The Story of The Universe
The Story of The Universe
The Story of The Universe
4)
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The Zodiacal Light
THE STORY OF
THE UNIVERSE
Told by Great Scientists
and Popular Authors
By ESTHER SINGLETON
Author of “Turrets, Towers and Temples,” “Wonders of Nature,”
“The World’s Great Events,” “Famous Paintings,” Translator
of Lavignac’s “Music Dramas of Richard Wagner”
FULLY ILLUSTRATED
VOLUME I
THE
S TA R RY
SKIES
P. F . C O L L I E R A N D S O N
NEW YORK
Copyright 1905
By P. F. COLLIER & SON
[Pg 1]
P R E FA C E
In the following pages I have endeavored to present a comprehensive and general view of
the material side of the universe. Instead of trying myself to tell the story of the universe, I
have gone to the works of acknowledged weight and authority in this line of research and
selected from them extracts of a popular character, especially those that are entertaining as
well as merely instructive. The average reader is frequently repelled from the study of the
sciences by the dry treatment adopted by those who try to instruct him. He cares little for
laws, theories, or affinities; and he can not help being bored by attempts to make him
understand classifications with their long lists of words manufactured from the names of
modern celebrities or non-entities and roots from dead languages. I have therefore kept
constantly in mind the person who seeks entertaining knowledge, and not the scientific
specialist. I have tried to avoid all technicalities wherever possible.
Of late years, in fact ever since the foundation of the British Association, there has been a
constantly increasing interest in the wonders of nature; and the specialist has responded to
this popular interest in his scientific labors by speaking in language that an intelligent child
can comprehend. People as a rule prefer to read of the habits, instincts, intelligence, and
movements of animals and plants, rather than of their organs and structure. Thus the study
of Natural History has received a great impetus from the writings of such men as Darwin
and Lubbock; and Astronomy has been rendered more attractive to the lay reader by
Flammarion, Gore, Proctor, and Ball. Every traveler who returns from remote or hitherto [2]
unknown Arctic or Torrid Zones has something fresh to tell us of the phenomena and life of
our universe, which adds fresh stimulus to the popular interest in the Natural Sciences.
The Story of the Universe naturally falls under the following four heads:
First, the bodies moving in infinite space, including stars, dark and lucid, planets, nebulæ,
comets, and meteors.
Second, the Earth, considered as a separate world and the only one of which we have
precise detailed knowledge. In this chapter we learn of the past of our globe from the
evidence afforded by the rocks of which its crust is composed. The varying conformations
of its present surface are described, as is its atmospheric envelope and attendant phenomena.
The ocean and its movements and depths are likewise fully considered.
Third, the Earth’s Garment—its flora. In this chapter we are told of the wonders and
beauties of plant-life, its development and distribution.
Fourth, the Earth’s Creatures. Here we have a general view of animal life, from the
mighty mammoth to the fairy fly: even the beings visible only to the microscope are not
forgotten. Special attention is also paid to man, from his origin to the present day.
I have made the selections from authentic editions of the writings of the scientists; and
have taken no liberties with the text, with the exception of occasional cutting.
In the Introduction I have given a short sketch of the development of the Natural
Sciences, from the dawn of written history to the present day.
E. S.
New York, March, 1905.
[3]
INTRODUCTION
The knowledge of the Natural Sciences among the Greeks and Romans was derived
principally from the Egyptians and Babylonians. The Phœnicians in their voyages, also,
necessarily paid considerable attention to Astronomy. Their Cynosura consisted of the tail of
the Little Bear, by which they steered. The great names in Greek Astronomy are Aratus,
Hipparchus, and Ptolemy.
From the fancies of Astrology, in which the early Arabs largely indulged, and which,
though discountenanced by Mahomet himself, have never been wholly abandoned by their
descendants, a not unnatural transition, led to the study of Astronomy. Under the patronage
of the Abbaside Caliph Al-Mamun (813-833 a. d.) this science made rapid progress.
Astronomy was zealously studied in the famous schools of Bagdad and Cordova.
The Almagest, or System of Astronomy, by Ptolemy, was translated into Arabic by Alhazi
and Sergius as early as 812. In the Tenth Century, Albaten observed the advance of the line
of the apsides in the earth’s orbit; Mohammed-ben-Jeber-al-Batani, the obliquity of the
ecliptic; Alpetragius wrote a theory of the planets; and Abul-Hassan-Ali, on astronomical
instruments. The obliquity of the ecliptic, the diameter of the earth, and even the precession
of the equinoxes, were then calculated with commendable accuracy; and shortly after, Abul-
Mezar’s Introduction to Astronomy and his Treatise on the Conjunction of the Planets, with
the Elements of Al-Furjanee (though this last author was largely indebted to the Egyptian
labors of Ptolemy), proved that the caliph’s liberality had been well bestowed. But Al- [4]
Batinee, a native of Syria (879-920 a. d.), surpassed all his predecessors in the nicety alike
of his observations and computations. Geber, at Seville, constructed (1196 a. d.) the first
astronomical observatory on record; and Ebn-Korrah in Egypt proved by his example that
the Arabs could be even better astronomers than the Greeks.
Ulug Bekh, grandson of the great Tamerlane, was a diligent observer. He established an
academy of astronomers at Samarcand, the capital of his dominions, and constructed
magnificent instruments. Ulug Bekh, too, made a catalogue of the fixed stars—the only one
that had been compiled since that of Hipparchus, sixteen centuries previously.
