How small are we in the scale of the universe Alex Hofeldt

In the winter of 1995,

scientists pointed the Hubble Telescope
at an area of the sky near the Big Dipper,

a spot that was dark and out of the way
of light pollution from surrounding stars.

The location was apparently empty,
and the whole endeavor was risky.

What, if anything, was going to show up?

Over ten consecutive days,

the telescope took close to 150 hours
of exposure of that same area.

And what came back
was nothing short of spectacular:

an image of over 1,500 distinct galaxies

glimmering in a tiny sliver
of the universe.

Now, let’s take a step back to understand
the scale of this image.

If you were to take a ballpoint pen

and hold it at arm’s length
in front of the night sky,

focusing on its very tip,

that is what the Hubble Telescope captured
in its first Deep Field image.

In other words,

those 3,000 galaxies were seen
in just a tiny speck of the universe,

approximately one two-millionth
of the night sky.

To put all this in perspective,

the average human measures
about 1.7 meters.

With Earth’s diameter
at 12,700 kilometers,

that’s nearly 7.5 million humans
lined up head to toe.

The Apollo 8 astronauts flew a distance
of 380,000 kilometers to the moon.

And our relatively small Sun has a
diameter of about 1.4 million kilometers,

or 110 times the Earth’s diameter.

A step further,

the Milky Way holds somewhere
between 100 to 400 billion stars,

including our Sun.

And each glowing dot of a galaxy captured
in the Deep Field image

contains billions of stars
at the very least.

Almost a decade after taking
the Deep Field image,

scientists adjusted the optics
on the Hubble Telescope

and took another long exposure
over a period of about four months.

This time, they observed 10,000 galaxies.

Half of these galaxies have since been
analyzed more clearly

in what’s known as
the eXtreme Deep Field image,

or XDF.

By combining over ten years
of photographs,

the XDF shows galaxies so distant

that they’re only
one ten-billionth the brightness

that the human eye can perceive.

So, what can we learn about the universe
from the Deep Field images?

In a study of the universe, space and time
are inextricably linked.

That’s because of
the finite speed of light.

So the Deep Field images are like
time machines to the ancient universe.

They reach so far into space and time

that we can observe galaxies
that existed over 13 billion years ago.

This means we’re looking
at the universe as it was

less than a billion years
after the Big Bang,

and it allows scientists to research
galaxies in their infancy.

The Deep Field images have also shown
that the universe is homogeneous.

That is, images taken at different
spots in the sky look similar.

That’s incredible when we think about
how vast the universe is.

Why would we expect it to be the same
across such huge distances?

On the scale of a galaxy,
let alone the universe,

we’re smaller than
we can readily comprehend,

but we do have the capacity to wonder,

to question,

to explore,

to investigate,

and to imagine.

So the next time you stand gazing up
at the night sky,

take a moment to think about the enormity
of what is beyond your vision,

out in the dark spaces between the stars.

1995 年冬天,

科学家们将哈勃望远镜
对准了北斗七星附近的一个天空区域,该区域

很暗,并且
不受周围恒星的光污染。

该位置显然是空的
,整个努力都是冒险的。

如果有的话,会出现什么?

连续十天

,望远镜
对同一区域进行了近 150 小时的曝光。

回来的
结果简直是壮观

:超过 1,500 个不同的

星系在宇宙的一小部分中闪闪发光

现在,让我们退后一步来了解
这张图片的比例。

如果你拿一支圆珠笔

,在夜空前一臂远地握住它

专注于它的尖端,

这就是哈勃望远镜
在其第一张深场图像中捕捉到的内容。

换句话说,

这 3,000 个星系只出现
在宇宙的一小部分,

大约是夜空的百万分之一

从这个角度来看,

人类的平均身高
约为 1.7 米。

地球直径
为 12,700 公里

,将近 750 万人
从头到脚排成一列。

阿波罗 8 号宇航员
向月球飞行了 38 万公里。

而我们相对较小的太阳
直径约为 140 万公里,

是地球直径的 110 倍。

更进一步

,银河系拥有
100 到 4000 亿颗恒星,

包括我们的太阳。

在深场图像

中捕获的星系的每个发光点至少包含数十亿颗恒星

在拍摄
了深场图像将近十年后,

科学家们调整
了哈勃望远镜的光学系统,

并在
大约四个月的时间内再次进行了长时间曝光。

这一次,他们观测了 10,000 个星系。

此后,这些星系中有一半

在所谓
的极深场图像

或 XDF 中得到了更清晰的分析。

通过结合十多年
的照片

,XDF 显示了如此遥远的星系

,它们
的亮度

只有人眼可以感知的十亿分之一。

那么,我们可以
从深场图像中了解宇宙的哪些信息?

在对宇宙的研究中,空间和时间
是密不可分的。

那是
因为光速有限。

因此,深场图像就像
通往古代宇宙的时间机器。

它们深入空间和时间

,我们可以观察
到 130 亿年前存在的星系。

这意味着我们正在
观察宇宙大爆炸后

不到十亿年的时间

,它使科学家们能够研究
处于婴儿期的星系。

深场图像还
表明宇宙是同质的。

也就是说,在天空中不同地点拍摄的图像
看起来相似。

当我们想到宇宙有多大时,这是不可思议的

为什么我们会期望它
在如此长的距离上是一样的?

在银河系的规模上,
更不用说宇宙了,

我们比
我们容易理解的要小,

但我们确实有能力去怀疑

、质疑

、探索

、调查

和想象。

因此,下次当您站着
凝视夜空时,请

花点时间思考一下在
您的视野之外

,在星星之间的黑暗空间中的巨大。