Henrietta Swan Leavitt was an American astronomer
@Scientists, Timeline and Childhood
Henrietta Swan Leavitt was an American astronomer
Henrietta Swan Leavitt born at
Henrietta Swan Leavitt was a highly religious woman throughout her life. She never married and dedicated her entire life to the study of heavenly bodies instead.
She suffered from ill-health all her life. In the last few decades of her life, she had significantly lost her hearing abilities. She died after a prolonged fight with cancer, on December 21, 1912, in Massachusetts.
She was buried at a cemetery where her parents and two of her siblings who had died in infancy had been buried.
Henrietta Swan Leavitt was born on July 4, 1868, in Lancaster, Massachusetts, to George Roswell Leavitt and Henrietta Swan Kendrick. Her father was a local congregational church minister. Theirs was a financially prosperous family, and she was the eldest of the seven siblings. Two of the siblings died as babies. The family had a history of sicknesses, and Henrietta herself struggled with ill health during most of her childhood.
Her father’s job had him frequently moving from one place to another. As a teenager, she spent a lot time in Cleveland, where her father worked in a local church. After graduating high school, Henrietta joined ‘Oberlin College’ in Ohio for a year-long preparatory course.
She studied several undergraduate programs for the next two years and also learned music for a year. When she was in her early 20s, the family moved back to Massachusetts. She then wished to join the prestigious ‘Harvard University.’
To her dismay, the world-renowned university did not accept female students at that time. However, female students were allowed at ‘Harvard Annex,’ an establishment that was operated by the ‘Society for the Collegiate Instruction for Women.’ During her years at ‘Harvard’ and ‘Oberlin,’ Henrietta studied a wide range of topics such as classical Greek, fine arts, philosophy, analytical geometry, and calculus.
Her interests shifted majorly during her fourth year at college, when she became extremely interested in studying astronomy. There were not many female astronomers at that time, and this led to some trouble initially, but she was determined to go ahead with it.
The American educational society deemed women unworthy of operating telescopes and conducting the study of stars and other heavenly bodies. Thus, after her graduation, she traveled to Europe and also worked as an art assistant at ‘Beloit College’ in Wisconsin. However, she soon got sick and lost her hearing partially.
In 1903, she arrived back at the ‘Harvard College Observatory’ and began to work without any pay. She was known as a member of a group known as the ‘Harvard Computers.’ It was a group of highly skilled women Pickering had hand-picked to go through the enormous data collected by scientists.
She survived on the money that her father sent her. A few months later, she started earning 30 cents an hour from ‘Harvard.’
As each person in the group was given a specific subject for research, Henrietta was assigned work on variable stars. Those variable stars illuminated differently at different times, but the exact reason for the same was not understood by scientists back then.
She focused on thousands of variable stars in the ‘Magellanic Clouds’ and noticed a strange pattern. She intensified her study and concluded that the brightness of a variable star determined its period of variability. In 1908, she published her findings in a paper titled ‘Annals of the Astronomical Observatory of Harvard College.’
Henrietta Swan Leavitt’s findings were the base for the discoveries of several future astronomers. The period–luminosity relationship was the foundation of the theory of the “standard candle” in astronomy, which was the key aspect of measuring distance to the remotest galaxies in the observable universe.
When astronomers started focusing on other galaxies, it was revealed that other galaxies also had Cepheids. They thus became a key clue to determine the presence of the “spiral nebulae” as independent galaxies located far away from the ‘Milky Way.’ This led to probably one of the greatest astronomical discoveries that took away the ‘Milky Way’s assumed central position.
The structure and the overall scale of the universe became clearer with ‘Leavitt’s Law.’ Edwin Hubble made some major discoveries and earned a huge name for himself, as a direct result of his understanding of Henrietta’s research studies.
Hubble proclaimed that Henrietta deserved a ‘Nobel Prize’ for her work. She was almost nominated for the prize by Gösta Mittag-Leffler, a member of the ‘Swedish Academy of Sciences’ in 1924, but by then, she had been dead for 3 years. Unfortunately, the ‘Nobel Prize’ is not awarded posthumously.