Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Space is vast. These newspaper headlines tell you just how vast.

Space is incomprehensibly vast. When you look up at the stars, the light coming from them was actually emitted decades or even centuries ago, as it takes light a long time to cover the vast distance between star systems.

This is a well-known fact, but one that's still hard to grasp. So a group of developers at recent hackathon hosted by the American Museum of Natural History came up with an ingenious way to drive this point home.

For each of the 100 stars closest to the sun, their project Star Date provides the headline of a New York Times article that was published when the light now reaching us was emitted:

stardate

(Star Date)

When light left the red dwarf Lalande 46650, for instance, the OJ Simpson trial was entering its fifth month. When it left Groombridge 1830, a star in the Ursa Major constellation, the EPA was fining Union Carbide $3.9 million in 1985. Take a look at the Star Date page for many other examples.

This context really puts into perspective how brief human history is, compared to the immensity of just our region of the Milky Way galaxy. Back when Reagan was president and the Berlin Wall was erect, light that’s now reaching us from the closest stars was just getting on its way.

Light from the vast majority of stars, meanwhile, is much, much older. When you look up at the more distant (but still quite visible) Andromeda galaxy, the light you see was emitted 2.54 million years ago — before humans had fully evolved into our modern anatomical state.

Hat tip to Rose Eveleth at the Atlantic for the very cool find.

More in Almanac

Culture
The bridge design that helped win World War IIThe bridge design that helped win World War II
Play
Culture

It’s a simple innovation that helped win a war.

By Phil Edwards
Video
The invention that fixed lighthousesThe invention that fixed lighthouses
Play
Video

It wasn’t the light. It was the lens.

By Phil Edwards
Almanac
Coffee is now a substitute for chewing tobaccoCoffee is now a substitute for chewing tobacco
Almanac

The way we chew now.

By Joseph Stromberg
Video
How tag became a professional sportHow tag became a professional sport
Play
Video

Tag went from childhood game to competitive spectacle. This is how.

By Phil Edwards
Politics
Mike Pompeo’s RNC speech will place him as the most partisan secretary of state in decadesMike Pompeo’s RNC speech will place him as the most partisan secretary of state in decades
Politics

“We should not be using American diplomacy for partisan political purposes,” a State Department official critical of Pompeo’s upcoming address told Vox.

By Alex Ward
Video
How slow motion changed moviesHow slow motion changed movies
Play
Video

Slow-mo is inescapable. Here’s how it happened.

By Phil Edwards