orin stepanek wrote:Just how do standard candles work? I mean; It's still just educated guess work, isn't it?
I suppose you could say that every conclusion drawn from an observation is an "educated guess". But that's probably not the term I'd use.
A standard candle is a light source (normally a star) with a known brightness. If you know the brightness, you can estimate the distance. Certainly there are assumptions involved: that the object is actually what we think it is, that the rules of physics are the same at its location as they are nearby, that nothing in the intervening space is absorbing light. Every observation comes with assumptions, though; this is no different. The assumptions seem reasonable, and standard candle measurements are consistent with each other (and with other measurements obtained by different methods, as outlined in your distance ladder reference), so there is a high level of confidence that the assumptions are valid.