Gradually, by their intercourse with civilized nations, the Arabian conquerors were
themselves subjected to the humanizing influence of letters, and, after 749 a. d., or during
the reign of the Abassides, literature, arts, and sciences appeared, and were generously
fostered under the splendid sway, first of Almansor (754-775), and afterward of the
celebrated Harun-al-Raschid (786-808). Learned men were now invited from many
countries and remunerated for their labors with princely munificence; the works of the best
Greek, Syriac, and old Persian writers were translated into Arabic, and spread abroad in
numerous copies. The Caliph Al-Mamun, who reigned from 813 to 833, offered to the Greek
emperor five tons of gold and a perpetual treaty of peace on condition that the philosopher
Leo should be allowed to give instruction to the former. Under the same Caliph the famous
schools of Bagdad, Basra, Bokhara, and Kufa were founded, and large libraries were
collected in Alexandria, Cairo, and Bagdad. The school of Cordova in Spain soon rivaled
that of Bagdad, and in the Tenth Century the Arabs were everywhere the preservers and
distributers of knowledge.
Pupils from France and other European countries repaired to Spain in great numbers, to
study mathematics and medicine under the Arabs. There were fourteen academies, with [5]
many preparatory and upper schools, in Spain, and five very considerable public libraries;
that of the Caliph Hakem containing, as is said, more than 600,000 volumes.
In Geography, History, Philosophy, Medicine, Physics, and Mathematics the Arabians
rendered important services to science; and the Arabic words still employed in science—
such as algebra, alcohol, azimuth, zenith, nadir, with many names of stars, etc. (see The
Arabian Heavens, pages 106-120 of Vol. I)—remain as indications of their influence on the
early intellectual culture of Europe. But Geography owes most to them during the Middle
Ages. In Africa and Asia, the boundaries of geographical science were extended, and the old
Arab treatises on geography and works of travels in several countries by Abulfeda, Edrisi,
Leo Africanus, Ibn Batuta, Ibn Foslan, Ibn Jobair, Albiruni the astronomer, and others, are
still interesting.
The structure of the earth received little attention from the ancients; the extent of its
surface known was limited, and the changes upon it were neither so speedy nor violent as to
excite special attention. The only opinions deserving to be noticed are those of Pythagoras
and Strabo, both of whom observed the phenomena which were then altering the surface of
the earth, and proposed theories for explaining the changes that had taken place in
geological time. The first held that, in addition to volcanic action, the change in the level of
sea and land was owing to the retiring of the sea; while the other maintained that the land
changed its level, and not the sea, and that such changes happened more easily to the land
below the sea because of its humidity.
From the fall of the Roman empire, during the Dark Ages, the physical sciences were
neglected. In the Tenth Century, Avicenna, Omar, and other Arabian writers commented on
the works of the Romans, but added little of their own.
Geological phenomena attracted attention in Italy in the Sixteenth Century, the absorbing
question then being as to the nature of fossils; only a few maintained that they were the [6]
remains of animals. Two centuries elapsed before the opinion was generally adopted.
Aristotle was the first who collected, in his work On Meteors, the current prognostics of
the weather. Some of these were derived from the Egyptians, who had studied the science as
a branch of Astronomy, while a considerable number were the result of his own observation.
The next writer upon this subject was Theophrastus, one of Aristotle’s pupils, who classified
the opinions commonly received regarding the weather under four heads, viz., the
prognostics of rain, of wind, of storm, and of fine weather. The subject was discussed purely
in its popular and practical bearings, and no attempt was made to explain phenomena whose
occurrence appeared so irregular and capricious. Cicero, Virgil, and a few other writers also
wrote on the subject; but the treatise of Theophrastus contains nearly all that was known
down to comparatively recent times. Partial explanations were attempted by Aristotle and
Lucretius, but their explanations were vague, and often absurd.
In this dormant condition meteorology remained for ages, and no progress was made till
proper instruments were invented for making real observations with regard to the
temperature, the pressure, the humidity, and the electricity of the air.
Solomon spoke of “trees, from the cedar in Lebanon even to the hyssop that springeth out
of the wall.” There is reason also to believe that Zoroaster devoted some attention to plants,
and that this study early engaged some of the philosophers of Greece. The oldest botanical
work which has come down to us is that of Theophrastus, the pupil of Aristotle, who
flourished in the fourth century b. c. His descriptions of plants are very unsatisfactory, but
his knowledge of their organs and of vegetable physiology may well be deemed wonderful.
It was not, indeed, till after the revival of letters in Western Europe, that it was ever again
studied as it had been by him. About four hundred years after Theophrastus, in the First [7]
Century of the Christian era, Dioscorides of Anazarbus, in Asia Minor—a herbalist,
however, rather than a botanist—described more than 600 plants in a work which continued
in great repute throughout the Middle Ages.
About the same time, the elder Pliny devoted a share of his attention to Botany, and his
writings contain some account of more than 1,000 species, compiled from various sources
and mingled with many errors. Centuries elapsed without producing another name worthy to
be mentioned. It was among the Arabians that the science next began to be cultivated, about
the close of the Eighth Century. The greatest name of this period is Avicenna. Among the
Arabs, Botany, like Chemistry, was chiefly studied as subsidiary to medicine; but as an
adjunct to the old herbal pharmacopœia, it received close attention. The principal mercurial
and arsenical preparations of the materia medica, the sulphates of several metals, the
properties of acids and alkalies, the distillation of alcohol—in fine, whatever resources
chemistry availed itself of up to a very recent date—were, with their practical application,
known to Er-Razi and Geber. In fact, the numerous terms borrowed from the Arabic
language—for instance, alcohol, alkali, alembic, and others—with the signs of drugs and the
like, still in use among modern apothecaries, remain to show how deeply this science is
indebted to Arab research.
