-
In 1987, a Chilean engineer
named Oscar Duhalde
-
became the only
living person on the planet
-
to discover a rare astronomical event
-
with the naked eye.
-
Oscar was a telescope operator
at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.
-
He worked with the astronomers who came
to the observatory for their research,
-
running the telescopes and processing
the data that they took.
-
On the night of February 24th,
-
Oscar stepped outside for a break
-
and looked up at the night sky
and he saw this.
-
This is the Large Magellanic Cloud.
-
It's a satellite galaxy very near
our own Milky Way.
-
But on that February night,
-
Oscar noticed that something
was different about this galaxy.
-
It didn't quite look like this.
-
It looked like this.
-
Did you see it?
-
(Laughter)
-
A small point of light had appeared
in one corner of this galaxy.
-
So to explain how amazing it is
that Oscar noticed this,
-
we need to zoom out a bit
-
and look at what the southern
sky in Chile looks like.
-
The Large Magellanic Cloud
is right in the middle of that image,
-
but despite its name, it's really small.
-
Imagine trying to notice
one single new point of light
-
appearing in that galaxy.
-
Oscar was able to do this
-
because he had the Large Magellanic Cloud
essentially memorized.
-
He had worked on data
from this galaxy for years,
-
poring over night after night
of observations
-
and doing it by hand,
-
because Oscar had begun
his work in astronomy
-
at a time when we stored all of the data
that we observed from the universe
-
on fragile sheets of glass.
-
I know that today's theme is "Moonshot,"
-
and as an astronomer, I figured
I could start us out nice and literally,
-
so here's a shot of the Moon.
-
(Laughter)
-
It's a familiar sight to all of us,
but there's a couple of unusual things
-
about this particular image.
-
For one, I flipped the colors.
-
It originally looked like this.
-
And if we zoom out, we can see
how this picture was taken.
-
This is a photograph
of the Moon taken in 1894
-
on a glass photographic plate.
-
This was the technology that astronomers
had available for decades
-
to store the observations
that we took of the night sky.
-
I've actually brought an example
of a glass plate to show you.
-
So this looks like a real secure way
to store our data.
-
These photographic plates
were incredibly difficult to work with.
-
One side of them was treated
with a chemical emulsion that would darken
-
when it was exposed to light.
-
This is how these plates were able
to store the pictures that they took,
-
but it meant that astronomers
had to work with these plates in darkness.
-
The plates had to be cut
to a specific size
-
so that they could fit
into the camera of a telescope.
-
So astronomers would take
razor-sharp cutting tools
-
and slice these tiny pieces of glass,
-
all in the dark.
-
Astronomers also had all kinds of tricks
that they would use
-
to make the plates
respond to light a little faster.
-
They would bake them or freeze them,
they would soak them in ammonia,
-
or they'd coat them with lemon juice --
-
all in the dark.
-
Then astronomers would take
these carefully designed plates
-
to the telescope
-
and load them into the camera.
-
They had to be loaded with that
chemically emulsified side pointed out
-
so that the light would hit it.
-
But in the dark, it was almost impossible
to tell which side was the right one.
-
Astronomers got into the habit
of tapping a plate to their lips,
-
or, like, licking it, to see
which side of the plate was sticky
-
and therefore coated with the emulsion.
-
And then when they actually
put it into the camera,
-
there was one last challenge.
-
In this picture behind me,
-
you can see that the plate
the astronomer is holding
-
is very slightly curved.
-
Sometimes plates had to be bent
to fit into a telescope's camera,
-
so you would take this carefully cut,
meticulously treated, very babied plate
-
up to a telescope, and then you'd just ...
-
So sometimes that would work.
Sometimes they would snap.
-
But it would usually end
with the [plate] loaded into a camera
-
on the back of a telescope.
-
You could then point that telescope
-
to whatever patch of sky
you wanted to study,
-
open the camera shutter,
-
and begin capturing data.
-
Now, astronomers couldn't just
walk away from the camera
-
once they'd done this.
-
They had to stay with that camera
for as long as they were observing.
-
This meant that astronomers
would get into elevators
-
attached to the side
of the telescope domes.
-
They would ride the elevator
high into the building
-
and then climb into
the top of the telescope
-
and stay there all night
shivering in the cold,
-
transferring plates
in and out of the camera,
-
opening and closing the shutter
-
and pointing the telescope
to whatever piece of sky
-
they wanted to study.
-
These astronomers worked with operators
who would stay on the ground.
-
And they would do things
like turn the dome itself
-
and make sure the rest
of the telescope was running.
-
It was a system that usually
worked pretty well,
-
but once in a while,
things would go wrong.
-
There was an astronomer observing
a very complicated plate
-
at this observatory,
the Lick Observatory here in California.
