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Herschel, Kapteyn, and the Milky Way |
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![]() | ===> Flux ("brightness") = Luminosity / (4 pi distance2) |
we expect that the more distant stars will be fainter (in an average sense since all stars do not have the same intrinsic luminosity. So, whether the stars are distributed in a thin shell around us or in a spherical distribution or a disk or a football shaped object or whatever, can also be deduced from star counting.
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Kapteyn (1920's) used photographic star counts and estimated distances using parallaxes and examining the proper motion of nearby stars. Kaptyen found that the Milky Way was a flattened distribution of stars round 33,000 light years x 6,500 light years and that the Sun was around 2,000 light years from the center of the galaxy. We know that the Milky Way is at least 80,000 light years x 2,000 light years in size and that the Sun is 25,000 light years from the center of the galaxy!! |
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Kapteyn deduced that the Milky Way was not nearly as flat as we know it to be and that we were very nearly at its center.