Vera Rubin in the pages of Physics Today
DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.9080
Vera Rubin, whose research charting stellar velocities in galaxies solidified the case for the existence of dark matter, died on 25 December at age 88.
For years Rubin’s name has routinely popped up in the science press each October, with columnists justifiably expressing disbelief and frustration that she and colleague Kent Ford hadn’t yet received the Nobel Prize in Physics. But it will be a shame if people remember Rubin only as the female astronomer who never won an arbitrary prize. Several articles and letters to the editor by Rubin in Physics Today illustrate the extraordinary combination of qualities that made her such a great scientist and role model.
Vera Rubin looks through a telescope at Vassar College in 1947.
Vassar College, courtesy AIP Emilio Segrè Visual Archives
In 2006 Rubin wrote a column
Interspersed between the details of her work is the sense of wonder she experienced during the process. “Often I wondered if an astronomer in M31 was observing us,” she wrote. “Always I wished we could exchange views.” Rubin never lost the inquisitiveness that led her as a child to stare out her bedroom window and chart meteor trails
Rubin wasn’t afraid to point the finger at those promoting sexism—intentionally or unintentionally—in science. In 1982 she wrote a letter to the editor in response to an article
In her letter
Another letter
Although it’s a travesty that Rubin never won the Nobel, it’s perhaps more disappointing that she won’t get to learn the nature of the mysterious substance she indirectly observed decades ago. As she wrote in her 2006 column, “No one can predict the surprises that surely lie ahead as we attempt to shed light on nature’s dark secret.”
More about the authors
Andrew Grant, agrant@aip.org