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| The Planet Found by a Flicker (1930) | | On February 18, 1930, a young observer named Clyde Tombaugh spotted a tiny moving point of light on glass photographic plates at Lowell Observatory in Arizona, the first recognized sighting of what would soon be named Pluto. The discovery wasn't a dramatic "Aha!" under a telescope. It was patient, meticulous work: comparing plates, hunting for a speck that shifted ever so slightly against a fixed sea of stars. | For decades, astronomers had searched for a predicted "Planet X." Pluto turned out to be far smaller than expected, more a doorway than a destination. It opened our imaginations to the Kuiper Belt and the strange frontier beyond Neptune, where worlds don't behave like the neat planets of grade-school posters. | Pluto's identity would evolve, famously reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006, but its discovery remains one of astronomy's most cinematic truths: sometimes the universe changes because someone noticed a flicker. | | | Related Time Capsules | | | Thanks for reading, | The TTC Team | P.S. Email is like hunting buried treasure sometimes. So, please check your junk or promotions folder if this newsletter ever goes missing… and move it to your primary inbox. Feel free to forward Today's Time Capsule to another history fan. |
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