The seeds of measuring the universe stretch back in time all the way to the Greek astronomer Aristarchus of Samos (ca. 310–230 b.c.), who had correct notions of parallax in mind with regard to distances of the Sun and Moon. Parallax is the technique of measuring the offset of nearer bodies to the distant background of stars and geometrically calculating a distance.
Little progress took place after Aristarchus until Polish astronomer Nicolas Copernicus (1473–1543) proposed the heliocentric model of the cosmos, and it was one of the last great visual astronomers, Danish nobleman Tycho Brahe (1546–1601), who made the first parallax measurements of comets and helped define a more modern distance scale to nearby objects.
Starting close to home
Let’s pause for a moment to appreciate the physical scale of just our solar system — only the Sun, its attendant planets and debris, and our little island of life inside it. To envision our immediate vicinity a little better in your mind, imagine a scale solar system with the Sun on one end and 1 centimeter representing the distance between our star and Earth, called an astronomical unit (AU). That is, 1 AU = 1 centimeter. You actually can draw this out on paper to help crystallize it in your mind. Tape several sheets of paper together and have at it. With the Sun at one end, Earth is 1 centimeter away, and Mercury and Venus are in there too at 0.4 centimeter and 0.7 centimeter, respectively. Outward from Earth, we have Mars at 1.5 centimeters, the main-belt asteroids centered around 2.5 centimeters, Jupiter at 5 centimeters, Saturn at 9.5 centimeters, Uranus at 19 centimeters, and Neptune at 30 centimeters. Pluto can be placed at 40 centimeters.
The outer solar system is sparse, consisting of the Kuiper Belt region from 30 to 50 centimeters from the Sun, and you can even indicate some of the more interesting objects in the area to keep Pluto company — Haumea at 40 centimeters, Makemake at 45 centimeters, and Eris at 60 centimeters. Now you can finish by indicating the region of the scattered disk, a sparse body of energetically “spun up” icy asteroids, between 50 and 100 centimeters from the Sun. This gives you a complete scale model of the solar system in a region spanning 1 meter, or 3 feet, across.
Now appreciate that on this scale, the inner edge of the Oort Cloud, the vast halo of 2 trillion comets on the solar system’s perimeter, is 100 meters (109 yards, more than an American football field) farther away than the edge of your diagram. The outer edge of the Oort Cloud, on this scale, is 1,000 meters (0.6 mile, more than 10 football fields) away.
Yet as human astronaut-explorers, we only have traveled as far away as the Moon, about 1/389 AU, or on our scale 1/389 centimeter, from Earth, which on this scale is about the size of a human red blood cell. That distance is imperceptibly close to our planet’s “dot” on our scale drawing.
And yet the distances to the nearest stars are larger than our imagined scale of the Oort Cloud. And then come perhaps 400 billion stars scattered across the bright disk of our Milky Way Galaxy, 150,000 light-years across, and a hundred billion more galaxies spread across a vast cosmos.
The next time you’re out under the stars, look up and think carefully about the enormity of the universe. It is one of the great humbling feelings of humanity.