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CHAPTER XXIV - STATUS OF THE NEBULÆ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

The question whether nebulæ are external galaxies hardly any longer needs discussion. It has been answered by the progress of discovery. No competent thinker, with the whole of the available evidence before him, can now, it is safe to say, maintain any single nebula to be a star system of coordinate rank with the Milky Way. A practical certainty has been attained that the entire contents, stellar and nebular, of the sphere belong to one mighty aggregation, and stand in ordered mutual relations within the limits of one all-embracing scheme—all-embracing, that is to say, so far as our capacities of knowledge extend. With the infinite possibilities beyond, science has no concern.

The chief reasons justifying the assertion that the status of the nebulæ is intra-galactic, are of three kinds. They depend, first, upon the nature of the bodies themselves; secondly, upon the stellar associations of many of them; thirdly, upon their systematic arrangement as compared with the systematic arrangement of the stars.

The detection of gaseous nebulæ not only directly demonstrated the non-stellar nature of a large number of these objects, but afforded a rational presumption that the others, however composed, were on a commensurate scale of size, and situated at commensurable distances. It may indeed turn out that gaseous and non-gaseous nebulæ form an unbroken series, rather than two distinct classes separated by an impassable barrier.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1890

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