Hans Lippershey
Uranus, which was discovered by Sir William HerschelPrior to the invention of the telescope, the only known planets were Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.Uranus was the first planet discovered by telescope.
Uranus was known to have 11 rings, however the Hubble space telescope discovered two more bringing the total to 13.
Titania and Oberon are two of the five major moons of Uranus. They were discovered by William Herschel in 1787.
He Discovered that Earth was not the center of the solar system , Jupiter Has four moons and Venus has light and dark phases, like a moon! He also discovered the rings of Saturn. All this using just one telescope? Galileo didn't invent the telescope, but he was the first person we know of to point a telescope into the skies - and discovered that Jupiter wasn't just a bright light in the sky, but was an enormous planet with moons of its own. The four largest are called the "Galilean" moons; Ganymede, Europa, Callisto and Io.
Galileo discovered the four largest moons of Jupiter and that Venus showed phases like those of the moon.
bobby and Whitney
Two guys named Hale and Bopp. Seriously. The comet was discovered independently by amateur astronomer and comet hunter Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp, who didn't own a telescope but was using the one owned by a friend.
Uranus, which was discovered by Sir William HerschelPrior to the invention of the telescope, the only known planets were Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.Uranus was the first planet discovered by telescope.
The first telescope was invented in 1608 by hans lippershey a glasses make in middleburg. after putting two lenses together he discovered that items were closer than before. Thus creating the telescope.
Two in our own solar system, and nearly 1,000 in orbit around other stars.
Cerium was discovered in two different places. It was discovered in Sweden by two people and then in Germany by a chemist, both in 1803.
Uranus was known to have 11 rings, however the Hubble space telescope discovered two more bringing the total to 13.
Titania and Oberon are two of the five major moons of Uranus. They were discovered by William Herschel in 1787.
Two elements were discovered in 1830: terbium and cerium. Terbium was discovered by Swedish chemist Carl Gustaf Mosander, while cerium was independently discovered by Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius and German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth.
William Herschel is the person who discovered the planet Uranus. The discovery took place on March 13, 1781. Herschel also discovered two of its moons as well as two of Saturn's moons.
On eyeglasses? Two lenses = bifocals Three lenses = Trofocals
You can answer this question if you know (or look up) two other pieces of information. 1) What are the names of all the planets? 2) What are the names of the planets you can see with the naked eye? If you can't see it with the naked eye, it must have required a telescope to discover it. The planets are, in order from their distance from the Sun: Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto (yes, I still count Pluto as a planet). The naked-eye planets are: Mercury Venus Earth (duh, look down) Mars Jupiter Saturn That leaves Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto as the planets discovered by telescope. Unless your professor believes that Pluto is not a planet, in which case the answer is Uranus and Neptune. And actually, if you look up information on these planets, you'll learn that Neptune and Pluto were "discovered" by noticing that something was disturbing (the astronomers say "perturbing") the orbits of other planets. Based on the disturbance, the position of the object was calculated. Then people looked for the object, and found it. So was the planet only "discovered" when someone saw it with a telescope? Or was it "discovered" by perturbation analysis and only "verified" with a telescope? If your professor believes the second one, then that leaves Uranus as the only planet discovered by telescope.