Timeline of Solar System astronomy

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Timeline of Solar System astronomy

Contents

[edit] Antiquity

[edit] Middle Ages

[edit] Renaissance

[edit] 18th century

  • 1705 – Edmond Halley publicly predicts the periodicity of Halley's Comet and computes its expected path of return in 1757
  • 1715 – Edmond Halley calculates the shadow path of a solar eclipse
  • 1716 – Edmond Halley suggests a high-precision measurement of the Sun-Earth distance by timing the transit of Venus
  • 1718- Edmond Halley discovers proper motion, dispelling the concept of the "fixed stars".
  • 1729 – James Bradley determines the cause of the aberration of starlight, providing the first direct evidence of the Earth's motion
  • 1755 – Immanuel Kant first formulates the nebular hypothesis of solar system formation.
  • 1758 – Johann Palitzsch observes the return of Halley's comet. The interference of Jupiter's orbit had slowed the return by 618 days. Parisian astronomer La Caille suggests it should be named Halley's comet.
  • 1766 – Johann Titius finds the Titius-Bode rule for planetary distances
  • 1772 – Johann Bode publicizes the Titius-Bode rule for planetary distances
  • 1781 – William Herschel discovers Uranus during a telescopic survey of the northern sky
  • 1787 – Herschel discovers Uranus's moons Titania and Oberon
  • 1789 – Herschel discovers Saturn's moons Enceladus and Mimas
  • 1796 – Pierre Laplace re-states the nebular hypothesis for the formation of the solar system from a spinning nebula of gas and dust

[edit] 19th century

[edit] 1900–1975

  • 1906 – Max Wolf discovers the Trojan asteroid Achilles
  • 1915 - Robert Innes discovers Proxima Centauri, the closest star to Earth after the Sun
  • 1919 – Arthur Stanley Eddington uses a solar eclipse to successfully test Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity
  • 1930 – Clyde Tombaugh discovers Pluto
  • 1930 – Seth Nicholson measures the surface temperature of the Moon
  • 1944 – Gerard Kuiper discovers that the satellite Titan has a substantial atmosphere
  • 1946 – American launch of a camera-equipped V-2 rocket provides the first image of the Earth from space
  • 1949 – Gerard Kuiper discovers Uranus's moon Miranda and Neptune's moon Nereid
  • 1950 – Jan Oort suggests the presence of a cometary Oort cloud
  • 1951 – Kuiper argues for an annular reservoir of comets between 40-100 astronomical units from the Sun, the Kuiper belt
  • 1959 – Luna 3 sends the first images of the far side of the Moon
  • 1962 – The Mariner 2 Venus flyby performs the first closeup observations of another planet
  • 1964 – The Mariner 4 spacecraft provides the first detailed images of the surface of Mars
  • 1966 – The Luna 9 Moon lander provides the first images from the surface of another celestial body
  • 1967 – Venera 4 provides the first information on Venus's atmosphere
  • 1968 – The Apollo 8 manned lunar mission provides the first image ever taken of the sphere of the Earth.
  • 1970 – The Venera 7 Venus lander sends back the first information ever successfully obtained from the surface of another planet
  • 1971 – The Mariner 9 Mars spacecraft becomes the first to successfully orbit another planet. It provides the first detailed maps of the Martian surface, discovering much of the planet's topography, including the volcano Olympus Mons and the canyon system Valles Marineris, which is named in its honor.
  • 1971 – Mars 3 lands on Mars, and transmits the first partial image from the surface of another planet.
  • 1973 – Skylab astronauts discover the Sun's coronal holes.
  • 1973 – Pioneer 10 flies by Jupiter, providing the first closeup images of the planet and revealing its intense radiation belts.
  • 1974 – Mariner 10 provides the first closeup images of the surface of Mercury.
  • 1975 – Venera 9 becomes the first probe to successfully transmit images from the surface of Venus.

[edit] 1975–2000

[edit] 2001–Present

[edit] References

  1. ^ A. Sachs (May 2, 1974), "Babylonian Observational Astronomy", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London (Royal Society of London) 276 (1257): 43-50 [45 & 48-9], JSTOR 74273 
  2. ^ Adi Setia (2004), "Fakhr Al-Din Al-Razi on Physics and the Nature of the Physical World: A Preliminary Survey", Islam & Science 2, http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0QYQ/is_2_2/ai_n9532826/, retrieved 2010-03-02 
  3. ^ Livingston, John W. (1971), "Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah: A Fourteenth Century Defense against Astrological Divination and Alchemical Transmutation", Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (1): 96–103 [99], doi:10.2307/600445 

[edit] See also

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