Star cataloguing He supervised the compilation of the Palermo Catalogue of stars, containing 7,646 star entries with unprecedented precision, including the star names "
Garnet Star" from
Herschel, and the
original Rotanev and
Sualocin. The catalogue wasn't finished for first edition publication until 1803, with a second edition in 1814. Piazzi's catalogue was more accurate than any of its predecessors;
Franz Xaver von Zach pronounced it epochal, and the
Institut de France awarded it the
Lalande Prize for the best astronomical work published in 1803. Spurred by the success discovering Ceres (see below), and in the line of his catalogue program, Piazzi studied the proper motions of stars to find parallax measurement candidates. One of them,
61 Cygni, was specially appointed as a good candidate for measuring a parallax, which was later performed by
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel. The star system
61 Cygni is sometimes still called variously ''Piazzi's Flying Star
and Bessel's Star''.
The dwarf planet Ceres , September 1801 Piazzi discovered
Ceres. On 1 January 1801 Piazzi discovered a "stellar object" that moved against the background of
stars. At first he thought it was a fixed star, but once he noticed that it moved, he became convinced it was a planet, or as he called it, "a new star". In his journal, he wrote: In spite of his assumption that it was a planet, he took the conservative route and announced it as a
comet. In a letter to astronomer
Barnaba Oriani of
Milan he made his suspicions known in writing: He was not able to observe it long enough as it was soon lost in the glare of the
Sun. Unable to compute its
orbit with existing methods, the mathematician
Carl Friedrich Gauss developed a new method of orbit calculation that allowed astronomers to locate it again. After its orbit was better determined, it was clear that Piazzi's assumption was correct and this object was not a comet but more like a small
planet. Coincidentally, it was also almost exactly where the
Titius–Bode law predicted a planet would be. Piazzi named it "Ceres Ferdinandea," after the
Roman and Sicilian
goddess of grain and
King Ferdinand IV of
Naples and
Sicily. The Ferdinandea part was later dropped for political reasons.
Ceres turned out to be the first, and largest, of the
asteroids existing within the
asteroid belt. Ceres is today called a
dwarf planet. ==Posthumous honours==