
Chronology of Solar System Discovery
Prior to 1600
From the dawn of history until the beginning of the 17th century the known universe
consisted of only 8 bodies:
Sun
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Moon
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
plus the "fixed" stars.
In Europe, the prevailing view was the Ptolemaic
system with the Earth at the center and the other bodies revolving around it.
The 17th Century
In 1610 Galileo Galilei
first turned a telescope on the heavens and the universe exploded.
By the end of the 17th century, 9 new bodies had been discovered
and Copernicus's heliocentric
theory was widely accepted.
The total number of known bodies had more than doubled to 17:
Callisto 1610 Galileo Galilei
Europa 1610 Galileo Galilei
Ganymede 1610 Galileo Galilei
Io 1610 Galileo Galilei
Titan 1655 Christiaan Huygens
Iapetus 1671 Giovanni Domenico Cassini
Rhea 1672 Giovanni Domenico Cassini
Dione 1684 Giovanni Domenico Cassini
Tethys 1684 Giovanni Domenico Cassini
The 18th Century
Only 5 new bodies (not counting comets)
were discovered
in the 18th century (all by William Herschel)
bringing the total to 22:
Uranus 1781 William Herschel
Oberon 1787 William Herschel
Titania 1787 William Herschel
Enceladus 1789 William Herschel
Mimas 1789 William Herschel
The 19th Century
The number of bodies in the solar system increased dramatically in the
19th century with the discovery of the asteroids
(464 of which were known at by 1899)
but only 9 more "major" bodies were discovered.
The number of major bodies rose to 31 (almost doubling the 17th century total):
Neptune 1846 Johann Gotfried Galle, Urbain Jean Joseph Le Verrier
Triton 1846 William Lassell
Hyperion 1848 William Cranch Bond
Ariel 1851 William Lassell
Umbriel 1851 William Lassell
Phobos 1877 Asaph Hall
Deimos 1877 Asaph Hall
Amalthea 1892 Edward Emerson Barnard
Phoebe 1898 William Henry Pickering
The 20th Century
So far, in 20th century 40 more major bodies (and thousands of comets and asteroids)
have been discovered
(27 by the Voyager probes)
more than doubling the count again to 71:
Himalia 1904 C. Perrine
Elara 1905 C. Perrine
Pasiphae 1908 P. Melotte
Sinope 1914 S. Nicholson
Pluto 1930 Clyde W. Tombaugh
Carme 1938 S. Nicholson
Lysithea 1938 S. Nicholson
Miranda 1948 Gerard Kuiper
Nereid 1949 Gerard Kuiper
Ananke 1951 S. Nicholson
Janus 1966 Audouin Dollfus
Leda 1974 Charles T. Kowal
Charon 1978 J. Christy
Adrastea 1979 D. Jewitt & E. Danielson
Metis 1979 Stephen Synnott
Thebe 1979 Stephen Synnott
Epimetheus 1980 R. Walker
Atlas 1980 R. Terrile
Calypso 1980 Pascu et. al.
Helene 1980 P. Laques & J. Lecacheus
Pandora 1980 S. Collins et. al.
Prometheus 1980 S. Collins et. al.
Telesto 1980 Reitsema et. al.
Puck 1985 Voyager 2
Belinda 1986 Voyager 2
Bianca 1986 Voyager 2
Cordelia 1986 Voyager 2
Cressida 1986 Voyager 2
Desdemona 1986 Voyager 2
Juliet 1986 Voyager 2
Ophelia 1986 Voyager 2
Portia 1986 Voyager 2
Rosalind 1986 Voyager 2
Despina 1989 Voyager 2
Galatea 1989 Voyager 2
Larissa 1989 Voyager 2
Naiad 1989 Voyager 2
Proteus 1989 Voyager 2
Thalassa 1989 Voyager 2
Pan 1990 Showalter
Space History