Space Topics: Pluto and Charon
The Discovery of a Planet
Part 2: Out of the Six-Planet World
Since humans first set their eyes to the stars, they noticed that a few of
these bright objects behaved differently from the others. Whereas all the stars
moved together, revolving around the Earth once every 24 hours, five appeared
to move within the firmament among the other stars. Accordingly, they were
named “planets,” meaning “wanderers” in Greek. By the
17th century leading astronomers, following the teachings of Copernicus, had
recognized that the planets revolve around the Sun, and that the Earth itself
is also a planet. This brought the total number of planets to six: Mercury,
Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
All of these planets had been known since antiquity, and their progress in
the sky measured and recorded carefully for nearly 2000 years. Their number
seemed so well established that astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571 - 1630), who
was the first to correctly calculate the orbits of the planets, devoted a large
part of his Mysterium Cosmographicum (1596) to explaining why there had to
be exactly six planets. It was a comforting view of a closed and familiar “system
of the world,” which accorded well with prevailing beliefs in an orderly
universe guided by divine wisdom.
But in 1781 the system of the planets received a jolt from which it would
never recover. On the 13th of March William Herschel, a German-born Englishman,
master craftsman and dedicated astronomer, trained his 6.2 inch reflector telescope
at the sky. “While I was examining the small stars in the neighborhood
of H Geminorum,” he wrote later, “I perceived one that was visibly
larger than the rest.” Further observations showed that the large “star” appeared
to be moving among the other stars, and it was soon recognized as a planet,
orbiting the Sun beyond Saturn. After several name changes which included “The
Georgian Star” (Herschel’s own preference) and simply “Herschel,” the
seventh planet became known as Uranus.
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William Herschel (1738-1822)
Portrait by John Russell. Herschell discovered the planet Uranus in 1781.
Credit: Greenwich Royal Observatory |
Once the lid was blown off the old six-planet system, there no longer seemed
to be an upper limit to the number of possible planets. If Uranus had been
hiding all these centuries in the far reaches of the Solar System, could there
not be other planets lurking even further away? A close analysis of the orbits
of Saturn and Uranus showed that this might indeed be the case. Something,
it appeared, was causing perturbations in the smooth elliptical orbits of these
two outer planets. The most likely explanation was that an unknown planet was
exerting a gravitational pull on its neighbors, causing them to stray from
their calculated orbits. Finding that planet, or even figuring out where to
look for it, proved to be a daunting task.
When the 8th planet, now known as Neptune, was finally detected in 1846, it
was the occasion of one of the most celebrated controversies in the history
of science. Two young astronomers – John Couch Adams in England, and
Urbain J. J. Leverrier in France – had independently calculated near-identical
orbits for the missing planet based on the orbital irregularities of Saturn
and Uranus. Being relatively unknown and lacking professional standing, both
had trouble getting observational astronomers to follow up on their calculations
and search for the planet. Finally, on the night of September 23, 1846, astronomer
Johann Galle of the Berlin Observatory tested Leverrier’s prediction
and almost immediately found the planet. The priority dispute that followed
between Adams and Leverrier and their respective champions was to rock the
astronomical community in both England and France for decades to come.
--Amir Alexander
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