Aristotle seems to have been the first to study Zoology. Some of the groups he established
still retain their place in the most modern classifications. His two great sections of the
Animal Kingdom consisted of Enanima (red blood) and Anima (having a circulation of
colorless fluid). Ælian and Pliny wrote on the subject, but they indulged largely in fables.
There was little advance in the science during the Dark and Middle Ages. The Bestiaries
were written for the sake of moral teaching, and the animals had to behave with that end in
view. Albertus Magnus is the only famous name in this department before the revival of
learning.
The shining light of the Thirteenth Century was Roger Bacon. His Opus Majus is “at once [8]
the Encyclopædia and the Novum Organum of the Thirteenth Century.” In this, besides
other branches of scientific research, he devotes a rapid examination to questions of
Climate, Hydrography, Geography, and Astrology. Scientific research, however, was out of
date, and from the educated world Roger Bacon received small recognition. His writings
earned only a prison from his own Order, and he died, in his own words, “unheard,
forgotten, buried.”
The Revival of Learning, commonly known as the Period of the Renaissance, naturally
entailed renewed interest in the sciences as well as the arts. Green gives a comprehensive
view of it:
“The last royalist had only just laid down his arms when the little company who
were at a later time to be known as the Royal Society gathered round Wilkins at
Oxford. It is in this group of scientific observers that we catch the secret of the
coming generation. From the vexed problems, political and religious, with which it
had so long wrestled in vain, England turned at last to the physical world around it, to
the observation of its phenomena, to the discovery of the laws which govern them.
The pursuit of physical science became a passion; and its method of research, by
observation, comparison, and experiment, transformed the older methods of inquiry in
matters without its pale. In religion, in politics, in the study of man and of nature, not
faith but reason, not tradition but inquiry, were to be the watchwords of the coming
time. The dead-weight of the past was suddenly rolled away, and the new England
heard at last and understood the call of Francis Bacon.
“Bacon had already called men with a trumpet-voice to such studies; but in England
at least Bacon stood before his age. The beginnings of physical science were more
slow and timid there than in any country of Europe. Only two discoveries of any real
value came from English research before the Restoration; the first, Gilbert’s discovery
of terrestrial magnetism in the close of Elizabeth’s reign; the next, the great discovery
of the circulation of the blood, which was taught by Harvey in the reign of James.
Apart from these illustrious names England took little share in the scientific
movement of the continent; and her whole energies seemed to be whirled into the
vortex of theology and politics by the Civil War. But the war had not reached its end
when a little group of students were to be seen in London, men ‘inquisitive,’ says one [9]
of them, ‘into natural philosophy and other parts of human learning, and particularly
of what hath been called the New Philosophy,... which from the times of Galileo at
Florence, and Sir Francis Bacon (Lord Verulam) in England, hath been much
cultivated in Italy, France, Germany, and other parts abroad, as well as with us in
England.’ The strife of the time indeed aided in directing the minds of men to natural
inquiries. ‘To have been always tossing about some theological question,’ says the
first historian of the Royal Society, Bishop Sprat, ‘would have been to have made that
their private diversion, the excess of which they disliked in the public. To have been
eternally musing on civil business and the distresses of the country was too
melancholy a reflection. It was nature alone which could pleasantly entertain them in
that estate.’ Foremost in the group stood Doctors Wallis and Wilkins, whose removal
to Oxford, which had just been reorganized by the Puritan Visitors, divided the little
company into two societies. The Oxford society, which was the more important of the
two, held its meetings at the lodgings of Dr. Wilkins, who had become Warden of
Wadham College, and added to the names of its members that of the eminent
mathematician Dr. Ward, and that of the first of English economists, Sir William
Petty. ‘Our business,’ Wallis tells us, ‘was (precluding matters of theology and state
affairs) to discourse and consider of philosophical inquiries and such as related
thereunto, as Physick, Anatomy, Geometry, Astronomy, Navigation, Statics,
Magnetics, Chymicks, Mechanicks, and Natural Experiments: with the state of these
studies, as then cultivated at home and abroad. We then discoursed of the circulation
of the blood, the valves in the venæ lacteæ, the lymphatic vessels, the Copernican
hypothesis, the nature of comets and new stars, the satellites of Jupiter, the oval shape
of Saturn, the spots in the sun and its turning on its own axis, the inequalities and
selenography of the moon, the several phases of Venus and Mercury, the improvement
of telescopes, the grinding of glasses for that purpose, the weight of air, the
possibility or impossibility of vacuities, and Nature’s abhorrence thereof, the
Torricellian experiment in quicksilver, the descent of heavy bodies and the degree of
acceleration therein, and divers other things of like nature.’
“The other little company of inquirers, who remained in London, was at last broken
up by the troubles of the Second Protectorate; but it was revived at the Restoration by
the return to London of the more eminent members of the Oxford group. Science
suddenly became the fashion of the day. Charles was himself a fair chymist, and took
a keen interest in the problems of navigation. The Duke of Buckingham varied his
freaks of riming, drinking, and fiddling by fits of devotion to his laboratory. Poets [10]
like Dryden and Cowley, courtiers like Sir Robert Murray and Sir Kenelm Digby
joined the scientific company to which in token of his sympathy with it the King gave
the title of ‘The Royal Society.’ The curious glass toys called Prince Rupert’s drops
recall the scientific inquiries which, with the study of etching, amused the old age of
the great cavalry leader of the Civil War. Wits and fops crowded to the meetings of
the new society. Statesmen like Lord Somers felt honored at being chosen its
presidents. Its definite establishment marks the opening of a great age of scientific
discovery in England. Almost every year of the half century which followed saw some
step made to a wider and truer knowledge. Our first national observatory rose at
Greenwich, and modern astronomy began with the long series of astronomical
observations which immortalized the name of Flamsteed. His successor, Halley,
undertook the investigation of the tides, of comets, and of terrestrial magnetism.
