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Vera RubinтАЩs work on dark matter led to a paradigm shift in cosmology

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Cover of "Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond" by Ashley Yeager

Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond
Ashley Jean Yeager
MIT Press, $24.95

Vera RubinтАЩs research forced cosmologists to radically reimagine the cosmos.

In the 1960s and тАЩ70s, RubinтАЩs observations of stars whirling around within galaxies revealed the gravitational tug of invisible тАЬdark matter.тАЭ Although astronomers had detected hints of this enigmatic substance for decades, RubinтАЩs data helped finally convince a skeptical scientific community that dark matter exists (SN: 1/10/20).

тАЬHer work was pivotal to redefining the composition of our cosmos,тАЭ Ashley Yeager, Science NewsтАЩ associate news editor, writes in her new book. Bright Galaxies, Dark Matter, and Beyond follows RubinтАЩs journey from stargazing child to preeminent astronomer and fierce advocate for women in science.

That journey, Yeager shows, was rife with obstacles. When Rubin was a young astronomer in the 1950s and тАЩ60s, many observatories were closed to women, and more established scientists often brushed her off. Much of her early work was met with intense skepticism, but that only made Rubin, who died in 2016 at age 88, a more dogged data collector.

On graphs plotting the speeds of stars swirling around galaxies, Rubin showed that stars farther from galactic centers orbited just as fast as inner stars. That is, the galaxiesтАЩ rotation curves were flat. Such speedy outer stars must be pulled along by the gravitational grip of dark matter.

Science News staff writer Maria Temming spoke with Yeager about RubinтАЩs legacy and what, beyond her pioneering research, made Rubin remarkable. The following discussion has been edited for clarity and brevity.

Temming: What inspired you to tell RubinтАЩs story?

Yeager: It all started when I was working at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., in 2007. I was walking around the тАЬExplore the UniverseтАЭ exhibit and noticed there werenтАЩt many women featured. But then there was this picture of a woman with big glasses and cropped hair, and I thought, тАЬWho is this?тАЭ It was Vera Rubin.

My supervisor was a curator of oral histories. He was working on RubinтАЩs, so I asked him about her. He said, тАЬI have one more oral history interview to do with her. Would you like to come?тАЭ So I got to interview her. She was charismatic, kind and curious тАФ not a person who was all about herself, but wanted to know about you. That stuck with me.

Temming: You spend much of the book describing evidence for dark matter besides RubinтАЩs research. Why?

Yeager: I wanted to make sure I didnтАЩt portray Rubin as this lone person who discovered dark matter, because there were a lot of different moving pieces in astronomy and physics that came together in the тАЩ70s and early тАЩ80s for the scientific community to say, тАЬOK, we really have to take dark matter seriously.тАЭ

Temming: What made RubinтАЩs work a linchpin for confirming dark matter?

Yeager: She really went after nailing down that flat rotation curve in all types of galaxies. Mainly because she did get a lot of pushback, continually, that said, тАЬOh, thatтАЩs just a special case in that galaxy, or thatтАЩs just for those types of galaxies.тАЭ She studied hundreds of galaxies to double-check that, yes, in fact, the rotation curves are flat. People saying, тАЬWe donтАЩt believe you,тАЭ didnтАЩt ever really knock her down. She just came back swinging harder.

It helped that she did the work in visible wavelengths of light. There had been a lot of radio astronomy data to suggest flat rotation curves, but because radio astronomy was very new, it was really only once you saw it with the eye that the astronomy community was convinced.

Temming: Do you have a favorite anecdote about Rubin?

Yeager: The one that comes to mind is how much she loved flowers. She told me about how on drives from Lowell Observatory to Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona, she and her colleague Kent Ford would always stop and buy wildflowers. The fact that picking these wildflowers stuck with her, I thought, was just representative of who she was. Her favorite moments werenтАЩt necessarily these big discoveries sheтАЩd made, but stopping to pick some flowers and enjoy their beauty.

Author Ashley Yeager interviews Vera Rubin
Author Ashley Yeager (left) interviewed Vera Rubin (right) in 2007 as part of an oral history project with SmithsonianтАЩs National Air and Space Museum.Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum (NASM 9A16674)

Temming: Did you learn anything in your research that surprised you?

Yeager: I didnтАЩt initially grasp how many different types of projects she had. She did a lot with looking for larger-scale structure [in the universe] and looking at the Hubble constant [which describes how fast the universe is expanding] (SN: 4/21/21). She had a very diverse set of questions that she wanted to answer, well into her 70s.

Temming: I was surprised by her decision to get out of the rat-race of hunting for quasars, when that area of research heated up in the 1960s.

Yeager: She very much didnтАЩt like to be in pressure situations where she could be wrong. She liked to go and collect so much data that no one could [dispute it]. With quasar research, it was just too fast, and she wanted to be methodical about it.

Temming: Why is RubinтАЩs story important to tell now?

Yeager: Unfortunately for women and minorities in science, itтАЩs still very relevant, in that there are a lot of challenges to pursuing a career in STEM. Her story demonstrates that you have to surround yourself with people who are willing to help you and get away from the people who want to keep you down. Plus her story is also very encouraging: Your curiosity can keep you going and can fuel something way bigger than yourself.

Temming: How did she advocate for women in astronomy?

Yeager: She was very outspoken about it. At National Academy of Sciences meetings, the organizers always dreaded her standing up, because she would say, тАЬWhat are we doing about women in science? WeтАЩre not doing enough.тАЭ She was constantly pushing for women to be recognized with awards. She kept tabs on the number of women who had earned Ph.D.s and who had gotten staff positions тАФ and their salaries. She was very data-driven. SheтАЩd cull that information and use it to advocate for better representation and recognition of women in astronomy.

Temming: How would you describe Rubin to someone who hasnтАЩt met her?

Yeager: She was one of the most persistent, gracious and nurturing people that IтАЩve ever met. You could strip away all that she did in astronomy and she would still be this incredible figure тАФ the way she carried herself, the way she treated people. Just a beautiful human being.


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