-
He was sitting at the top
of that yellow structure
-
that you see in the dome
on the lower right,
-
and he'd been exposing
one glass plate to the sky for hours,
-
crouched down and cold
-
and keeping the telescope
perfectly pointed
-
so he could take this precious
picture of the universe.
-
His operator wandered
into the dome at one point
-
just to check on him
and see how things were going.
-
And as the operator stepped through
the door of the dome,
-
he brushed against the wall
and flipped the light switch in the dome.
-
So the lights came blazing on
and flooding into the telescope
-
and ruining the plate,
-
and there was then this howl
from the top of the telescope.
-
The astronomer started yelling
and cursing and saying,
-
"What have you done?
You've destroyed so much hard work.
-
I'm going to get down
from this telescope and kill you!"
-
So he then starts moving the telescope
-
about this fast --
-
(Laughter)
-
toward the elevator
-
so that he can climb down
and make good on his threats.
-
Now, as he's approaching the elevator,
-
the elevator then suddenly
starts spinning away from him,
-
because remember, the astronomer
can control the telescope,
-
but the operator can control the dome.
-
(Laughter)
-
And the operator is looking up, going,
-
"He seems really mad. I might not want
to let him down until he's less murdery."
-
So the end is this absurd
slow-motion game of chase
-
with the lights on and the dome
just spinning around and around.
-
It must have looked completely ridiculous.
-
When I tell people about using
photographic plates to study the universe,
-
it does sound ridiculous.
-
It's a little absurd
-
to take what seems like a primitive tool
for studying the universe
-
and say, well, we're going
to dunk this in lemon juice, lick it,
-
stick it in the telescope,
shiver next to it for a few hours
-
and solve the mysteries of the cosmos.
-
In reality, though,
that's exactly what we did.
-
I showed you this picture before
-
of an astronomer perched
at the top of a telescope.
-
What I didn't tell you
is who this astronomer is.
-
This is Edwin Hubble,
-
and Hubble used photographic plates
-
to completely change
our entire understanding
-
of how big the universe is
and how it works.
-
This is a plate
that Hubble took back in 1923
-
of an object known at the time
as the Andromeda Nebula.
-
You can see in the upper
right of that image
-
that Hubble has labeled a star
with this bright red word, "Var!"
-
He's even put an exclamation
point next to it.
-
"Var" here stands for "variable."
-
Hubble had found a variable star
in the Andromeda Nebula.
-
Its brightness changed,
-
getting brighter and dimmer
as a function of time.
-
Hubble knew that if he studied
how that star changed with time,
-
he could measure the distance
to the Andromeda Nebula,
-
and when he did,
the results were astonishing.
-
He discovered that this was not,
in fact, a nebula.
-
This was the Andromeda Galaxy,
-
an entire separate galaxy
two and a half million light years
-
beyond our own Milky Way.
-
This was the first evidence
of other galaxies
-
existing in the universe beyond our own,
-
and it totally changed our understanding
of how big the universe was
-
and what it contained.
-
So now we can look at
what telescopes can do today.
-
This is a modern-day picture
of the Andromeda Galaxy,
-
and it looks just like
the telescope photos
-
that we all love to enjoy and look at:
-
it's colorful and detailed and beautiful.
-
We now store data like this digitally,
-
and we take it using
telescopes like these.
-
So this is me standing underneath
a telescope with a mirror
-
that's 26 feet across.
-
Bigger telescope mirrors let us take
sharper and clearer images,
-
and they also make it
easier for us to gather light
-
from faint and faraway objects.
-
So a bigger telescope literally
gives us a farther reach
-
into the universe,
-
looking at things that we
couldn't have seen before.
-
We're also no longer strapped
to the telescope
-
when we do our observations.
-
This is me during
my very first observing trip
-
at a telescope in Arizona.
-
I'm opening the dome of the telescope,
-
but I'm not on top
of the telescope to do it.
-
I'm sitting in a room
off to the side of the dome,
-
nice and warm and on the ground
-
and running the telescope from afar.
-
"Afar" can get pretty extreme.
-
Sometimes we don't even need
to go to telescopes anymore.
-
This is a telescope in New Mexico
that I use for my research all the time,
-
but I can run it with my laptop.
-
I can sit on my couch in Seattle
-
and send commands from my laptop
-
telling the telescope where to point,
-
when to open and close the shutter,
-
what pictures I want it
to take of the universe --
-
all from many states away.
-
So the way that we operate
telescopes has really changed,
-
but the questions we're trying to answer
about the universe
-
have remained the same.
-
One of the big questions still focuses
on how things change in the night sky,
-
and the changing sky was exactly
what Oscar Duhalde saw
-
when he looked up
with the naked eye in 1987.