Hooke improved the microscope, and gave a fresh impulse to microscopical research.
Boyle made the air-pump a means of advancing the science of pneumatics, and
became the founder of experimental chymistry. Wilkins pointed forward to the
science of philology in his scheme of a universal language. Sydenham introduced a
careful observation of nature and facts which changed the whole face of medicine.
The physiological researches of Willis first threw light upon the structure of the brain.
Woodward was the founder of mineralogy. In his edition of Willoughby’s
Ornithology, and in his own History of Fishes, John Ray was the first to raise zoology
to the rank of a science; and the first scientific classification of animals was
attempted in his Synopsis of Quadrupeds. Modern botany began with his History of
Plants, and the researches of an Oxford professor, Robert Morison; while Grew
divided with Malpighi the credit of founding the study of vegetable physiology. But
great as some of these names undoubtedly are, they are lost in the lustre of Isaac
Newton. Newton was born at Woolsthorpe in Lincolnshire, on Christmas Day, in the
memorable year which saw the outbreak of the Civil War. In the year of the
Restoration he entered Cambridge, where the teaching of Isaac Barrow quickened his
genius for mathematics, and where the method of Descartes had superseded the older
modes of study. From the close of his Cambridge career his life became a series of
great physical discoveries. At twenty-three he facilitated the calculation of planetary
movements by his theory of Fluxions. The optical discoveries to which he was led by
his experiments with the prism, and which he partly disclosed in the lectures which he
delivered as mathematical professor at Cambridge, were embodied in the theory of
light which he laid before the Royal Society on becoming a Fellow of it. His [11]
discovery of the law of gravitation had been made as early as 1666; but the erroneous
estimate which was then generally received of the earth’s diameter prevented him
from disclosing it for sixteen years; and it was not till the eve of the Revolution that
the Principia revealed to the world his new theory of the Universe.”
Ever since the Fifteenth Century, when Copernicus revived the ancient theory of
Pythagoras that the planets revolved around the sun (a theory left in an imperfect state and
demonstrated later by Kepler, Galileo, Newton, and others) astronomical research has
progressed steadily. It must be remembered, however, that De Revolutionibus Orbium,
which met with great opposition, contained nothing regarding the laws of motion, for these
had not been as yet discovered, and Saturn marked the boundaries of the Solar System.
Copernicus assigned the “fixed stars” to a sphere, as in Ptolemy’s heavens (see page 331).
The great Danish astronomer, Tycho Brahe, whose idea of the Solar System is represented
on page 343, was his opponent. Brahe, however, a devoted student, a man of wealth, the
favorite of kings and princes, and the proud possessor of the Castle of Uraniberg (City of the
Heavens), an observatory equipped with fine instruments and built for him by Frederick II,
King of Denmark, on the island of Hueen, and after his death the protégé of Rudolph II at
Benatek, near Prague, contributed greatly to the advancement of the science by means of his
discoveries, computations, solar and lunar tables, and catalogue of stars. He, like
Copernicus, placed the “fixed stars” in an outer sphere. His observations on the planets were
made to prove the truth of his system. This mass of observations was used instead by Johann
Kepler, who had been his assistant at the Benatek Observatory, to prove Copernicus’s
theory. Of Kepler, the discoverer of the three famous laws, who gave a complete theory of
solar eclipses, calculated the transits of Mercury and Venus, and made numerous discoveries
in optics and general physics, Proctor says:
[12]
“Kepler was not merely an observer and calculator; he inquired with great diligence
into the physical causes of every phenomenon, and made a near approach to the
discovery of that great principle which maintains and regulates the planetary motions.
He possessed some very sound and accurate notions of the nature of gravity, but
unfortunately conceived it to diminish simply in proportion to the distance, although
he had demonstrated that the intensity of light is reciprocally proportional to the
surface over which it is spread, or inversely as the square of the distance from the
luminous body.”
Great names follow in rapid succession. One of Kepler’s contemporaries was Galileo
Galilei, the discoverer of the “three laws of motion” and the relation of time and space in
falling bodies, the first to apply the newly invented telescope to the observation of the
heavens and the discoverer of four satellites of Jupiter (named by him the “Medeiran Stars”
in honor of his patron). He also detected spots on the sun’s disk, the phases of Venus, and
irregularities on the moon’s surface, and declared the Milky Way to be composed of a
countless tract of separate stars.
When we remember the limited power of the telescope of the age, we can but marvel, not
at how little, but how much was known regarding the starry skies.
During this period, numerous observers rendered great service to Astronomy, and other
scientists were engaged in making useful drawings, charts, maps, tables, and catalogues of
stars.
To this period also belongs John Bayer of Augsburg, who published a description of the
constellations with maps upon which the stars were marked with the letters of the Greek
Alphabet—a convenient method that was universally adopted and is still in use. Other
names include Gassendi, Riccioli, Grimaldi, and Hevelius—the latter a rich citizen of
Dantzig, who had a fine observatory of his own, where he worked for forty years. His
drawings and descriptions of the moon, his researches on comets, which he still believed
moved in parabolas, and his celestial charts engaged most of his attention.
