| UMBRIEL | Moon of Uranus discovered by English astronomer William Lassell in 1851 and named after a character in Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock (1712) |
| MOBYDICK | Classic novel which was a failure when published in 1851 and out of print when the author died in 1891 (4,4) |
| ARIEL | Brightest moon of Uranus, discovered by English astronomer William Lassell in 1851 (5) |
| TRITON | Largest satellite of Neptune, discovered by English astronomer William Lassell in 1846 (6) |
| MIRANDA | Moon of Uranus named after a character in Shakespeare's The Tempest (7) |
| OBERON | Discovered by William Herschel in 1787, moon of Uranus named after the king of the fairies in A Midsummer Night's Dream (6) |
| IAPETUS | Moon of Saturn discovered by Cassini in 1671 and named after a Greek Titan (7) |
| TITANIA | Largest satellite of Uranus, discovered by British astronomer William Herschel in 1787 (7) |
| PORTIA | An inner moon of the planet Uranus named after a character in The Merchant Of Venice (6) |
| MIMAS | The smallest and innermost of the major regular moons of Saturn. It was discovered in 1789 by the English astronomer William Herschel. Its most noteworthy feature is a 130-km- (80-mile-) diameter crat |
| ENCELADUS | The second nearest of the major regular moons of Saturn, the brightest of all its moons, and discovered in 1789 by the English astronomer William Herschel. The surface is almost pure water ice, with t |
| EINSTEINIUM | An element discovered in 1952 and named after a physicist born in Ulm in Germany (11) |
| PHOEBE | This moon was discovered by the American astronomer William Henry Pickering in 1899. Roughly spherical and about 210 km (130 miles) in diameter, this moon has a mean distance from Saturn of about 12,9 |
| SELWYN | College of Cambridge University, founded in 1882 and named after a former bishop of Lichfield (6) |
| TILSIT | A cheese first made in, and named after, a town in East Prussia |
| ERBIUM | A soft, silvery metallic element discovered in 1843 and named after a Swedish village (6) |
| BIANCA | Moon of Uranus named for Katherine's sister in Shakespeare's the Taming of the Shrew |
| EBOLA | Disease first identified in 1976 and named after a river in the Congo |
| TANNAHILL | And 21dn Paisley band formed in 1968 and named after a Scottish poet (9,7) |
| HUBBLE | ____ Space Telescope, object launched into orbit in 1990 and named after a U.S. astronomer (6) |