1755 - Drawing on Wright's work, Immanuel Kant conjectures that the galaxy is a rotating disk of stars held together by gravity, and that the nebulae are separate such galaxies,
1845 - Lord Rosse discovers a nebula with a distinct spiral shape
1918 - Harlow Shapley demonstrates that globular clusters are arranged in an spheroid or halo whose center is not the Earth, decides, correctly, that its center is the center of the galaxy,
1920 - Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis debate whether or not the spiral nebulae lie within the Milky Way,
1959 - Hundreds of radio sources are detected by the Cambridge Interferometer which produces the 3C catalogue. Many of these are later found to be distant quasars and radio galaxies
1960 - Thomas Matthews determines the radio position of the 3C source 3C48 to within 5",
1960 - Allan Sandage optically studies 3C48 and observes an unusual blue quasistellar object,
1962 - Cyril Hazard , M.B. Mackey, and A.J. Shimmins use lunar occultations to determine a precise position for the quasar3C273 and deduce that it is a double source,
1963 - Maarten Schmidt identifies the redshifted Balmer lines from the quasar 3C273
1973 - Jeremiah Ostriker and James Peebles discover that the amount of visible matter in the disks of typical spiral galaxies is not enough for Newtonian gravitation to keep the disks from flying apart or drastically changing shape,
1974 - B.L. Fanaroff and J.M. Riley distinguish between edge-darkened (FR I) and edge-brightened (FR II) radio sources,
1978 - Steve Gregory and Laird Thompson describe the Coma supercluster,
1978 - Vera Rubin, Kent Ford , N. Thonnard, and Albert Bosma measure the rotation curves of several spiral galaxies and find significant deviations from what is predicted by the Newtonian gravitation of visible stars,
1981 - Robert Kirshner , August Oemler , Paul Schechter , and Stephen Shectman find evidence for a giant void in Boötes with a diameter of approximately 100 million light years,
1985 - Robert Antonucci and J. Miller discover that the Seyfert II galaxy NGC 1068 has broad lines which can only be seen in polarized reflected light,
1987 - David Burstein , Roger Davies, Alan Dressler , Sandra Faber, Donald Lynden-Bell, R.J. Terlevich, and Gary Wegner claim that a large group of galaxies within about 200 million light years of the Milky Way are moving together towards the "Great Attractor" in the direction of Hydra and Centaurus,
1989 - Margaret Geller and John Huchra discover the "Great Wall", a sheet of galaxies more than 500 million light years long and 200 million wide, but only 15 million light years thick,
1990 - Michael Rowan-Robinson and Tom Broadhurst discover that the IRAS galaxy [[IRAS_F10214%2B4724]] is the brightest known object in the Universe,