The Dutch astronomer Huygens (born in 1629) is famous for his improvements in the [13]
telescope use of the pendulum clock and developments in the machinery of astronomical
instruments. He discovered the ring of Saturn and four of his satellites. Edmund Halley, an
English astronomer (born in 1656), also took a great interest in the telescope, and went to
Dantzig to settle a controversy between Robert Hooke and Hevelius regarding the best
glasses for use in astronomical observations; for Hevelius still worked with the ancient
instruments, while Hooke believed in the lens.
Halley revived the ancient idea that comets belonged to the Solar System, and predicted
that the comet of 1681 would return to its perihelion in 1759. This was the first prediction of
its kind verified.
During the last quarter of the Seventeenth Century, the telescope assumes importance and
two great observatories begin their work. In 1670 the Paris Observatory, of which Cassini
was made director, was finished, and five years later the Greenwich Observatory, where
Flamsteed was installed as royal astronomer.
Of Cassini, Lalande remarks that under him Astronomy underwent revolutions, and in
France he was regarded as the “creator of the science.” Cassini discovered that Saturn’s ring
was double and found four satellites of Jupiter.
Flamsteed’s observations on planets, satellites, comets, “fixed stars,” and his catalogue of
2,884 stars were valuable contributions to science; and his Historia Cœlestis is said to have
“formed a new era in sidereal astronomy.”
Flamsteed was succeeded by Halley, particularly famed for his investigations of comets.
The next great astronomical event was the discovery of Uranus by Sir William Herschel in
1781. Sir William Herschel also discovered two more of Saturn’s satellites, and began the
great work of resolving the Milky Way and other clusters into swarms of suns, single stars
into double and triple stars, inquiries into the mysteries of the nebulæ, and in every way [14]
enlarging the general conception of the sidereal universe.
To the end of the Eighteenth and beginning of the Nineteenth Centuries belongs the
brilliant French astronomer and mathematician Laplace, who published in 1799-1808 his
Mécanique Céleste, in which he announced his Nebular Hypothesis (described on page 433
of Vol. II. The discoveries of the Planetoids are described on pages 396-403, and that of
Neptune in 1846 on pages 430-432). The latest important additions to the Solar System are
the discovery by Prof. Barnard of Jupiter’s Fifth Satellite in 1892 and Saturn’s Ninth by
Prof. W. H. Pickering in 1904. The discovery even of a Seventh Satellite of Jupiter has just
been announced from the Lick Observatory.
It would be impossible to mention the names of the astronomers whose work from the
middle of the last century to its closing years has been distinguished in various fields. Space
only permits brief mention of the new methods of research by means of the spectroscope
and celestial photography. With the first the name of the English astronomer, William
Huggins, is identified and has yielded most important and startling information regarding
the composition of heavenly bodies, and with the application of the photographic telescope
these new methods have created a revolution in astronomical observation.
It may be interesting to gain a slight idea of the numbers of stars revealed by the camera
by referring to Sir Robert Ball:
“If we take a position on the equator, from whence, of course, all the heavens can be
completely seen in the lapse of six months, the number of stars that can be reckoned
with the unaided eye will, according to Houzeau, amount to about six thousand. If we
augment our unaided vision by a telescope of even small dimensions, such as three
inches in diameter, the number of stars in the Northern Hemisphere alone is upward
of three hundred thousand. We may assume that the Southern Hemisphere has an
equally numerous star-population, so that the entire multitude visible with this optical
aid is about six hundred thousand. Thus we see that the use of a telescope small [15]
enough to be carried in the hands suffices to multiply the lucid stars one-hundredfold.
Great telescopes no doubt soon show us that the hundreds of thousands are only the
brighter members of a host of millions, and now we receive the assurance of
photography that the telescopic stars are only the more conspicuous members of that
vast universe. Mr. Roberts indeed declares that the multitudes of stars on the
photographic plate grow with each increase of exposure to such a degree that it would
almost seem as if the plate would be a wellnigh continuous mass of stars if the
operations could be sufficiently protracted.”
Naturally the past years have witnessed the making of new catalogues and maps of stars,
and many valuable computations of parallaxes, etc. Some of the results obtained by these
new methods are described in the chapters on the Nebulæ and Swarms of Suns, The Great
Nebula of Orion, and The Colored, Double, Multiple, Binary, Variable, and Temporary Stars
in Vol. I. From this brief survey of the progress of Astronomy the fact will be appreciated,
therefore, that all the discoveries and researches have resulted in a larger conception of the
universe, and the Solar System sinks into insignificance in the vast ocean of stars and suns.
The study of the Earth’s crust and its contents divested of superstition dates from the end
of the Seventeenth Century. Nicolaus Steno (1638-1687), a Dane, devoted himself to
geology, and in 1669 observed successive layers of strata. He is called “the father of
Palæontology.” In 1680 Leibnitz proposed the theory that the Earth was originally in a
molten state. The classification of strata was begun about the middle of the Eighteenth
Century. The views of James Hutton (1788), who returned to the theories advanced by Ray
(a return to the views of Pythagoras), were continued by Sir Charles Lyell.
Geology and Palæontology have progressed side by side. Among the most famous
investigators are Cuvier, Dawson, Marsh, Owen, Huxley, Agassiz, De Blainville, Kaup, Sir
Roderick Murchison, Boyd Dawkins, Sir William Flower, R. Lydekker, and E. D. Cope.
