Henrietta Swan Leavitt | |
---|---|
Henrietta Swan Leavitt
|
|
Born | July 4, 1868 Lancaster, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | December 12, 1921 Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
(aged 53)
Residence | Cambridge, Massachusetts |
Citizenship | United States |
Nationality | American |
Fields | Astronomy |
Institutions | Harvard University |
Alma mater | Radcliffe College, Oberlin College |
Known for | Leavitt's Law: the period–luminosity relationship of Cepheid stars |
Henrietta Swan Leavitt (July 4, 1868 – December 12, 1921) was an American astronomer who discovered the relation between the luminosity and the period of Cepheid variable stars. A graduate of Radcliffe College, Leavitt started working at the Harvard College Observatory as a "computer" in 1893, examining photographic plates in order to measure and catalog the brightness of the stars. Though she received little recognition in her lifetime, it was her discovery that first allowed astronomers to measure the distance between the Earth and faraway galaxies. She explained her discovery: "A straight line can readily be drawn among each of the two series of points corresponding to maxima and minima, thus showing that there is a simple relation between the brightness of the variables and their periods." After Leavitt's death, Edwin Hubble used the luminosity–period relation for Cepheids together with spectral shifts first measured by fellow astronomer Vesto Slipher at Lowell Observatory to determine that the universe is expanding (see Hubble's law).
Henrietta Swan Leavitt, the daughter of Congregational church minister George Roswell Leavitt and his wife Henrietta Swan (Kendrick), was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts, a descendant of Deacon John Leavitt, an English Puritan tailor, who settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the early seventeenth century. (The family name was spelled Levett in early Massachusetts records.) She attended Oberlin College and graduated from Radcliffe College, then called the Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women, with a bachelor's degree in 1892. She studied a broad curriculum including classical Greek, fine arts, philosophy, analytic geometry, and calculus. It wasn't until her fourth year of college that Leavitt took a course in astronomy, in which she earned an A–. She then traveled in America and in Europe, during which time she lost her hearing.