Mercury,
March/April 2001 Table of Contents
Improving
telescopes and techniques have spurred the discovery of new satellites.
by
William Sheehan
When
Galileo pointed his primitive 2-inch refractor at Jupiter in 1610,
little did he know that he would start a great moon chase that continues
to the present day. Galileo discovered four moons orbiting Jupiter,
forcing people to change their conception of the universe. As telescopes
and techniques improved, astronomers found more and more moons around
other planets. Today, astronomers have found nearly 100 planetary
satellites.
This
article traces the history of moon discoveries from Galileos
day to the late 1990s. Along the way, it talks about the great moon
discoverers, people like Giovanni Cassini, William Herschel, William
Lassell, Asaph Hall, Seth Nicholson, and Gerard Kuiper. The article
explains the new technologies that made new moon discoveries possible.
A table at the end of the article lists all of the moons discovered
through the end of 2000, along with the discoverers, year of discovery,
and basic data.
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