Space Topics: Pluto and Charon
The Discovery of a Planet
Part 3: Planet X
The discovery of Neptune accounted for nearly all the unexplained motions
of the outer planets of the Solar System. Nevertheless, several astronomers
insisted that some unexplained residual motions remained, pointing to the presence
of a ninth planet beyond the orbit of Neptune. Chief among the proponents of
the “Trans-Neptunian Planet” was Percival Lowell (1855 – 1916),
a traveler and idealist, scion to a wealthy and distinguished Boston “brahmin” family.
At a time of increasing professionalization in the ancient art of observational
astronomy, Lowell was a throwback to an earlier day. Despite his keen mathematical
talent, which early caught the attention of Harvard’s Benjamin Peirce,
he chose not to pursue a conventional academic career. Instead he joined the
diplomatic corps, traveled in the Far East and published vivid accounts of
his experiences in Korea and Japan.
Percival Lowell (1855-1916)
Credit: Lowell Observatory Archives
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In the 1890’s Lowell became the leading advocate of the theory that
Mars was crisscrossed by an elaborate network of “canals.” Lowell
believed that the canals were the work of an intelligent alien race, forced
to divert water from the polar ice-caps by the drying up of surface water on
their planet. In 1894 he founded the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona,
for the express purpose of proving his views.
Sadly for Lowell, his theory of the Mars canals remained very much the minority
view in the astronomical community. Where Lowell saw and drew canals, other
saw nothing but patches of varying shades and colors on the surface of the
Red Planet. Even at Flagstaff, where observations were conducted by his faithful
students and assistants, no conclusive evidence could be produced for the existence
of the Mars canals. Lowell’s reputation suffered, as many practicing
astronomers came to view him as a dreamer and an amateur rather than as a professional
colleague. The reputations of the observatory and the astornomers Lowell employed
there suffered as well, and they felt marginalized in wider astronomical circles.
Perhaps in order to reestablish himself in the astronomical world, Lowell
began to focus his attention on the question of a planet beyond the orbit of
Neptune. Nothing, after all, would restore his reputation as effectively as
the discovery of a 9th planet orbiting the Sun. By applying his mathematical
skills to the perturbations in the predicted movements of the outer planets
he became convinced that the planet was indeed lurking out there, beyond the
orbit of Neptune. Based on his calculation he predicted it would be a gas giant,
comparable in mass to Neptune. He named it “Planet X.”
Between 1905 and his death in 1916 Lowell conducted several searches for Planet
X at his Flagstaff observatory. Using a 5 inch refractor, and later a 40 inch
reflector telescope, Lowell conducted systematic observations of the regions
where he expected the planet to be found. Unlike the discoveries of the previous
centuries, which were accomplished by direct observation through an eye-piece,
Lowell made use of new photographic techniques not available to his predecessors.
By placing the plates at the telescope’s focus he acquired a detailed
photographic image of the sky at that point. By exposing another photographic
plate to the same region of the sky a few days later, Lowell could compare
the two images for any sign of movement among the stars. In the early years
he did so by simply placing the plates side by side for comparison, but in
1911 he acquire a blink comparator from Germany – the same one that Clyde
Tombaugh would use 19 years later. This allowed for far more efficient and
accurate comparisons to be made between the plates, but still, no planet was
found. When Lowell died unexpectedly at Flagstaff in 1916 the observatory became
entangled in a costly legal battle with his widow, which lasted for close to
ten years. The search for Planet X was put on hold.
It was not until 1927, with their legal troubles behind them, that the staff
of the Lowell observatory felt ready to continue in the quest of their founder.
Under the leadership of Dr, V. M. Slipher, a former Lowell assistant who was
now the observatory’s director, the observatory prepared to renew the
search. With help from Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Percival’s younger brother
who was now President of Harvard, they ordered a brand new 13 inch refractor
telescope that would be devoted solely to the search for Planet X.
For the Lowell Observatory much was at stake. The Mars canal debate had cast
a long shadow on the observatory and its staff, which had not lifted even years
after Lowell’s death. And although V. M. Slipher was conducting groundbreaking
research at the observatory into the spectrum and speed of receding galaxies,
nothing would redeem the name of the observatory and its founder like the discovery
of the planet he predicted. As the new telescope was being assembled in its purpose-built
dome in 1928, Slipher began to consider who would best be suited to conduct the
hard nightly routine of a systematic planet search. He himself, and the observatory’s
other astronomers, his brother E. C. Slipher and C. O. Lampland, were each busy
with their own lines of research. Hiring another professional astronomer was
too expensive for the observatory’s strained budget, and Slipher was
also concerned about bringing on board an additional astronomer with his own
research agenda. It was around that time that he received a letter from a farm
boy in Kansas containing drawings of Mars and Jupiter taken with a home-built
telescope. His name was Clyde Tombaugh.
--Amir Alexander
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