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The Planets .... brought to you by QuasArt Web Designs.

People
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English astronomer and mathematician. At the age of 24, Adams
was the first person to predict the position of a planetary mass
beyond Uranus. After Johann Gottfried
Galle confirmed the existence of Neptune
based on independent calculations done by Urbain Jean Joseph Le
Verrier, the two became embroiled in a dispute over priority.
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American astronomer. Barnard discovered Jupiter's
satellite Amalthea and Barnard's
star, the second-nearest star system to the Sun.
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German astronomer. He is known for the bogus "Bode's Law" which
attempts to explain the sizes of the planetary orbits.
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American astronomer. One of the earliest American astronomers
of note, Bond rose from poverty and overcame a lack of formal
education to become the first director of the Harvard College
Observatory. At the observatory, he studied Saturn
and (with William Lassell) discovered its
moon Hyperion.
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Danish astronomer. His accurate astronomical observations formed
the basis for Johannes Kepler's laws of
planetary motion.
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(Aka Jean Dominique) Italian-born French astronomer. Cassini was
the first director of the Royal Observatory in Paris. He discovered
four of Saturn's moons (Tethys,
Dione, Rhea and
Iapetus) and the major gap in its rings.
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Polish astronomer who advanced the heliocentric
theory that the earth and other planets revolve around the Sun.
This was highly controversial at the time; the Ptolemaic
view of the universe, which was the prevailing theory for more
than 1000 years, was deeply ingrained in the prevailing philosophy
and religion.
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German-American physicist. Einstein developed the Special and
General Theories of Relativity,
which along with Quantum Mechanics, forms the foundation of modern
physics.
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American public official, writer, and scientist. Franklin played
a major role in the American Revolution and helped draft the Constitution.
His numerous scientific and practical innovations include the
lightning rod, bifocal spectacles, and a stove.
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German astronomer. Galle, along with Heinrich Louis d'Arrest,
made the first observation of Neptune
based on calculations by Urbain Jean Joseph Le
Verrier. Although Galle was the first to observe Neptune,
its discovery is usually credited to John Couch
Adams (who made an earlier calculation) and Le Verrier.
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Italian astronomer and physicist. The first to use a telescope
to study the stars. Discoverer of the first moons of an extraterrestrial
body (see Galilean Moons). Galileo
was an outspoken supporter of Copernicus's
heliocentric theory. In
reaction to Galileo, the Church declared it heresy to teach that
the Earth moved and imprisoned him. The Church clung to this position
for 350 years until Galileo was formally exonerated in 1992.
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King of Great Britain and Ireland (1760-1820). His government's
policies fed American colonial discontent, leading to revolution
in 1776.
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English astronomer. Halley applied Newton's
laws of motion to predict correctly the period of the comet which
now bears his name.
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British astronomer. Herschel discovered Uranus
and cataloged more than 800 double stars and 2,500 nebulae.
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Dutch physicist and astronomer. Huygens first described the nature
of Saturn's rings (1655) and discovered
its moon Titan. He also pioneered the
use of the pendulum in clocks.
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German astronomer and mathematician. Considered a founder of modern
astronomy, he formulated the famous three laws of planetary
motion. They comprise a quantitative formulation of Copernicus's
theory that the planets revolve around the Sun.
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American astronomer. Kowal discovered Leda
and comet-like object Chiron.
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Dutch-born American astronomer. Kuiper is best known for his study
of the surface of the Moon. He discovered
Miranda and Nereid
and found an atmosphere on Titan.
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French mathematician and astronomer. Lagrange made a number of
contributions to the study of celestial mechanics. He showed that
three bodies can lie at the apexes of an equilateral triangle
which rotates in its plane. If one of the bodies is sufficiently
massive compared with the other two, then the triangular configuration
is apparently stable. Several examples are known in the solar
system: Such bodies are sometimes refered to as Trojans.
The leading apex of the triangle is known as the leading Lagrange
point or L4; the trailing apex is the trailing Lagrange point
or L5.
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British astronomer. Lassell discovered Neptune's
largest satellite, Triton and (with
William Cranch Bond) discovered Saturn's
moon Hyperion. A successful brewer
before turning to astronomy.
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French astronomer. La Verrier's prediction of the position of
an undiscovered planet (Neptune) that
caused perturbations in the orbit of Uranus
was the first to be confirmed (by Johann Gottfried Galle).
However, John Couch Adams had made a similar
prediction some months earlier.
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American astronomer. He founded the Lowell Observatory in Arizona
(1894), where his studies of Mars led
him to believe that the planet was inhabited. His successors later
discovered Pluto.
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(Aka Mayr) German astronomer. Marius gave Jupiter's
"Galilean" moons their names.
He and Galileo both claimed to have discovered
them in 1610 and likely did so independently. They became involved
in a dispute over priority. Marius was also the first to observe
the Andromeda Nebula with a telescope and one of the first to
observe sunspots.
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English mathematician and physicist. Newton invented calculus,
discovered the classical laws of motion and gravity, built the
first reflecting telescope, and demonstrated the compound nature
of white light, in the process laying the foundations of spectroscopy.
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Dutch astronomer. Oort made major contributions to knowledge of
the structure and rotation of our galaxy. More or less as a sideline,
Oort studied comets as well. The result
of this work was a theory, now widely accepted, that the Sun is
surrounded by a distant cloud of cometary material, now called
the Oort Cloud, bits of which are occasionally hurled into
the Solar System as comets.
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Argentine-American astronomer. Perrine discovered Himalia
and Elara.
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American astronomer. His photographs of Mars, among the earliest
obtained, provided a basis for his opposition to Lowell's
observations of supposed canals on Mars. Discovered Saturn's
moon Phoebe.
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English writer best remembered for his satirical mock-epic poems
The Rape of the Lock and The Dunciad.
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Alexandrian astronomer, mathematician, and geographer who based
his astronomy on the belief that all heavenly bodies revolve around
the earth.
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English playwright and poet.
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American astronomer. Tombaugh discovered Pluto.
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American physicist. Van Allen discovered the Earth's
radiation belts, which now bear his name, with an instrument aboard
the first successful American satellite, Explorer 1.
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French writer. Verne is considered to be the founder of modern
science fiction. His novels include "Journey to the Center
of the Earth" and "From the Earth to the Moon".
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T
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P L A N E T S
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Planets
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Sun
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Mercury |
Venus | Earth
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Uranus |
Neptune |
Pluto
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