https://wn.com/How_Vera_Rubin_Found_The_First_Direct_Evidence_For_Dark_Matter_|_Great_Minds
Vera Rubin graphed the rotation curves of galaxies, helping astronomers better understand the accelerated orbits of stars on the outskirts of galaxies. Her life's work generated some of the first solid evidence for dark matter in the universe.
Thumbnail Credit: Vera Rubin - Courtesy, Carnegie Institution of Washington
http://hq-filemaker1.carnegiescience.edu/images_archives_search.php
Hosted by: Reid Reimers
----------
Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow
----------
Dooblydoo thanks go to the following Patreon supporters—Kevin Bealer, Mark Terrio-Cameron, KatieMarie Magnone, Patrick Merrithew, Charles Southerland, Fatima Iqbal, Sultan Alkhulaifi, Tim Curwick, Scott Satovsky Jr, Philippe von Bergen, Bella Nash, Chris Peters, Patrick D. Ashmore, Piya Shedden, Charles George
----------
Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover your torso and hold your liquids? Check out our awesome products over at DFTBA Records: http://dftba.com/scishow
----------
Looking for SciShow elsewhere on the internet?
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/scishow
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/scishow
Tumblr: http://scishow.tumblr.com
Instagram: http://instagram.com/thescishow
----------
Sources:
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/295/5557/960.full.pdf?ck=nck
https://www.aps.org/programs/outreach/history/historicsites/carnegie.cfm
http://www.marciabartusiak.com/uploads/8/5/8/9/8589314/spins_the_stars.pdf
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/vera-rubin-didnt-discover-dark-matter/
http://www.astronomy.com/news/2016/10/vera-rubin
Images:
https://carnegiescience.edu/sites/carnegiescience.edu/files/RubinAtLowellObs1965.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:GOODS_South_field.jpg
http://hq-filemaker1.carnegiescience.edu/images_archives_search.php
- published: 04 Jul 2017
- views: 115321
5:51
Vera Rubin Lives on in Lives of the Women She Helped in Astronomy
The "Mother of Dark Matter" was a force of nature—and a forceful advocate for other women who also wanted to dedicate their careers to the cosmos.
The "Mother of Dark Matter" was a force of nature—and a forceful advocate for other women who also wanted to dedicate their careers to the cosmos.
https://wn.com/Vera_Rubin_Lives_On_In_Lives_Of_The_Women_She_Helped_In_Astronomy
The "Mother of Dark Matter" was a force of nature—and a forceful advocate for other women who also wanted to dedicate their careers to the cosmos.
- published: 31 Mar 2023
- views: 5757
2:39
Vera Rubin - Astronomer and Inspiration
Vera Rubin was an accomplished astronomer who provided convincing evidence for the existence of dark matter. She was a source of support for many students and a...
Vera Rubin was an accomplished astronomer who provided convincing evidence for the existence of dark matter. She was a source of support for many students and advocated for women in science. We’re proud to be named in her honor!
Ve este video en Español: https://youtu.be/FwRmsAIK7_k
----
Video music:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Video voice: Sarah Partridge, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0664064/
----
Follow us on social media:
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Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory
Rubin Observatory is a joint initiative of the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Department of Energy (DOE). Its primary mission is to carry out the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, providing an unprecedented data set for scientific research supported by both agencies. Rubin is operated jointly by NSF’s NOIRLab and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC). NOIRLab is managed for NSF by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) and SLAC is operated for DOE by Stanford University.
----
Use policy
https://gallery.lsst.org/bp/#/brandguidelines/2206/section/17286
https://wn.com/Vera_Rubin_Astronomer_And_Inspiration
Vera Rubin was an accomplished astronomer who provided convincing evidence for the existence of dark matter. She was a source of support for many students and advocated for women in science. We’re proud to be named in her honor!
Ve este video en Español: https://youtu.be/FwRmsAIK7_k
----
Video music:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Video voice: Sarah Partridge, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0664064/
----
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/VRubinObs
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubin_observatory
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VRubinObs
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/compnay/rubinobservatory
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory
Rubin Observatory is a joint initiative of the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Department of Energy (DOE). Its primary mission is to carry out the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, providing an unprecedented data set for scientific research supported by both agencies. Rubin is operated jointly by NSF’s NOIRLab and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC). NOIRLab is managed for NSF by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) and SLAC is operated for DOE by Stanford University.
