The dwarf-planet Ceres was discovered in 1801. It was originally considered to be the eighth known planet and the fifth planet out from the sun, filling the space between Mars and Jupiter that is now known as the "asteroid belt". It was eventually reclassified as a new type of object called "asteroid" when additional bodies were discovered in that orbital region. It was reclassified again as a "dwarf planet" at the same time that Pluto was demoted from planet to dwarf-planet status. Pluto is currently the largest-known dwarf planet and Ceres is the smallest.
Neptune, the eighth major planet and the one farthest from the sun, was not discovered until 1846, 45 years after Ceres. So, Ceres was briefly the eighth planet, then it wasn't, and then there were eight planets again when Neptune was discovered.
Ceres and Neptune, former and current "eighth planets", are now visible in the same region of the sky and shine at about the same brightness: magnitude 7.6 for Ceres and 7.8 for Neptune.
I was able to capture Ceres, Neptune, and Saturn in the same images with an Olympus E-M1iii camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 lens + softon filter. The quarter moon was just setting behind the Bristol Head ridgeline, but was still an hour from official moonset, so the sky was bright with moon light.
![]() |
Ceres: lower middle (circled), Neptune: upper middle (circled), bright Saturn. |
![]() |
Ceres (circled). |
![]() |
Neptune (circled) and bright Saturn. |
![]() |
Capella and the constellation Auriga in the northeast. |
Capella is the sixth brightest star in the night sky, just slightly behind Vega.
![]() |
The Pleiades over Snowshoe Mountain. |
added 01 October:
The planet Uranus appears just to the lower right of the Pleiades:
![]() |
Uranus (circled). |
Uranus was the first planet discovered in modern times, by William Herschel in 1781. It is currently at magnitude 5.6, which technically makes it a naked-eye object under the right dark-sky conditions. I could see it easily with a 1.8x40 wide-field binocular.