Edwin Hubble Discovers the Universe
			
		
		
			Image Credit & 
Copyright:  
Courtesy
Carnegie Institution for Science
		
		
			How big is our universe?
This very question, 
among others, 
was debated by two leading astronomers 100 years ago today in what has become known as 
astronomy's Great Debate. 
Many astronomers then believed that our 
Milky Way Galaxy was the entire universe. 
Many others, though, believed that our galaxy was just 
one of many. 
In the 
Great Debate, 
each argument was detailed, but no consensus was reached. 
The answer came over three years later with the detected variation 
of single spot in the 
Andromeda Nebula, as shown on the 
original glass discovery plate digitally reproduced here.
When Edwin Hubble 
compared images, he noticed that this 
spot varied, and so wrote "VAR!" on the plate. 
The best explanation, Hubble knew, was that this spot was the 
image of a variable star that was very far away.
So M31 was really the 
Andromeda  Galaxy  -- 
a galaxy possibly similar to our own. 
The 
featured image 
may not be pretty, but the variable spot on it 
opened a door 
through which humanity gazed knowingly, for the first time, into a 
surprisingly vast cosmos.