----
Use policy
https://gallery.lsst.org/bp/#/brandguidelines/2206/section/17286
- published: 14 Sep 2022
- views: 6037
14:29
The most ambitious astronomy project EVER | The Vera Rubin Observatory
AD | Huge thanks to KiwiCo for sponsoring today’s video. Go to https://www.kiwico.com/astrodrbecky and use code ASTRODRBECKY for 50% off your first month of mon...
AD | Huge thanks to KiwiCo for sponsoring today’s video. Go to https://www.kiwico.com/astrodrbecky and use code ASTRODRBECKY for 50% off your first month of monthly lines. | Move over JWST, move over Euclid, the eyes of the astronomy world are all moving to look at the Vera Rubin Observatory which is getting closer and closer to what’s known as “first light” in August 2024 - when after 13 years of construction in the Chilean desert, for the first time light will be collected by the 8.4m mirror and travel through the telescope’s optical system. Rubin is one of the most ambitious astronomy projects we’ve ever seen - yes its seen all the usual technological advancements that come with a new observatory - but Rubin stands out due to the sheer scale of what its going to attempt to do. You see, unlike other telescopes which astronomers apply to use to focus in one specific object that they’re really interested in, Rubin will complete a full survey of the entire sky every three nights - splitting the sky up into a mosaic and going back night after night to collect more light and build up a picture of what’s in each part of the sky so that it can record the things that have changed in the sky each night - from supernova, to asteroids, or burping black holes. All of this together means that Rubin will collect a HUGE amount of data, its estimated that it will detect 20 billion objects in the sky over its 10 year survey, and flag 10 million things that change in the sky each night. Over its 10-year survey, it will collect around 60 petabytes of data! So with all that data, Rubin is set to change the face of astronomy forever, as long as we’re prepared for that deluge of data...
Help classify the shapes of galaxies in images from the Euclid Space Telescope to train an AI algorithm with Galaxy Zoo: https://galaxyzoo.org/
My previous video on all the evidence we have for dark matter - https://youtu.be/nbE8B7zggUg
My previous video on alternate theories of gravity that don't need dark matter - https://youtu.be/dtfEzDAlL5k
My previous video on how astrophysicists use AI - https://youtu.be/NnhxYKn4bEY
My previous video on the most distant galaxy known record breakers - https://youtu.be/NnhxYKn4bEY
My previous video on the Euclid Space Telescope - https://youtu.be/JFAB1MhYGyc
00:00 Introduction
02:47 AD | Kiwi Co
04:18 Who was Vera Rubin and why is the telescope named after her?
06:59 What are the new technologies that have been developed for the Rubin Observatory?
08:41 What are the Rubin Observatory's main science goals?
10:24 How does Rubin differ from the Euclid Space Telescope?
13:13 Bloopers
Muthukrishna et al. (2022) - https://arxiv.org/pdf/2111.00036
Video filmed on a Sony ⍺7 IV
---
📚 My new book, "A Brief History of Black Holes", out NOW in hardback, paperback, e-book and audiobook (which I narrated myself!): http://lnk.to/DrBecky
---
👕 My new merch, including JWST designs, are available here (with worldwide shipping!): https://dr-becky.teemill.com/
---
🎧 Royal Astronomical Society Podcast that I co-host: podfollow.com/supermassive
---
🔔 Don't forget to subscribe and click the little bell icon to be notified when I post a new video!
---
👩🏽💻 I'm Dr. Becky Smethurst, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford (Christ Church). I love making videos about science with an unnatural level of enthusiasm. I like to focus on how we know things, not just what we know. And especially, the things we still don't know. If you've ever wondered about something in space and couldn't find an answer online - you can ask me! My day job is to do research into how supermassive black holes can affect the galaxies that they live in. In particular, I look at whether the energy output from the disk of material orbiting around a growing supermassive black hole can stop a galaxy from forming stars.