-
This point of light that he saw appearing
in the Large Magellanic Cloud
-
turned out to be a supernova.
-
This was the first naked-eye supernova
-
seen from Earth in more than 400 years.
-
This is pretty cool,
-
but a couple of you might
be looking at this image and going,
-
"Really? I've heard of supernovae.
-
They're supposed to be spectacular,
-
and this is just like a dot
that appeared in the sky."
-
It's true that when you hear
the description of what a supernova is
-
it sounds really epic.
-
They're these brilliant, explosive deaths
of enormous, massive stars,
-
and they shoot energy
out into the universe,
-
and they spew material out into space,
-
and they sound, like, noticeable.
-
They sound really obvious.
-
The whole trick about
what a supernova looks like
-
has to do with where it is.
-
If a star were to die as a supernova
-
right in our backyard in the Milky Way,
a few hundred light years away --
-
"backyard" in astronomy terms --
-
it would be incredibly bright.
-
We would be able to see
that supernova at night
-
as bright as the Moon.
-
We would be able to read by its light.
-
Everybody would wind up taking photos
of this supernova on their phone.
-
It would be on headlines
all over the world.
-
It would for sure get a hashtag.
-
It would be impossible to miss
that a supernova had happened so nearby.
-
But the supernova that Oscar observed
-
didn't happen a few hundred
light years away.
-
This supernova happened
170,000 light years away,
-
which is why instead of an epic explosion,
-
it appears as a little dot.
-
This was still unbelievably exciting.
-
It was still visible with the naked eye,
-
and the most spectacular supernova
-
that we've seen since
the invention of the telescope.
-
But it gives you a better sense
of what most supernovae look like.
-
We still discover and study
supernovae all the time today,
-
but we do it in distant galaxies
using powerful telescopes.
-
We photograph the galaxy multiple times,
-
and we look for something that's changed.
-
We look for that little
pinprick of light appearing
-
that tells us that a star has died.
-
We can learn a great deal
about the universe and about stars
-
from supernovae,
-
but we don't want to leave
studying them up to chance.
-
We don't want to count on
happening to look up at the right time
-
or pointing our telescope
at the right galaxy.
-
What we ideally want is a telescope
-
that can systematically
and computationally
-
do what Oscar did with his mind.
-
Oscar was able to discover this supernova
-
because he had that galaxy memorized.
-
With digital data,
-
we can effectively memorize
every piece of the sky that we look at,
-
compare old and new observations
-
and look for anything that's changed.
-
This is the Vera Rubin Observatory
-
in Chile.
-
Now, when I visited it back in March,
it was still under construction.
-
But this telescope
will begin observations next year,
-
and when it does,
-
it will carry out a simple
but spectacular observing program.
-
This telescope will photograph
the entire southern sky
-
every few days
-
over and over,
-
following a preset pattern
-
for 10 years.
-
Computers and algorithms
affiliated with the observatory
-
will then compare every pair of images
taken of the same patch of sky,
-
looking for anything
that's gotten brighter or dimmer,
-
like a variable star,
-
or looking for anything that's appeared,
-
like a supernova.
-
Right now, we discover about
a thousand supernovae every year.
-
The Rubin Observatory will be capable
of discovering a thousand supernovae
-
every night.
-
It's going to dramatically change
the face of astronomy
-
and of how we study things
that change in the sky,
-
and it will do all of this
-
largely without much
human intervention at all.
-
It will follow that preset pattern
-
and computationally find
anything that's changed or appeared.
-
This might sound a little sad at first,
-
this idea that we're removing
people from stargazing.
-
But in reality,
-
our role as astronomers
isn't disappearing,
-
it's just moving.
-
We've already seen
how we do our jobs change.
-
We've gone from perching atop telescopes
-
to sitting next to them
-
to not even needing to go to them
or send them commands at all.
-
Where astronomers still shine
-
is in asking questions
and working with the data.
-
Gathering data is only the first step.
-
Analyzing it is where we can really apply
what we know about the universe.
-
Human curiosity is what makes us
ask questions like:
-
How big is the universe?
How did it begin?
-
How's it going to end? And are we alone?
-
So this is the power that humans
are still able to bring to astronomy.
-
So compare the capabilities
of a telescope like this
-
with the observations
that we were able to take like this.
-
We discovered amazing things
with glass plates,
-
but discovery looks different today.
-
The way we do astronomy
looks different today.
-
What hasn't changed
is that seed of human curiosity.
-
If we can harness the power
of tomorrow's technology
-
and combine it with this drive
that we all have to look up
-
and to ask questions
about what we see there,
-
we'll be ready to learn
some incredible new things
-
about the universe.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)