planet: Identification of the Solar Planets
Identification of the Solar Planets
The ancient Greeks applied the term
With the development of the telescope other planets became visible. Uranus, detected in 1781 by Sir William Herschel, was the first planet discovered in modern times. Neptune was discovered in 1846 as the result of a mathematical analysis of the irregularities in the motion of Uranus, and the dwarf planet Pluto, whose existence was predicted from the perturbations of both Uranus and Neptune, was found in 1930. In addition to the major planets, the telescope has revealed thousands of minor planets, or asteroids, which orbit the sun in a bandlike cluster between Mars and Jupiter; the largest of these, the dwarf planet Ceres, was also the first discovered (1801), and was regarded as a planet for many years. Additional minor planets have been discovered since 1992 beyond the orbit of Neptune in the Kuiper belt; at least one of these transneptunian objects, Eris, has a diameter (1,500 mi/2,400 km) slightly larger than that of Pluto. In 2016 researchers reported that peculiarities of the orbits of a number of the most distant known Kuiper belt objects would be best explained by the existence of a ninth planet with about 10 times the mass of Earth and an orbit that is 20 times farther from the sun than that of Neptune.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Discovery of the Extrasolar Planets
- Identification of the Solar Planets
- Classification of the Sun's Major Planets
- Bibliography
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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