To the review of the new developments of meteorology and the science of probabilities by [16]
Sir Ralph Abercromby, on pages 784-792 of Vol. II, it is only necessary to add that the
interest in meteorological research developed greatly after Torricelli’s discovery in 1643 of
weight and pressure in the atmosphere led to the perfection of the barometer and the
development of the thermometer and hygrometer, both in the Seventeenth Century. The
theory of trade-winds George Hadley announced in the Philosophical Transactions for
1735. Dalton’s Meteorological Essays, published in 1793, and Dr. William Charles Wells’s
Theory of Dew, published in 1814, attracted much attention. Regarding the inquiries into the
laws of light by Snell, Newton, Descartes, Thomas Young, and Sir George Airy, the reader is
referred to the chapter on The Rainbow in Vol. II, by John Tyndall, with whose researches in
the latter half of the Nineteenth Century every one is more or less acquainted.
Little need be said here regarding the history of Botany, which is reviewed on pages 984-
1000 of Vol. II. We may add, however, that one of the first to revive this study was Otto
Brunsfels, whose Historia Plantarum Argentorati was published in two folio volumes with
cuts in Strasburg in 1530. He had many followers on the Continent and in England. During
the revival of learning, chairs of Botany were founded in the universities; botanic gardens
were established in many places (the Jardin des Plantes was founded in 1626); and botanists
began to travel to remote countries to search for unknown flora.
To the Seventeenth Century belong the names of Dr. Turner, “the father of English
Botany”; Robert Morison, professor of Botany at Oxford; John Ray, Nehemiah Grew,
Malpighi, Henshaw, and Robert Hooke. The two latter were among the first to employ the
newly invented microscope to the study of this science. It may be mentioned in passing, that
Huygens is said to have taken from Holland to England microscopes about the size of a
grain of sand, and that the first microscope consisting of a combination of lenses is
attributed to Jansen, a spectacle-maker of Holland. Hooke, whom Herschel calls “the great [17]
contemporary and almost the rival of Newton,” gave a tremendous impetus to Microscopy,
and practically laid the foundation of Histology or the Inner Morphology of Plants, due to
Grew and Malpighi. Schleiden undertook to explain the mysteries of cell formation in 1838,
further investigated by Schwann, and is now known as the Schleiden-Schwann theory.
Nägeli and Von Mohl continued researches on this line. To the contents of the cell Von Mohl
gave the name protoplasm.
In 1849, Hofmeister began investigations into the life-histories of plants, since when the
study of Vegetable Physiology has progressed side by side with Chemistry. To Darwin great
subjects are due: the cross-fertilization of plants, their reproduction, and their relations to
insects and their movements. It may be mentioned, however, that in 1693 Ray attempted to
explain the movements of leaves, tendrils, and petals by physical and mechanical laws.
Since the middle of the Nineteenth Century, the branches of Botany that have been
particularly studied are Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, Inner Morphology, and Fossil
Botany—and the discoveries made have naturally had an effect upon the classification of
vegetable life.
According to Agassiz:
“We must come down to the last century, to Linnæus, before we find the history
taken up where Aristotle had left it, and some of his suggestions carried out with new
freshness and vigor. Aristotle had already distinguished between genera and species;
Linnæus took hold of this idea, and gave special names to other groups, of different
weight and value. Besides species and genera, he gives us orders and classes—
considering classes the most comprehensive, then orders, then genera, then species.
He did not, however, represent these groups as distinguished by their nature, but only
by their range; they were still to him, as genera and species had been to Aristotle,
only larger or smaller groups, not founded upon and limited by different categories of
structure. He divided the animal kingdom into six classes: Mammalia, Birds, Reptiles,
Fishes, Insects, and Worms.”
Linnæus’s classification was, therefore, the first attempt to group animals; but until [18]
Cuvier there was no great principle of classification. In 1707 Buffon succeeded in making
Zoology, which had been regarded as a most uninteresting study, popular and respected. He
also had the idea of collecting all the known facts of scientific investigation and arranging
them systematically. Buffon was ridiculed as a scientist by his contemporaries, Hevelius,
Diderot, D’Alembert, and Condillac, who opposed his explanations of natural phenomena.
Buffon’s Histoire Naturelle Générale et Particulière is his most important work. A complete
edition in thirty-six volumes appeared in Paris in 1749-1788. Although it is said to “have
made an epoch in the study of the natural sciences” in Buffon’s day, it now possesses little
scientific value.
Cuvier’s classification has never been overthrown. His original investigations in various
departments of science, and particularly that of fossil vertebrate animals, opened up new
fields of study. His talents with both pen and pencil contributed largely to making that
branch of science popular.
Lamarck, Cuvier’s contemporary, divided the animal kingdom into Vertebrates and
Invertebrates. Lamarck, like Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, was a believer in the theory of
evolution, which was opposed by Cuvier.
Lamarck turned from the study of Meteorology to that of Botany, and later again to that
of Zoology. In 1793 he became professor of the natural history of the lower classes of
animals in the Jardin des Plantes. His theories have greatly influenced modern science,
particularly that of the “Variation of Species,” which was set forth in his Philosophie
Zoologique (two vols., Paris, 1809) and other works. Lamarck’s Histoire des Animaux sans
Vertèbres (seven vols., Paris, 1815-22) is his greatest work.
Karl Ernst von Baer, the Russian naturalist, a pupil of Döllinger in Würzburg, devoted
himself chiefly to the study of embryology and made valuable discoveries.
Passing by many illustrious names, we come to that of Sir Richard Owen, of whom it has [19]
been said that “from the sponge to man, he has thrown light over every subject he has
touched.” His work in the Hunter Museum, his descriptions and restorations of extinct birds
and animals, and his original works on every branch of animal life, form an enormous
contribution to the progress of science. He promulgated the advanced views of John Hunter,
the great physiologist and surgeon, of whose famous museum of more than ten thousand
specimens, illustrative of anatomy and natural history, he became curator.
