February 14, 2008 marks the 110th anniversary of the birth of astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky. His amazing scientific career is relatively unknown to the general public, but he remains a giant in the astronomical community.
In an article titled “Idea Man” published in 2001 Stephen M. Maurer wrote that Zwicky will be “remembered as a gifted observational astronomer who had discovered more supernovae than everyone else in human history combined. Today, Zwicky’s reputation is bigger than ever, except that now astronomers think of him as a theorist. When researchers talk about neutron stars, dark matter, and gravitational lenses, they all start the same way: ‘Zwicky noticed this problem in the 1930s. Back then, nobody listened . . .’”
Starting in 1936 Zwicky used the 18-inch Schmidt to make the first rapid survey of the heavens, mapping out hundreds of thousands of galaxies. With it he also began his searches for exploding stars known as supernovae (With Walter Baade he even coined the term “supernova”), discovered that galaxies come in clusters and obtained the first evidence for dark matter. His searches for supernovae were extremely fruitful, having discovered more than 120 of them during his lifetime – at the time that was more supernovae than all other astronomers combined. He was the first to suggest, and correctly so, that a supernova marks an ordinary star’s transition to a collapsed, super dense object known as a neutron star.
Today’s astronomers are still following in Zwicky’s footsteps. Palomar’s 48-inch Schmidt (since renamed the Samuel Oschin Telescope) is used nightly to survey the sky, hunting for supernovae, gravitational lenses and more. Astronomers have found a renewed interest in Zwicky’s concept of sky surveys. Entire giant telescopes are about to be built for that purpose. Beyond his observational work Zwicky’s theoretical advances laid the foundation for modern astrophysics, which owes him a great debt.
1 comment:
Zwicky was certainly one of the most memorable astronomers of the 20th century. I regret that I was never able to meet him.
Matthew Ota
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