http://drbecky.uk.com
https://rebeccasmethurst.co.uk
https://wn.com/The_Most_Ambitious_Astronomy_Project_Ever_|_The_Vera_Rubin_Observatory
AD | Huge thanks to KiwiCo for sponsoring today’s video. Go to https://www.kiwico.com/astrodrbecky and use code ASTRODRBECKY for 50% off your first month of monthly lines. | Move over JWST, move over Euclid, the eyes of the astronomy world are all moving to look at the Vera Rubin Observatory which is getting closer and closer to what’s known as “first light” in August 2024 - when after 13 years of construction in the Chilean desert, for the first time light will be collected by the 8.4m mirror and travel through the telescope’s optical system. Rubin is one of the most ambitious astronomy projects we’ve ever seen - yes its seen all the usual technological advancements that come with a new observatory - but Rubin stands out due to the sheer scale of what its going to attempt to do. You see, unlike other telescopes which astronomers apply to use to focus in one specific object that they’re really interested in, Rubin will complete a full survey of the entire sky every three nights - splitting the sky up into a mosaic and going back night after night to collect more light and build up a picture of what’s in each part of the sky so that it can record the things that have changed in the sky each night - from supernova, to asteroids, or burping black holes. All of this together means that Rubin will collect a HUGE amount of data, its estimated that it will detect 20 billion objects in the sky over its 10 year survey, and flag 10 million things that change in the sky each night. Over its 10-year survey, it will collect around 60 petabytes of data! So with all that data, Rubin is set to change the face of astronomy forever, as long as we’re prepared for that deluge of data...
Help classify the shapes of galaxies in images from the Euclid Space Telescope to train an AI algorithm with Galaxy Zoo: https://galaxyzoo.org/
My previous video on all the evidence we have for dark matter - https://youtu.be/nbE8B7zggUg
My previous video on alternate theories of gravity that don't need dark matter - https://youtu.be/dtfEzDAlL5k
My previous video on how astrophysicists use AI - https://youtu.be/NnhxYKn4bEY
My previous video on the most distant galaxy known record breakers - https://youtu.be/NnhxYKn4bEY
My previous video on the Euclid Space Telescope - https://youtu.be/JFAB1MhYGyc
00:00 Introduction
02:47 AD | Kiwi Co
04:18 Who was Vera Rubin and why is the telescope named after her?
06:59 What are the new technologies that have been developed for the Rubin Observatory?
08:41 What are the Rubin Observatory's main science goals?
10:24 How does Rubin differ from the Euclid Space Telescope?
13:13 Bloopers
Muthukrishna et al. (2022) - https://arxiv.org/pdf/2111.00036
Video filmed on a Sony ⍺7 IV
---
📚 My new book, "A Brief History of Black Holes", out NOW in hardback, paperback, e-book and audiobook (which I narrated myself!): http://lnk.to/DrBecky
---
👕 My new merch, including JWST designs, are available here (with worldwide shipping!): https://dr-becky.teemill.com/
---
🎧 Royal Astronomical Society Podcast that I co-host: podfollow.com/supermassive
---
🔔 Don't forget to subscribe and click the little bell icon to be notified when I post a new video!
---
👩🏽💻 I'm Dr. Becky Smethurst, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford (Christ Church). I love making videos about science with an unnatural level of enthusiasm. I like to focus on how we know things, not just what we know. And especially, the things we still don't know. If you've ever wondered about something in space and couldn't find an answer online - you can ask me! My day job is to do research into how supermassive black holes can affect the galaxies that they live in. In particular, I look at whether the energy output from the disk of material orbiting around a growing supermassive black hole can stop a galaxy from forming stars.
http://drbecky.uk.com
https://rebeccasmethurst.co.uk
- published: 09 Aug 2024
- views: 128242
2:39
Vera Rubin - Astrónoma e inspiración
Vera Rubin fue una astrónoma connotada que proporcionó pruebas convincentes de la existencia de la materia oscura. Fue una fuente de apoyo para muchos estudiant...
Vera Rubin fue una astrónoma connotada que proporcionó pruebas convincentes de la existencia de la materia oscura. Fue una fuente de apoyo para muchos estudiantes y abogó por las mujeres en la ciencia. ¡Estamos orgullosos de ser nombrados en su honor!
