# Kepler's Legacy: From Piazzi's Asteroids to Modern Exoplanets episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 6, 2026 · 1 MIN

# Kepler's Legacy: From Piazzi's Asteroids to Modern Exoplanets

from Astronomy Tonight · host Inception Point AI

# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating January 6th, a date that marks one of the most delightfully named astronomical events in modern history: the discovery of the **Pluto-Charon system's mutual eclipses** beginning in 1985, but more importantly, we're looking back at **January 6, 2010**, when NASA's Kepler Space Telescope observed one of its first major planetary discoveries in the making! But here's the really fun part – January 6th is also the anniversary of a fascinating celestial alignment observation! On this very date in 1822, the famous astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi made critical observations that helped confirm the orbital mechanics of asteroids. While we often think of astronomy as a modern science filled with space telescopes and rovers, Piazzi was out there with a simple refracting telescope, painstakingly tracking these distant worlds night after night. What's remarkable is how these early observations laid the groundwork for everything we do today. Piazzi couldn't have imagined that someday we'd be discovering thousands of exoplanets, yet his meticulous work on asteroid positions was absolutely essential to understanding how our solar system actually works! So tonight, as you look up at the January sky, remember that we're standing on the shoulders of giants – observers with nothing but their eyes, telescopes, and sheer determination. Be sure to **subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast** so you never miss an episode! And if you want more information about tonight's topics, check out **QuietPlease.AI**. Thank you for listening to another Quiet Please production!

# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating January 6th, a date that marks one of the most delightfully named astronomical events in modern history: the discovery of the **Pluto-Charon system's mutual eclipses** beginning in 1985, but more importantly, we're looking back at **January 6, 2010**, when NASA's Kepler Space Telescope observed one of its first major planetary discoveries in the making! But here's the really fun part – January 6th is also the anniversary of a fascinating celestial alignment observation! On this very date in 1822, the famous astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi made critical observations that helped confirm the orbital mechanics of asteroids. While we often think of astronomy as a modern science filled with space telescopes and rovers, Piazzi was out there with a simple refracting telescope, painstakingly tracking these distant worlds night after night. What's remarkable is how these early observations laid the groundwork for everything we do today. Piazzi couldn't have imagined that someday we'd be discovering thousands of exoplanets, yet his meticulous work on asteroid positions was absolutely essential to understanding how our solar system actually works! So tonight, as you look up at the January sky, remember that we're standing on the shoulders of giants – observers with nothing but their eyes, telescopes, and sheer determination. Be sure to **subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast** so you never miss an episode! And if you want more information about tonight's topics, check out **QuietPlease.AI**. Thank you for listening to another Quiet Please production!

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# Kepler's Legacy: From Piazzi's Asteroids to Modern Exoplanets

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This episode was published on January 6, 2026.

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# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating January 6th, a date that marks one of the most delightfully named astronomical events in modern history: the discovery of the **Pluto-Charon system's mutual...

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