Astronomy may not be the oldest profession, but
humans have been staring into the heavens since at
least the dawn of civilization. Some of the earliest
written records, from ancient Sumer, describe the
patterns of the constellations, the locations of
bright stars, and the motions of planets, beginning
a 6000-year written record of astronomical
investigation.
For almost all of that time, the only tools
available to observers were their own eyes and a few
elementary sighting instruments, such as the
astrolabe and the sextant. Nevertheless, with this
equipment, some profound conclusions were possible:
for example, the Sun is further from us than the
Moon, which orbits Earth; Earth is round; and with
very careful observation, one can deduce that the
Sun, not Earth, is the likely center of motion in
the solar system, a theory first published widely by
Nicolaus Copernicus in 1543.
The latter idea required a huge leap of
intuition. After all, our unaided eyes don't have
enough resolving power to distinguish the other
planets from true point sources: there is nothing to
indicate that those apparently tiny points of light
have anything in common with the great sphere we
live on.
It also impinged on religious faith, as Galileo
found to his detriment when in 1610 he published his
treatise Sidereus Nuncius (The Starry Messenger).
Made with the newly invented telescope, his
observations of the motions of Jupiter's largest
moons and the phases of Venus provided the first
powerful evidence in support of the Copernican
theory. The religious establishment of the time,
unable to accept the notion that man was not at the
center of the cosmos, placed Galileo under house
arrest for much of the rest of his life. But nothing
could stop the revolution in thinking that would
take place, fueled by observations made with
resolving power and sensitivity an order of
magnitude greater than had ever been possible
before.
Today, another revolution is under way. Modern
telescopes capture as much as 40 000 times more
light than Galileo's original, making them much more
sensitive to faint objects. But until recently,
their resolving power has been limited by Earth's
atmosphere, so that the images they make are only a
few times sharper than those Galileo saw. Now,
however, the technology of adaptive optics is
yielding images at the theoretical limit of
sharpness, finally allowing astronomers to
capitalize on the full potential of the world's
biggest telescopes.