TOOLSicon.jpg (5338 bytes) Exploring The Planets
Tools Of Exploration

Earth-based Observations

 

A new era in the exploration of the planets began when Galileo focused his primitive telescope on the Moon. No longer were the planets mere points of light, but other worlds. The emphasis in planetary astronomy shifted from explaining the planets' motions to studying their natures.

 

Telescopic Observation


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1851 Daguerreotype

As better telescopes were developed, astronomers produced more accurate maps of the Moon than the sketches of Galileo's day. This is a copy of the earliest known photograph of the Moon, a daguerreotype taken in 1851. The development of photography was important in astronomy. Still, the human eye can discern more detail than could be captured on a photographic plate.

This photograph is typical of Mars' appearance as seen through a large optical telescope on Earth.
NASA Image

Here is how Earth would appear with a similar telescope from Mars. Is this the Earth you know?
NASA Image


Radar Astronomy


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Radar astronomy was born in 1946, when a radio signal was sent from Earth and "bounced" off the surface of the Moon. Radar was first reflected off the surface of Venus in 1961. This 1988 radar map of the surface of Venus was produced by the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico.
Courtesy of D. B. Campbell, Cornell University


Radio Astronomy


Goldstone 70-meter antenna
NASA photograph

All objects with a temperature above absolute zero emit some radiation. Objects hotter than about 1000° C (1800° F) emit radiation in the visible wavelengths -- light humans see. Most planetary bodies, however, are cooler than a few hundred degrees and emit very short radio waves (microwaves). The amount of microwave energy emitted by a planet is a measure of its temperature. These microwaves can be detected by sensitive radio telescopes with large antennas.


Airborne and Orbital Telescopes...


Tools of Exploration
Earth-based Observations || Airborne and Orbital Telescopes || Probes and Fly-by Spacecraft
Orbiters || Landers || Rovers || Sample Return

©2002 National Air and Space Museum