R.I.P. Dr. Vera Rubin

The Woman Who Found Dark Matter

vera rubin
Vera Rubin

As I write this, reports are spreading rapidly through the astronomy community of the death of Dr. Vera Rubin on December 25, 2016. If you don’t know who she was, or what she worked on, come sit by me and let me tell you a story about this lady.

Remembering Vera Rubin

It was at one of the first meetings of the American Astronomical Society I attended. I was a graduate student and giving a talk about outreach and amateur astronomy. I was scared to death because, hey, it was me, a lowly student giving a talk to all these exalted astronomers. A woman sat in the front row and smiled at me as I shuffled the papers on the podium. The room filled and then the session chair gave me the signal that my 10 minutes had started. I plunged into my talk.

At the end, a few people asked questions, everyone clapped politely, and the next person stepped up to the podium. I fled the room to catch my breath. The woman followed me out and asked if I’d like to get a cup of coffee. At the same moment my advisor came out and said, “Oh, I see you’ve met Vera Rubin”, and he proceeded to introduce me to her before being collared by someone else for a chat. Dr. Rubin and I went to get coffee, and for the next 30 minutes or so she asked me all about my work and what I hoped to do when I graduated. It was a wonderful experience.

Over the years we met here and there, and I learned more about her work with galaxy rotation studies and the existence of dark matter. I found it fascinating, as so many people do, and followed her research with interest. When I was asked to write a book about astronomy, one of the directions I got from the editors was to include some bios of “seminal” astronomers. Dr. Rubin was one of those I chose. In retrospect, I wish could have done a book on her work instead of simply a chapter.

In the Hall of Giants

I know that Vera Rubin didn’t work in a vacuum on dark matter — that, like Newton and every other astronomer has done — she stood on the shoulders of giants. Her work forged a new path in understanding dark matter and its affect on the universe. Now, she is a giant in her own right. Now, others will stand on her shoulders. Her insights and drive to understand the difficult “galaxy rotation problem” led directly to the theory of dark matter, and more recently to the confirming observations of its existence. It was a monumental achievement.

For her work, Dr. Rubin should have received a Nobel Prize. That didn’t happen and the Nobel physics committee should be thinking hard about why she was overlooked.  She has been honored with many other prizes and awards for her insights, and she will be long remembered for her seminal contributions to astronomy.

RIP Dr. Vera Rubin, and deepest condolences to her extended family.

Want the Car Alan Stern Drove While Heading to Pluto?

Help Lowell Observatory: Bid on Alan Stern’s “Second Fastest Vehicle”

Alan Stern car
Alan Stern’s car next to a Percival Lowell’s 1912 car, named “Big Red”. Alan named his “New Red” in tribute. 

Okay, so my friend Alan Stern has been hinting around all week about something “cool” about to happen. If you’ve heard of him, you know he and his team of scientists and technicians pulled off something REALLY cool a year and a half ago. That’s when their New Horizons spacecraft swept past Pluto. It gave us the best (and so far only) close-up images of that distant planet.

All the while Alan and his team were waiting for New Horizons to get to Pluto, he was driving a red Nissan 350Z. It was the only car he drove. In fact, he bought it in 2006, the year New Horizons lifted off and started on its journey to Pluto and beyond. The car is still in great shape (just like New Horizons), and so Alan is donating it Lowell Observatory, where it will be auctioned off to the highest bidder.  It’s Alan’s way of paying tribute to Clyde Tombaugh and Lowell Observatory, the man who searched for Pluto and the place where it was discovered. “New Horizons was, and is, the best aspect of my career so far,” Alan said. “So I wanted to donate this car to Lowell Observatory as a fundraising vehicle to recognize the fact that New Horizons could not have happened without the historic and pioneering work that took place at Lowell Observatory early in the last century.”

Funding Outreach

The proceeds from the auction of Alan’s “other spacecraft” will help fund Lowell’s outreach and scientific research programs. It’s also a unique way to get a very special object. The car sports a bumper sticker that says, “My other vehicle is on its way to Pluto”. If you’re the lucky bidder on this well-cared-for car now at Lowell, you also get to enjoy a dinner with Alan Stern, who is a great guy and one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world. I’ve done that (without having to buy a car) and it’s a great treat! So, go ahead and give it a whirl. You’ll have fun and be supporting a worthy cause.

Interested in owning Alan’s car (which is in great shape and should run for another 230,000 files?  Check out the auction link here: Own Alan’s Car. You just might get lucky and get Alan’s “second-fastest” vehicle in YOUR driveway! Plus, it’s all for a good cause at Lowell Observatory.

The auction begins December 15 and ends 11:59 p.m. (PST) on December 24. What a heck of a holiday present and I’m sure that Lowell Observatory will love you for it, too!