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who discovered saturn

2007-03-13 09:10:14 · 13 answers · asked by Angela M 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

13 answers

Most astonomers have working eyes, and they can SEE it. Saturn's discoverer has probably been lost in time... since it's been visible to the naked eye since before mankind existed, no one can really lay claim to 'discovering' it.

2007-03-13 09:13:08 · answer #1 · answered by quantumclaustrophobe 7 · 3 0

I'm no scientist but I have seen Saturn with my own eyes. A scientist "Knows" things by one of two ways. First, they use acceptable authority as their sources. Acceptable authority are those sources that have been deemed accurate and precise by each individual scientist. The New England journal of medicine is considered a knowledgable authority but if a "scientist" believes something that the journal reports is false, then the scientist will test their own belief. Which is the second way a scientist "knows". Careful measuring and repeated testing is the only true method of "knowing".

2007-03-13 09:22:30 · answer #2 · answered by Wreynor 2 · 1 0

The same way everyone else does--look up in the sky. Saturn ins visible to the naked eye--and was known to the ancient civilizations long before the telescope was invented--but that --the telescope--is how Uranus and Neptune, as well as many other astronomical bodies--were discovered.

2007-03-13 09:21:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Please quote a peer-reveiwed article in a scientific booklet alongside with Nature or scientific American which states this certaintly that no life exists on different planets. the two that or admit what you merely wrote is entire bullshit. good now there's a robot rover on Mars referred to as interest that's searching for info of life. Scientists would not have spent billions of greenbacks putting it there in the event that they have been specific it would not locate something. Your tiny ideas looks at a loss for words between technology fiction and actuality. merely by way of fact a technology fiction teach portrays 'extraterrestrial beings' in any surroundings does no longer propose that such extraterrestrial beings exist. for this reason scientists place self belief in those products referred to as "info" incredibly than on the deluded imaginations of television teach script writers. No-one has ever seen an alien yet very almost each scientist and questioning individual interior the worldwide recognizes that, statistically speaking, life is extremely probably to exist previous Earth.

2016-12-14 18:10:50 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Saturn is known to be part of the night sky since we climbed down from the trees.
It was the outermost celestial object people in ancient times observed as to be a 'special object' in the skies for it's strange path it appears to perform over time.

Galileo Galilei figured it to be a planet in 1610

The first person suggesting it has rings was Christiaan Huygens in 1655. followed by Giovanni Cassini who figured that there is more than just one ring in 1675

2007-03-13 10:01:35 · answer #5 · answered by blondnirvana 5 · 0 0

Good news - it's still there! If you know how to recognise the constellation Leo, go and have a look - Saturn's just to the right of the head.

2007-03-13 12:28:56 · answer #6 · answered by Iridflare 7 · 0 0

When was the last time you walked into a door? How did you know the door was there? Was it the black eye, or the headache?

Saturn is about that obvious.

2007-03-13 14:02:02 · answer #7 · answered by aviophage 7 · 1 0

they know it's there because they can see it. It actually appears to the naked eye as a star in the evening.
I think Galileo identified several or all of the planets as planets instead of stars with a crude telescope way back in the day

2007-03-13 09:13:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You can see it from the surface of the Earth with an ordinary optical telescope. And, occasionaly, it can even be seen with the naked eye if you know what to look for (it looks like a tiny star from here, of course).

2007-03-13 09:13:45 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

You can see it WITHOUT A TELESCOPE! It has been known since ancient times. Without a telescope it just looks like a bright star, and with one you can see the rings. I have seen it with my own eyes many times, with and without a telescope.

2007-03-13 09:52:08 · answer #10 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 1 0

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