Opinion | The Silent Pulse of the Universe: What Jocelyn Bell Burnell Discovered – The New York Times

Posted: August 2, 2021 at 1:53 am

Growing up in a Quaker household, Jocelyn Bell Burnell was raised to believe that she had as much right to an education as anyone else. But as a girl in the 1940s in Northern Ireland, her enthusiasm for the sciences was met with hostility from teachers and male students. Undeterred, she went on to study radio astronomy at Glasgow University, where she was the only woman in many of her classes.

In 1967, Burnell made a discovery that altered our perception of the universe. As a Ph.D. student at Cambridge University assisting the astronomer Anthony Hewish, she discovered pulsars compact, spinning celestial objects that give off beams of radiation, like cosmic lighthouses. (A visualization of some early pulsar data is immortalized as the album art for Joy Divisions Unknown Pleasures.)

But as the short documentary above shows, the world wasnt yet ready to accept that a breakthrough in astrophysics could have come from a young woman.

Ben Proudfoot is a filmmaker and the founder and C.E.O. of Breakwater Studios. He co-directed the Oscar-nominated Op-Doc A Concerto Is a Conversation.

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Opinion | The Silent Pulse of the Universe: What Jocelyn Bell Burnell Discovered - The New York Times

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