Download Astronomy Invention and Exploration Timeline

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Astrophotography wikipedia , lookup

James Webb Space Telescope wikipedia , lookup

Lost Cosmonauts wikipedia , lookup

Satellite system (astronomy) wikipedia , lookup

Space warfare wikipedia , lookup

Outer space wikipedia , lookup

International Ultraviolet Explorer wikipedia , lookup

Observational astronomy wikipedia , lookup

U.S. space exploration history on U.S. stamps wikipedia , lookup

Astrobiology wikipedia , lookup

Spitzer Space Telescope wikipedia , lookup

Extraterrestrial life wikipedia , lookup

Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems wikipedia , lookup

Space exploration wikipedia , lookup

Timeline of astronomy wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Astronomy Invention and
Exploration Timeline














1609: Kepler publishes Brahe's calculation of the orbit of Mars. Kepler
publishes his first two laws of planetary motion.
1610: Galileo discovers Jupiter's 4 largest moons.
1613: Galileo publishes work on sunspots.
1619: Kepler publishes De cometis and Harmonice mundi, in which he
announces his third law of planetary motion.
1632: Galileo publishes Dialogo sopra I due massimi sistemi del mondo,
supporting Copernicus' view that the planets circled the sun.
1633: Inquisition forces Galileo to recant his belief in Copernican theory.
1642: Galileo dies.
1655: Dutch mathematician Christiaan Huygens develops a new method
for grinding telescope lenses, making a more powerful telescope, and
discovers the rings and one moon of Saturn.
1656: Christiaan Huygens invents a pendulum clock and discovers that
Saturn's "handles" are in fact rings.
1659: Anglo-Irish physicist and chemist Robert Boyle develops an air
pump for creating vacuums, confirms Galileo's view that bodies fall in a
vacuum at the same rate, regardless of weight; discovers that sound does
not travel in a vacuum.
1660: Robert Hooke of London claims he invented and applied the
hairspring to the balance wheel. However, the invention is widely credited
to Christiaan Huygens and Abbé d'Hautefeuille who simultaneously
developed the use of a hairspring with the balance wheel in 1674.
1664: Isaac Newton experiments with gravity. The Great Red Spot on
Jupiter is observed by Robert Hooke.
1666: Isaac Newton develops calculus (fluxions). Cassini discovers the
polar ice caps on Mars.
1668: Isaac Newton invents a reflecting telescope.




















1669: Isaac Newton in England and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibrniz in
Germany determine the principles of calculus at the same time. (The
name is derived from the Latin word for pebble, referring to the use of
pebble for counting.) Robert Hooke observes that the star Gamma
Draconis has a parallax of 30 seconds of arc.
1675: Leibniz determines integral and differential calculus. Christian
Huygens patents the pocket watch. Foundation of the Royal Greenwich
Observatory.
1678: Christiaan Huygens discovers the
polarization of light.
1680: First publication of "Old Moore's
Almanack", which later becomes known
as "Vox stellarum".
1682: Edmond Halley discovers Halley's comet.
1687: Isaac Newton describes the theory of gravity. The era of modern
physics is inaugurated by the publication of his Mathematical Principles of
Natural Philosophy, commonly called the Principia'. It was published in
Latin and did not appear in English until 1729.
1688: Newton constructs the first reflecting telescope.
1701: Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius devises the centigrade
temperature scale.
1705: Edmund Halley predicts that the comet spotted in 1682 will return in
1758.
1754: The heliometer, a device designed to measure the diameter of the
sun, is invented by John Dollond. It is also used to measure distances
between stars.
1757: John Campbell invents the sextant.
1758: Dolland invents a chromatic lens. As predicted by Edmund Halley,
the 1682 comet returns, and is thereafter named Halley's Comet.
1762: James Bradley publishes a star catalogue, containing the measured
positions of 60,000 stars.
1781: William Herschel discovers Uranus and recognizes star systems
outside our galaxy.
1796: Pierre Laplace develops the theory of the origin of the universe.
1798: Laplace predicts the existence of black holes.
1801: Thomas Young publishes proof of the principle of interference of
light, supporting the wave theory of light. The first asteroid is discovered
when Giuseppe Piazzi identifies Ceres.
1820: The Royal Astronomical Society is founded.
1838: Friedrich Bessel makes the first measurement of the distance of a
star from the Earth, calculating the distance of 61 Cygni to be
approximately 6 light years away; the true value is later calculated as
approximately 12 light years.
1840: John Draper makes the first daguerreotype image of the Moon.





















