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Nonetheless, this procedure just works with the planets nearest to earth since Uranus and Neptune, albeit extremely huge, are up to this point away that they shouldn't be visible with the unaided eye; they are just noticeable with telescopes. Along these lines, our progenitors struggled with tracking down them. For instance, in 1801, the cosmologist William Herschel found the planet Uranus because of his perceptions with his telescope.
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In 1960 the space expert John Flamsteed noticed the planet Uranus no less than multiple times and grouped it as 34 Tauri; that is, as a star, he kicked the bucket without acknowledging he had found Uranus very nearly 100 years before William Herschell. Additionally, in 1612 space expert Galileo Galilei noticed Neptune more than once while noticing the planet Jupiter.
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In any case, similarly as Flamsteed portrayed it as a star and not a planet, Galileo found Neptune very nearly 200 years before Leverrier yet never knew it. Much more as of late, space expert Brown, who found the bantam planet Eris at the Palomar Observatory in 2005, found that the main picture of this body was on a visual plate made by similar telescope in 1955, over quite a while back! Since there are billions of stars in the universe, distinguishing an item however little as a planet may be truly challenging, predominantly since planets, in contrast to stars, don't produce their light.
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