Vera Rubin

The BBC:

Astronomer Vera Rubin, whose pioneering work on galaxy rotation rates led to the theory of dark matter, has died at the age of 88, her son says.

Allan Rubin said she died on Sunday of natural causes, AP reported. She was living in Princeton, New Jersey.

Her studies earned her numerous honours, including being the second female astronomer to be elected to the US National Academy of Sciences.

But many questioned why she was never awarded a Nobel Prize.

I bet I know. I bet you do too.

In 1974, Rubin discovered that the stars at the edges of galaxies moved faster than expected.

Gravity calculations using only visible matter in galaxies showed that the outer stars should have been moving more slowly.

To reconcile her observations with the law of gravity, scientists proposed there was matter we cannot see and called it dark matter.

Dark matter is an unidentified type of matter comprising approximately 27% of the mass and energy in the observable universe.

So basically she discovered dark matter. No biggy.

Vera Rubin’s interest in astronomy began as a young girl and grew with the involvement of her father, who helped her build a telescope and took her to meetings of amateur astronomers, according to a profile of the American Museum of Natural History.

She was the only astronomy major to graduate from the prestigious women’s college Vassar in 1948. When she sought to enrol as a graduate student at Princeton, she was told that women were not allowed in the university’s graduate astronomy programme, a policy that was not abandoned until 1975.

So she went to Cornell and then Georgetown. She won the US National Medal of Science in 1993.

Comments

2 responses to “Vera Rubin”

  1. James Garnett Avatar
    James Garnett

    I bet I know. I bet you do too.

    And they can’t use the excuse they used to deny a Nobel to Rosalind Franklin, either.

  2. Arnaud Avatar

    What Phil Plait said on his blog Bad Astronomy :

    One more thing that must be said. As a woman, Rubin faced in uphill battle in much of her career. She deserved a Nobel Prize for her work, but was overlooked year after year. I’ve written about this before; her work predates the discovery of dark energy by decades, yet the two teams of astronomers who made that discovery were awarded the Nobel in 2011. I do think the 2011 award was deserved, but why did the Nobel Committee skip over Rubin for so long? The last woman to win the Prize for physics was Maria Goeppert-Mayer (for her work on atomic nuclear structure), and that was in 1963. The last woman before that was Marie Curie, in 1903. And that’s it. Just two women.

    But the Nobel committee, by its own rules, does not give the award posthumously. So that’s that.

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2016/12/27/astronomer_vera_rubin_has_died.html