Prehistory of Transit Searches
Danielle Briot (Paris Observatory), Jean Schneider (Paris, Obsevatory)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical development of transit observations from solar system planets to exoplanets, highlighting early predictions, mistaken observations, and the evolution of transit detection methods over time.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive historical overview of transit searches, including early hypotheses, mistaken detections, and the transition to modern exoplanet transit observations.
Findings
First solar system transit observations in 1631 by Gassendi
Historical predictions of exoplanet transits dating back centuries
Recent studies explore transits related to hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations
Abstract
Nowadays the more powerful method to detect extrasolar planets is the transit method. We review the planet transits which were anticipated, searched, and the first ones which were observed all through history. Indeed transits of planets in front of their star were first investigated and studied in the solar system. The first observations of sunspots were sometimes mistaken for transits of unknown planets. The first scientific observation and study of a transit in the solar system was the observation of Mercury transit by Pierre Gassendi in 1631. Because observations of Venus transits could give a way to determine the distance Sun-Earth, transits of Venus were overwhelmingly observed. Some objects which actually do not exist were searched by their hypothetical transits on the Sun, as some examples a Venus satellite and an infra-mercurial planet. We evoke the possibly first use of the…
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