Watch this video in English: https://youtu.be/wd2hL3yI_-E
----
Música del video:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Narración del video:
Jacqueline V., https://www.voicecrafters.com/spanish-latin-american-voice-over-talent/jacqueline-v/
----
Síguenos en las redes sociales:
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/VRubinObs
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubin_observatory
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VRubinObs
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/compnay/rubinobservatory
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory
El Observatorio Rubin es una iniciativa conjunta de la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias (NSF) y el Departamento de Energía (DOE). Su misión principal es llevar a cabo la Investigación del Espacio-Tiempo como Legado para la posteridad, proporcionando un conjunto de datos sin precedentes para la investigación científica respaldada por ambas agencias. Rubin es operado conjuntamente por NOIRLab de NSF y el Laboratorio Nacional de Aceleradores (SLAC). NOIRLab es administrado para NSF por la Asociación de Universidades para la Investigación en Astronomía (AURA) y SLAC es operado para DOE por la Universidad de Stanford.
----
Use policy
https://gallery.lsst.org/bp/#/brandguidelines/2206/section/17286
https://wn.com/Vera_Rubin_Astrónoma_E_Inspiración
Vera Rubin fue una astrónoma connotada que proporcionó pruebas convincentes de la existencia de la materia oscura. Fue una fuente de apoyo para muchos estudiantes y abogó por las mujeres en la ciencia. ¡Estamos orgullosos de ser nombrados en su honor!
Watch this video in English: https://youtu.be/wd2hL3yI_-E
----
Música del video:
Patrick Moore, https://www.patrickmooremusic.net/
Narración del video:
Jacqueline V., https://www.voicecrafters.com/spanish-latin-american-voice-over-talent/jacqueline-v/
----
Síguenos en las redes sociales:
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/VRubinObs
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubin_observatory
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VRubinObs
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/compnay/rubinobservatory
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rubin_observatory
El Observatorio Rubin es una iniciativa conjunta de la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias (NSF) y el Departamento de Energía (DOE). Su misión principal es llevar a cabo la Investigación del Espacio-Tiempo como Legado para la posteridad, proporcionando un conjunto de datos sin precedentes para la investigación científica respaldada por ambas agencias. Rubin es operado conjuntamente por NOIRLab de NSF y el Laboratorio Nacional de Aceleradores (SLAC). NOIRLab es administrado para NSF por la Asociación de Universidades para la Investigación en Astronomía (AURA) y SLAC es operado para DOE por la Universidad de Stanford.
----
Use policy
https://gallery.lsst.org/bp/#/brandguidelines/2206/section/17286
- published: 11 Oct 2022
- views: 2178
2:45
What is the Vera Rubin Observatory?
The Vera Rubin Observatory is almost ready to begin its groundbreaking studies taking pictures of the entire Southern Hemisphere sky for 10 years. Aaron Roodman...
The Vera Rubin Observatory is almost ready to begin its groundbreaking studies taking pictures of the entire Southern Hemisphere sky for 10 years. Aaron Roodman is the Deputy Director of the Vera Rubin Observatory: 30 years in the making, this new observatory will revolutionize our view of the universe by capturing over 20 billion galaxies and identifying millions of cosmic changes every night.
Learn more at https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/research/slac-science-explained/lsst-camera
For updates go to: https://rubinobservatory.org/about/construction
Video is produced by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory where the LSST camera is built.
Written, edited and produced by Olivier Bonin.
Musicbed: MB01INLBMNDUSUZ
https://wn.com/What_Is_The_Vera_Rubin_Observatory
The Vera Rubin Observatory is almost ready to begin its groundbreaking studies taking pictures of the entire Southern Hemisphere sky for 10 years. Aaron Roodman is the Deputy Director of the Vera Rubin Observatory: 30 years in the making, this new observatory will revolutionize our view of the universe by capturing over 20 billion galaxies and identifying millions of cosmic changes every night.
Learn more at https://www6.slac.stanford.edu/research/slac-science-explained/lsst-camera
For updates go to: https://rubinobservatory.org/about/construction
Video is produced by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory where the LSST camera is built.
Written, edited and produced by Olivier Bonin.
Musicbed: MB01INLBMNDUSUZ
- published: 06 Mar 2024
- views: 2269
3:21
Interview with Ece Eser on pioneering astronomer Vera Rubin
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https://wn.com/Interview_With_Ece_Eser_On_Pioneering_Astronomer_Vera_Rubin
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- published: 27 Dec 2016
- views: 1612
2:19
Vera Rubin and Dark Matter | AMS OpenMind
Over the years, there have always been things astronomers didn’t understand. 🌌 In the early 20th century, they started using a term for small anomalies that mad...
