The Early Years: Lyman Spitzer, Jr. and the Physics of Star Formation
Bruce G. Elmegreen (1) ((1) IBM T.J. Watson Research Center)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical development of understanding star formation, highlighting Lyman Spitzer Jr.'s contributions to establishing that star formation occurs in the present universe, challenging earlier beliefs of only ancient star formation.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive review of Lyman Spitzer Jr.'s pioneering work and the historical debate on the age and formation of stars, emphasizing the development of modern star formation theory.
Findings
Confirmation of ongoing star formation in the present universe
Historical evidence supporting the modern theory of star formation
Lyman Spitzer Jr.'s foundational role in astrophysics
Abstract
The discovery of the interstellar medium and the early work of Lyman Spitzer, Jr. are reviewed here in the context of the remarkable observation in the early 1950's that star formation continues in the present age. Prior to this observation, stars were thought to have formed only at the beginning of the universe. The main debate in the 1930's was whether stars had the young age of ~3 Gyr suggested by the expansion of the universe and the meteorites, or the old age of 10^{13} yr suggested by thermalized stellar motions. The adoption of Ambartsumian's claim of modern-day star formation was slow and mixed in the early 1950's. While some astronomers like Adriaan Blaauw immediately followed, adding more from their own data, others were slow to change. By the end of the 1950's, Lyman had deduced the basic theory for star formation that we would recognize today.
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Astro and Planetary Science
