In 1917,
Heber Doust Curtis observed a
nova within what then was called the "
Andromeda Nebula". Searching the photographic record, 11 more novas were discovered. Curtis noticed that novas in Andromeda were drastically fainter than novas in the
Milky Way. Based on this, Curtis was able to estimate that Andromeda was 500,000
light-years away. As a result, Curtis became a proponent of the so-called "island Universes" hypothesis, which held that objects previously believed to be
spiral nebulae within the Milky Way were actually independent galaxies. In 1920,
the Great Debate between
Harlow Shapley and Curtis took place, concerning the nature of the Milky Way, spiral nebulae, and the dimensions of the Universe. To support his claim that the Great Andromeda Nebula (M31) was an external galaxy, Curtis also noted the appearance of dark lanes resembling the dust clouds in this galaxy, as well as the significant
Doppler shift. In 1922
Ernst Öpik presented an elegant and simple astrophysical method to estimate the distance of M31. His result put the Andromeda Nebula far outside this galaxy at a distance of about 450,000
parsec, which is about 1,500,000
ly.
Edwin Hubble settled the debate about whether other galaxies exist in 1925 when he identified extragalactic
Cepheid variable stars for the first time on astronomical photos of M31. These were made using the 2.5 metre (100 in)
Hooker telescope, and they enabled the distance of Great Andromeda Nebula to be determined. His measurement demonstrated conclusively that this feature was not a cluster of stars and gas within this galaxy, but an entirely separate galaxy located a significant distance from the Milky Way. This proved the existence of other galaxies.
Expanding Universe Hubble also demonstrated that the
redshift of other galaxies is approximately proportional to their distance from Earth (
Hubble's law). This raised the appearance of this galaxy being in the center of an expanding Universe, however, Hubble rejected the findings philosophically: The redshift observations of Hubble, in which galaxies appear to be moving away from us at a rate proportional to their distance from us, are now understood to be associated with the
expansion of the universe. All observers anywhere in the Universe will observe the same effect.
Copernican and cosmological principles The
Copernican principle, named after Nicolaus Copernicus, states that the Earth is not in a central, specially favored position.
Hermann Bondi named the principle after Copernicus in the mid-20th century, although the principle itself dates back to the 16th-17th century
paradigm shift away from the geocentric
Ptolemaic system. The
cosmological principle is an extension of the Copernican principle which states that the Universe is homogeneous (the same observational evidence is available to observers at different locations in the Universe) and isotropic (the same observational evidence is available by looking in any direction in the Universe). A homogeneous, isotropic Universe does not have a center. ==See also==