Over the years, there have always been things astronomers didn’t understand. 🌌 In the early 20th century, they started using a term for small anomalies that made no sense unless there was something they couldn’t see: dark matter. 🌑
This is Vera Rubin. At 14, she built her own telescope. 🔭 She pursued a career in astronomy and faced significant challenges as a woman in academia. She learned two crucial things: first, being a woman would complicate her academic life, and second, the Doppler effect. 🌈
The Doppler effect means light is bluer when the source moves towards the observer and redder when it moves away. When a light source rotates, one half is bluer, and the other half is redder. This should also apply to galaxies, with the center rotating faster than the edges. However, when Rubin studied our nearest galaxy, the colors were uniform. Everything rotated at the same speed, much faster than expected. 🌠
Rubin quickly checked other galaxies and found the same phenomenon. Galaxies seemed to be enveloped in a halo of invisible matter that accelerated their rotation with its gravity. This additional matter held together all the stars, gas, and dust but didn’t interact with light at all. It wasn’t a “small anomaly”; it was everywhere. 🌌
Vera Rubin was the first to provide reliable evidence of dark matter, calculating that it makes up about 85% of the universe’s matter. Today, scientists still face the challenge of detecting and studying dark matter particles. Until then, the mystery of what holds galaxies together remains.
#VeraRubin #DarkMatter #Astronomy #ScienceHistory #WomenInScience #DopplerEffect #Galaxies #Physics #Education #learnsomethingnew
A video by @scienseed4294 for Ventana al conocimiento
https://wn.com/Vera_Rubin_And_Dark_Matter_|_Ams_Openmind
Over the years, there have always been things astronomers didn’t understand. 🌌 In the early 20th century, they started using a term for small anomalies that made no sense unless there was something they couldn’t see: dark matter. 🌑
This is Vera Rubin. At 14, she built her own telescope. 🔭 She pursued a career in astronomy and faced significant challenges as a woman in academia. She learned two crucial things: first, being a woman would complicate her academic life, and second, the Doppler effect. 🌈
The Doppler effect means light is bluer when the source moves towards the observer and redder when it moves away. When a light source rotates, one half is bluer, and the other half is redder. This should also apply to galaxies, with the center rotating faster than the edges. However, when Rubin studied our nearest galaxy, the colors were uniform. Everything rotated at the same speed, much faster than expected. 🌠
Rubin quickly checked other galaxies and found the same phenomenon. Galaxies seemed to be enveloped in a halo of invisible matter that accelerated their rotation with its gravity. This additional matter held together all the stars, gas, and dust but didn’t interact with light at all. It wasn’t a “small anomaly”; it was everywhere. 🌌
Vera Rubin was the first to provide reliable evidence of dark matter, calculating that it makes up about 85% of the universe’s matter. Today, scientists still face the challenge of detecting and studying dark matter particles. Until then, the mystery of what holds galaxies together remains.
#VeraRubin #DarkMatter #Astronomy #ScienceHistory #WomenInScience #DopplerEffect #Galaxies #Physics #Education #learnsomethingnew
A video by @scienseed4294 for Ventana al conocimiento
- published: 23 Dec 2017
- views: 112403
5:27
Episode 434: Surveying the sky with one of the world's most advanced telescopes
Astronomers with the University of Arizona-backed Vera Rubin Observatory are on track to start their work early next year. Project outreach and education direct...
Astronomers with the University of Arizona-backed Vera Rubin Observatory are on track to start their work early next year. Project outreach and education director Alan Strauss discusses how they will use the largest camera ever built to take a highly-detailed time-lapse look at our universe.
https://wn.com/Episode_434_Surveying_The_Sky_With_One_Of_The_World's_Most_Advanced_Telescopes
Astronomers with the University of Arizona-backed Vera Rubin Observatory are on track to start their work early next year. Project outreach and education director Alan Strauss discusses how they will use the largest camera ever built to take a highly-detailed time-lapse look at our universe.
- published: 18 Oct 2024
- views: 154
12:09
Vera Rubin (1928 - 2016) - Space Today TV Ep.550
🚀Aprenda Astronomia no maior Curso de Astronomia do Brasil: https://academyspace.com.br/bigbang
Acaba logo 2016, você certamente já ouviu esse clamor esse ano, ...
