Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Who found Saturn?

Galileo Galilei was the first to observe Saturn with a telescope in 1610. Because of the crudeness of his telescope, he couldn't determine what the rings were. He incorrectly guessed that there were two large moons on either side of Saturn. Two years later when he viewed Saturn again, the "moons" had disappeared. We know now this is because Galileo was viewing the rings edge-on so that they were invisible, but at the time it was very confusing to Galileo. After another two years, Galileo viewed Saturn again and found that the "moons" had returned. He concluded that the rings were "arms" of some sort.




Galileo & his drawings 



Top drawing: Galileo's drawing of Saturn, 1610 

Bottom drawing: Galileo's drawing of Saturn, 1616 



A few years after Huygens' discoveries, an Italian-French astronomer by the name of Jean- Dominique Cassini discovered 4 other major moons of Saturn: Iapetus, Rhea, Tethys, and Dione. In 1675, Cassini discovered a narrow gap that splits Saturn's ring system into two parts, and the gap has since been known as the "Cassini Division." Because of his numerous contributions to our knowledge about the planet Saturn, Cassini was chosen as the name of the spacecraft flying to Saturn.
Jean-Dominique Cassini
Other major discoveries came later. During the 19th century, J.E. Keeler showed that the ring system is not a uniform sheet but actually comprised of small particles. Most recently, the Voyager spacecrafts (visiting in 1980-81) made discoveries about the composition and interaction of the rings.

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