Three names shine with especial lustre upon the Nineteenth Century—Darwin, Huxley,
and Spencer. The theory of evolution first appeared in De Maillet’s work, Telliamed,
published in 1758, but written in 1735. More than thirty writers before Darwin treated this
theory, among whom were Erasmus Darwin, Goethe, Lamarck, and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.
Largely owing to the opposition of Cuvier, it never succeeded until it was revived by
Charles Darwin, who, after twenty-one years of work, published his results in 1858 in the
Journal of the Linnæan Society, followed in the next year by The Origin of Species by
Means of Natural Selection (see pages 1482-1512 of Vol. IV).
“The lifeless earth,” says Sir Robert Ball, “is the canvas on which has been drawn
the noblest picture that modern science has produced. It is Darwin who has drawn this
picture. He has shown that the evolution of the lifeless earth from the nebula is but
the prelude to an organic evolution of still greater interest and complexity. He has
taken up the history of the earth at the point where the astronomer left it, and he has
made discoveries which have influenced thought and opinion more than any other
discoveries that have been made for centuries.”
The neglected department of Marine Zoology the Nineteenth Century has made
particularly its mission to investigate, but space only permits mention of four names:
Edward Forbes, Lord Kelvin (Sir Wyville Thomson), Ernst Heinrich Haeckel, and the Prince
of Monaco.
The first, whom Lord Kelvin considers “the most accomplished and original naturalist of [20]
his time,” was a pupil of Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Jussieu, and De Blainville. He is regarded
as the originator of the use of the dredge for collecting specimens and the first who
undertook the systematic study of Marine Zoology with reference to the distribution of
fauna. In 1859 his Natural History of the European Seas appeared after his death.
One of the most important investigators in this line is Prof. Haeckel, famous for his
studies of the lower class of marine animals. He is also distinguished for his researches in
other branches of Zoology and Palæontology, and was one of the first followers of Darwin
in Germany.
Entomology has also made enormous progress during the Nineteenth Century. At the end
of the Seventeenth Century, Ray estimated the number of insects throughout the world at
10,000 species! The great entomologists of the Eighteenth Century include Linnæus, De
Geer, and Fabricius. Next follow Latreille, Kirby and Spence, and a host of distinguished
scientists in Europe and the United States, of whom Sir John Lubbock (Lord Avebury) heads
the list. A comparatively new line of investigation is that of the Chalcididæ (see Fairy Flies,
pages 1449-1458, in Vol. IV).
ESTHER SINGLETON.
[21]
ILLUSTRATIONS
CONTENTS
Colored, Double, Multiple, Binary, Variable, and Temporary Stars. J. E. Gore 187
THE
W hat are the heavens? Where the shores of that limitless ocean; where the bottom of
that unfathomable abyss?
What are those brilliant points—those innumerable stars, which, never dim, shine out
unceasingly from the dark profound? Are they sown broadcast—orderless, with no other
bond save that which perspective lends to them? Or, if not immovable, as we have so long
imagined, if not golden nails fixed to a crystal vault, whither are they bound? And, finally,
what are the parts assigned to the sun, our earth, and all the earths attendant on the glorious
orb of day in this tremendous concert of celestial spheres—this sublime harmony of the
universe?
These are magnificent problems of which the most fertile imagination would have in vain
attempted the solution, if, for the greater glory of the human mind, astronomy—first born of
the sciences—had not at length come to our aid.
How wonderful is the power of man! Chained down to the surface of the earth, an
intelligent atom on a grain of sand lost in the immensity of a space, he invents instruments [26]
which multiply a thousand-fold his vision, he sounds the depths of the ether, gauges the
visible universe, and counts the myriads of stars which people it; next, studying their most
complicated movements, he measures exactly their dimensions and the distances of the
nearest of them from the earth, and next deduces their masses; then, discovering in the
seeming disorder of the stellar groupings real bonds of union, he at last evolves order from
apparent confusion.
Nor is this all. Rising by a supreme flight of thought to the most abstract speculations, he
discovers the laws which regulate all celestial movements, and defines the nature of the
universal force which sustains the worlds.
Such are the fruits of the unceasing labors of twenty generations of astronomers. Such the
result of the genius and of the patient perseverance of men who have devoted themselves for
two thousand years to the study of the phenomena of the heavens. The Chaldean shepherds
were, they say, the first astronomers. We can well believe it. Dwelling in the midst of vast
plains, where the mildness of the seasons permitted them to pass the night in the open air,
where the clear sky unfolded before them perpetually the most glorious scenes, they ought
to have been, and they were, contemplative astronomers. And all of us would be what they
were did not the rigor of our climate and our variable atmosphere so often prevent us
observing the heavens; and did not, moreover, the turmoil and cares of civilized life deprive
us of the necessary leisure.
Nothing is more fitted to elevate the mind toward the infinite than the pensive [27]
contemplation of the starry vault in the silent calm of night. A thousand fires sparkle in all
parts of the sombre azure of the sky. Varied in color and brilliancy, some shine with a vivid
light, perpetually changing and twinkling; others, again, with a more constant one—more
tranquil and soft; while very many only send us their rays intermittently, as if they could
scarce pierce the profundity of space.
To enjoy this spectacle in all its magnificence, a night must be chosen when the
atmosphere is perfectly pure and transparent—one neither illuminated by the moon, nor by
the glimmer of twilight or of dawn. The heavens then resemble an immense sea, the broad
expanse of which glitters with gold dust or diamonds.