🚀Aprenda Astronomia no maior Curso de Astronomia do Brasil: https://academyspace.com.br/bigbang
Acaba logo 2016, você certamente já ouviu esse clamor esse ano, certo?
Seja na área que for, política, econômica, desastres como o da Chape, mortes na música, o ano não está fácil.
E na ciência, particularmente na astronomia/astronáutica, também não.
Há duas semanas morreu o John Glenn, um dos heróis da exploração espacial, e no dia 25 morreu uma figura icônica, principalmente para quem estuda, lê ou se interessa pela famosa matéria escura.
A astrônoma Vera Rubin, nos deixou com 88 anos.
A história dela é fantástica. Ela contou que quando criança sua cama fica de frente para uma janela, e dali ela começou a observar as estrelas.
Disse que quando tinha chuva de meteoros, no dia seguinte ela conseguia se lembrar de tudo e desenhava a trajetória dos meteoros.
Ela descobriu que queria ser astrônoma no colegial, mas ela nunca tinha encontrado com um astrônomo. Ela só conhecia Maria Mitchell de um livro, sabia que ela havia estudado em Vassar, e resolveu seguir os passos dela.
Foi para Vassar, se casou com um cientista e entrou no programa de graduação junto com seu marido.
Na verdade ela tinha aceita em Harvard, numa carta do diretor do observatório em algum lugar estava escrito, Maldito seja, mulheres.
Ela respondeu a carta, dizendo que estava se casando e iria para Cornell. O diretor tentou se retratar, escrevendo que Maldita mulheres, sempre que consigo uma boa ela se casa.
Em Cornell não havia astronomia, então ela foi estudar física, e teve como membro de sua banca ninguém menos que Richard Feymann. Ela apresentou sua tese também na sociedade astronômica americana, mas seus conceitos eram muito a frente de seu tempo e isso criou um ceticismo muito grande.
Seu artigo foi rejeitado pelas revistas especializadas, mas ela continuou sua luta.
Foi no doutorado que ela resolveu estudar a matéria escura, um conceito originalmente proposto em 1933.
para fazer as medições que ela precisava, ela tinha que usar o maior telescópio da época, o de Monte Palomar.
O problema, até então as mulheres não podiam chegar nem perto do prédio do observatório, quanto mais entrar e usar o instrumento. Mas ela conseguiu.
Observando as galáxias espirais ela notou que o material nas bordas da galáxia giram com a mesma taxa que o material no centro delas.
Essa observação ia contra as leis da física que dizem que o material no centro, devido a maior concentração de poeira, estrelas e gás, deveria se mover mais rapidamente do que o material da borda, onde se tem menos matéria.
A explicação para o movimento ser o mesmo, é um halo de matéria escura existente ao redor das galáxias, que espalham a massa e por isso a taxa é a mesma.
Durante sua pesquisa ela estudou mais de 200 galáxias.
Ela publicou 144 artigos científicos, tem um asteroide batizado em seu nome, tem 4 filhos, entre eles 2 doutores em gelologia, uma doutora em matemática e uma doutora em raios cósmicos.
Recebeu todas as honrarias na sua área, se tornou a segunda mulher a ganhar a medalha de ouro da sociedade astronômica real caroline, em 1996, sendo que a primeira foi Caroline Herschel em 1828.
E nos deixou aos 88 anos.
Lutou muito pela presença das mulheres na ciência e deixou um grande legado como ela mesmo disse:
"Fama é passageira, meus números significam muito mais para mim do que meu nome. Se os astrônomo estiverem usando meus dados no futuro, essa será minha maior realização".
Fontes:
https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/04/18/vera-rubin-interview-women-in-science/
https://www.engadget.com/2016/12/26/dark-matter-scientist-vera-rubin-dies/
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/dec/26/vera-rubin-pioneering-astronomer-dark-matter-died-aged-88
http://www.mirror.co.uk/science/vera-rubin-dead-astronomer-who-9520881
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vera_Rubin
http://meiobit.com/357698/dra-vera-rubin-faleceu-a-rainha-das-galaxias-materia-escura/
Artigo:
http://www.slideshare.net/sacani/galaxy-dynamics-and-the-mass-density-of-the-universe
https://wn.com/Vera_Rubin_(1928_2016)_Space_Today_Tv_Ep.550
🚀Aprenda Astronomia no maior Curso de Astronomia do Brasil: https://academyspace.com.br/bigbang
Acaba logo 2016, você certamente já ouviu esse clamor esse ano, certo?