1846: The 8th planet, Neptune, is
discovered by Johann Galle.
1849: The first US astronomical
publication is instigated: the
Astronomical Journal.
1850: William Bond takes the first photographic image of a star (Vega).
1865: Jules Verne publishes From Here to the Earth, mentioning the exact
velocity that the cannon shot the three travelers to the moon (an object
must have a velocity of seven miles a second to escape the Earth's
gravity).
1866: Great Leonid meteor showers.
1887: AA Michelson and EW Morley experimentally demonstrate the
constancy of the speed of light.
1895: Konstantin Tsiolkovsky publishes a series of papers describing
space flight.
1900: Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck, in a lecture to the German Physical
Society, announces that matter absorbs heat energy and emits light
energy discontinuously, giving birth to quantum mechanics.
1903:Orville Wright launches first powered flight in history, flying at Kitty
Hawk for 12 seconds - 4 flights were made on 17 December. Earlier that
year, Russian physicist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky claimed, with complex
mathematical theories that man will one day travel in space and occupy
planets. Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky publishes The Investigation
of Outer Space by Means of Reaction Apparatus.
1904:Discovery of interstellar matter by Johannes Hartmann.
1905:Albert Einstein publishes "theory of relativity."
1906:An explosion at Tunguska, Siberia, is attributed to comet fragments.
1915:Discovery of Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to the Earth (except
the Sun).
1919:International Astronomical Union founded.
1924:Edwin Hubble proves that galaxies are systems independent of the
Milky Way.
1930:Clyde Tombaugh discovers the 9th planet, Pluto.
1931:Karl Jansky invents radio astronomy
1939:Frank J Whittle invents the jet engine. Robert Watson-Watt invents
radar.
1945: Radar contact is established with the Moon. Arthur C Clarke
proposes communications satellites in geosynchronous orbit above the
Earth - by 1965 his visionary ideas become reality.
1947: Chuck Yeager breaks the sound barrier in the Bell X-1 rocket plane.
1948:The Hale reflector telescope is installed at the Mount Palomar
observatory in California.
1949:Rocket testing ground is established at Cape Canaveral.
























1951:First space flight by living creatures when
US sends 4 monkeys into the stratosphere.
1955:The Jodrell Bank telescope is completed.
1957:USSR launches the Sputnik 1 satellite into
space.
1958 NASA founded.
1959:First pictures of far side of the moon by Luna
III.
1961: Yuri Gagarin is the first man in space. Alan
B. Shephard Jr is the first American in space.
1962:John Glenn becomes first American to orbit earth in space. The first
X-ray source is discovered in Scorpius.
1963:Velentina Tereshklova becomes first woman in space in Vostok 6.
First quasar discovered.
1965:Soviet astronaut Alexei Leonov makes the first space walk.
1966: Star Trek debuts on NBC. Neil Armstrong and David Scott makes
the first space docking in Gemini 8. Luna IX probe lands on the Moon,
while Venera III makes a landing on Venus.
1967:Bell and Hewish discover the first pulsar
1969:Neil Armstrong is the first man on the moon
followed by Buzz Aldrin in Apollo 11.
1970:Apollo 13 forced to abort Lunar Mission
when oxygen tank explodes. Crew managed safe
return to Earth.
1971:The Russians launch Salyut I, the first orbital
space station.
1975:Soviet Soyuz 19 docks with Apollo 18. Venera IX makes a landing
on Venus and relays pictures of the planet back to the Earth
1976:Viking I lands on Mars.
1977:Star Wars debuts. Rings around Uranus discovered. The Voyager
deep space probes are launched.
1978:Pioneer 1 and 2 reach Venus 1978 James Christy discovers Charon,
a moon of Pluto.
1979-1981:The Voyager spacecraft pass Jupiter and Saturn, relaying an
enormous amount of information back.
1981:Shuttle Columbia launched.
1982: Rings around Neptune discovered.
1983:Sally Ride is first US woman in space. Pioneer 10 becomes the first
man-made object to travel beyond the solar system.
1986:Soviet Union launches Mir space station. Space Shuttle Challenger
explodes, killing all aboard. Voyager 2 reaches Uranus, finding 6 new
moons.
1987:Supernova SN1987A flares up, becoming the first supernova visible
to the naked eye since 1604.





1989:Voyager 2 reaches Neptune, discovering a ring system and 8
moons.
1990:Hubble space telescope launched.
1991:Helen Sharman becomes the first British astronaut, on Soyuz TM12.
1992: COBE satellite discovers ripples from the Big Bang. NASA launches
the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) program.
1994: An asteroid passes earth at only 160 000km (100,000 miles).
Hubble Space Telescope finds evidence for a black hole at the centre of
the M87 galaxy.






1996:NASA scientists announce the possible discovery of
proof of living organisms on a Mars meteorite in Antarctica.
1997:First ever space funeral when Timothy Leary's ashes is
launched into space. US space probe pathfinder lands on
Mars. World's first university, where Aristotle and Socrates
taught, is discovered in Athens.
1998:Construction started on the International Space
Station. Supernova observations suggest that the universe is
expanding at an increased rate.
2003: Spirit and Opportunity, two rovers, are launched and
land on Mars.
2007: Launched in August by NASA, the Phoenix Mars
Mission is designed to study the history of water and
habitability of Martian soil.