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Shapley's Debate
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 July 2016
Extract
The attempt to make three-dimensional sense of the Milky Way goes back to a most unlikely origin: the English antiquary of the early eighteenth century, William Stukeley, remembered today for associating the Druids with Stonehenge. Stukeley came from Lincolnshire and so was a fellow-countryman of Isaac Newton, and as a result he was privileged to talk with the great man from time to time. In his Memoirs of Newton Stukeley records one conversation they had in about 1720, in which Stukeley proposed that the Sun and the brightest stars of the night sky make up what we today would term a globular cluster, and this cluster is surrounded by a gap, outside of which lie the small stars of the Milky Way in the form of a flattened ring.
- Type
- Chapter I. Review Papers on Harlow Shapley
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- Copyright © Kluwer 1988