Seja na área que for, política, econômica, desastres como o da Chape, mortes na música, o ano não está fácil.
E na ciência, particularmente na astronomia/astronáutica, também não.
Há duas semanas morreu o John Glenn, um dos heróis da exploração espacial, e no dia 25 morreu uma figura icônica, principalmente para quem estuda, lê ou se interessa pela famosa matéria escura.
A astrônoma Vera Rubin, nos deixou com 88 anos.
A história dela é fantástica. Ela contou que quando criança sua cama fica de frente para uma janela, e dali ela começou a observar as estrelas.
Disse que quando tinha chuva de meteoros, no dia seguinte ela conseguia se lembrar de tudo e desenhava a trajetória dos meteoros.
Ela descobriu que queria ser astrônoma no colegial, mas ela nunca tinha encontrado com um astrônomo. Ela só conhecia Maria Mitchell de um livro, sabia que ela havia estudado em Vassar, e resolveu seguir os passos dela.
Foi para Vassar, se casou com um cientista e entrou no programa de graduação junto com seu marido.
Na verdade ela tinha aceita em Harvard, numa carta do diretor do observatório em algum lugar estava escrito, Maldito seja, mulheres.
Ela respondeu a carta, dizendo que estava se casando e iria para Cornell. O diretor tentou se retratar, escrevendo que Maldita mulheres, sempre que consigo uma boa ela se casa.
Em Cornell não havia astronomia, então ela foi estudar física, e teve como membro de sua banca ninguém menos que Richard Feymann. Ela apresentou sua tese também na sociedade astronômica americana, mas seus conceitos eram muito a frente de seu tempo e isso criou um ceticismo muito grande.
Seu artigo foi rejeitado pelas revistas especializadas, mas ela continuou sua luta.
Foi no doutorado que ela resolveu estudar a matéria escura, um conceito originalmente proposto em 1933.
para fazer as medições que ela precisava, ela tinha que usar o maior telescópio da época, o de Monte Palomar.
O problema, até então as mulheres não podiam chegar nem perto do prédio do observatório, quanto mais entrar e usar o instrumento. Mas ela conseguiu.
Observando as galáxias espirais ela notou que o material nas bordas da galáxia giram com a mesma taxa que o material no centro delas.
Essa observação ia contra as leis da física que dizem que o material no centro, devido a maior concentração de poeira, estrelas e gás, deveria se mover mais rapidamente do que o material da borda, onde se tem menos matéria.
A explicação para o movimento ser o mesmo, é um halo de matéria escura existente ao redor das galáxias, que espalham a massa e por isso a taxa é a mesma.
Durante sua pesquisa ela estudou mais de 200 galáxias.
Ela publicou 144 artigos científicos, tem um asteroide batizado em seu nome, tem 4 filhos, entre eles 2 doutores em gelologia, uma doutora em matemática e uma doutora em raios cósmicos.
Recebeu todas as honrarias na sua área, se tornou a segunda mulher a ganhar a medalha de ouro da sociedade astronômica real caroline, em 1996, sendo que a primeira foi Caroline Herschel em 1828.
E nos deixou aos 88 anos.
Lutou muito pela presença das mulheres na ciência e deixou um grande legado como ela mesmo disse:
"Fama é passageira, meus números significam muito mais para mim do que meu nome. Se os astrônomo estiverem usando meus dados no futuro, essa será minha maior realização".
Fontes:
https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/04/18/vera-rubin-interview-women-in-science/
https://www.engadget.com/2016/12/26/dark-matter-scientist-vera-rubin-dies/
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/dec/26/vera-rubin-pioneering-astronomer-dark-matter-died-aged-88
http://www.mirror.co.uk/science/vera-rubin-dead-astronomer-who-9520881
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vera_Rubin
http://meiobit.com/357698/dra-vera-rubin-faleceu-a-rainha-das-galaxias-materia-escura/
Artigo:
http://www.slideshare.net/sacani/galaxy-dynamics-and-the-mass-density-of-the-universe
- published: 27 Dec 2016
- views: 6044