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Moments of 1-Ceres (2)
For 2 centuries it was the largest known rock in the Solar System. The Texas-sized asteroid Ceres, about 930 Km (about 580 miles) across, was the first asteroid ever detected. The space rock was identified in 1801 by astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi, a monk in Sicily and the founding director of the Palermo Astronomical Observatory. He noted over a few nights a shifting point in the sky that wasn't one of the planets, their moons or a star. Thus, he discovered the rock. 

After discovering the asteroid, Piazzi was invited to join the Celestial Police, a group of 24 international astronomers looking for what they called "guest planets" between Mars and Jupiter. The Celestial Police noted that the spacing between planets was fairly regular, but that there was a large gap between Mars and Jupiter. 

Soon other small bodies were discovered in that region (Pallas in 1802, Juno in 1804 and Vesta in 1807), so the Celestial Police concluded that not just one, but many minor planets had to exist in a Main Asteroid Belt.
Parole chiave: Hubble Images - Asteroids and Planets

Moments of 1-Ceres (2)

For 2 centuries it was the largest known rock in the Solar System. The Texas-sized asteroid Ceres, about 930 Km (about 580 miles) across, was the first asteroid ever detected. The space rock was identified in 1801 by astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi, a monk in Sicily and the founding director of the Palermo Astronomical Observatory. He noted over a few nights a shifting point in the sky that wasn't one of the planets, their moons or a star. Thus, he discovered the rock.

After discovering the asteroid, Piazzi was invited to join the Celestial Police, a group of 24 international astronomers looking for what they called "guest planets" between Mars and Jupiter. The Celestial Police noted that the spacing between planets was fairly regular, but that there was a large gap between Mars and Jupiter.

Soon other small bodies were discovered in that region (Pallas in 1802, Juno in 1804 and Vesta in 1807), so the Celestial Police concluded that not just one, but many minor planets had to exist in a Main Asteroid Belt.

082-Craters-Unnamed_Crater-PIA15222-PCF-LXTT.jpg 006-Ceres.jpg 005-Ceres.jpg 000-Ceres~0.jpg 012-1-Ceres-PIA19620-PCF-LXTT-IPF.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:005-Ceres.jpg
Nome album:1-Ceres and 4-Vesta
Valutazione (7 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Hubble / Images / - / Asteroids / and / Planets
Copyright:NASA - Hubble Space Telescope
Dimensione del file:84 KiB
Data di inserimento:Ago 21, 2006
Dimensioni:2047 x 1021 pixels
Visualizzato:57 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=12410
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