In presence of such splendor, the senses, mind and imagination are alike inthralled. The
impression gathered is an emotion at once profound and religious, an indefinable mixture of
admiration, and of calm and tender melancholy. It seems as if these distant worlds, in
shining earthward, put themselves in close communication with our thoughts.
At a first glance at the starry firmament the stars seem pretty regularly distributed;
nevertheless, look at that whitish, undecided, vapory glimmer which girdles the heavens as
with a belt. It is the Milky Way.[1] As we approach the borders of this star-cloud in our
inspection, the stars appear more and more crowded together, and most of them so small that [28]
the eye can scarcely distinguish them. The accumulation of stars in the direction of the
Milky Way is more especially visible when we examine the heavens with the aid of a
powerful telescope.
The Milky Way itself is nothing more than an immensely extended zone of stars, that is,
of suns, since each star, from the most brilliant to the faintest, is a sun.
Here, then, is an immense group, a gigantic assemblage of worlds, which seems to
embrace all the universe, if it be true that the greater number of the scattered stars situated
out of the Milky Way nevertheless form part of it. In reality, this multitude of millions of
suns is divided into numerous and distinct groups, and those into others still more restricted
in number, each composed of two or three suns.
What breadth of space does each of these groups occupy? What is the measure of the
space which holds them all? The most powerful imagination in vain attempts to answer
these questions intelligibly; here numbers fail us.
Let us add—a fact well proved, and one which will seem strange to many—
Our sun himself is a star of the Milky Way.
In examining attentively every part of the starry vault, a keen eye perceives here and there
whitish spots resembling little clouds. One would say they were so many patches detached
from the Milky Way, from which, however, they are often very distinct and very distant. The
telescope discovers by thousands those cloud-patches, these—to give them their [29]
astronomical name—Nebulæ.
It was formerly imagined that each of these star-clouds was nothing more than an
accumulation of stars, very close together, and very numerous—so many Milky Ways lying
outside our own, and for the most part so distant that the most powerful instruments were
able only to distinguish a confused glimmering. One of the most important observations of
modern times, however, has shown that many of these nebulæ, including the most glorious
one in our northern hemisphere—that in the sword-handle of Orion—are but masses of
glowing gases.
Others, again, of these cloud-like masses—cloud-like by reason of their distance—show
us, faintly shining on a background of apparent nebulæ, brilliant stars, larger no doubt, or
more brilliant, than their fellows, and some of these objects called “Star-Clusters,” which
are nearest to us, are among the most glorious objects revealed to us by our telescopes.
Let us attempt now to conceive what fearful distances separate these archipelagoes of
worlds from our own!
Unfathomable abysses whose unspeakable depths the most powerful telescopes increase
indefinitely! Profound, endless, bottomless, but lighted up by millions of suns!
Such appears to us the universe from the natural observatory where we are placed. But to
obtain a more complete idea of its constitution, of the infinite variety of its members, we
must descend from those regions, where the sight and mind are lost, to a group, nearer to us, [30]
and therefore more accessible to the investigations of man—to that group, or system, of
which the earth forms part.
Of this the sun is the centre.
Round this focus of light and heat, but at various distances, revolve more than a hundred
secondary bodies—Planets, some of which are accompanied by smaller ones—Satellites.
Not self-luminous, they would be invisible to us, if the light, which they receive from the
sun, were not reflected toward the earth, making them also appear as luminous points spread
over the celestial vault like so many stars. Such would be the appearance of the earth seen in
space, at a distance sufficiently great.
A common character distinguishes all the celestial bodies that form part of this group—
the Solar System—from the multitude of other stars. For while the suns, composing what is
called the Sidereal Universe, are situated at distances seemingly infinite, the bodies
composing the group of which we speak are relatively much nearer the earth, are, in fact,
our neighbors.
What results from this double fact? Two very simple consequences, easily understood.
The first is, that the stars do not undergo any sensible change of position in the starry
vault. Their distance is such that they appear actually at rest in the depths of space; hence
the term Fixed Stars—now abandoned, because a minute and elaborate study of their
relative positions has established the fact that the stars really do move in the remote regions
of the heavens. The apparent immobility of which we have spoken, and which is one of their [31]
characteristics, is evidenced by the uniformity of appearance preserved for centuries by the
artificial groups of stars, to which the name of Constellations has been given.
Now, it is otherwise with the bodies that revolve round our sun: they are near enough to
the earth to allow of their displacements in space being perceived in short intervals of time.
Traveling, by virtue of their proper motions along the starry vault, distances which appear
greater as their own distance from us is less, these bodies received at the outset the name
they have since retained—Planets, or Wandering Stars.
It is thus that, when we stand in the middle of an extensive plain, we judge distant objects
—those that border the horizon—to be immovable; while we instantly perceive the slightest
change of place in the near ones. It is true that when we ourselves move, the real movements
become complicated with the apparent movements, but the former must be distinguished, if
we wish to have an exact idea of the actual course traveled. This complication of the
apparent movements of the planets—a necessary consequence of the movement of the earth
—is one of the most striking testimonials to the reality of the latter; but it must also be
added, that this was precisely the stone of stumbling of ancient astronomy until the time—
and that not long ago—when the real movements were made known. Movements of
rotation, movements of revolution, around the common centre, the duration of these
movements, distances, forms and dimensions, distribution of light and heat, all change in [32]
passing from one planet to another. And yet, marvelous thing, the same laws govern, all in
such a way that the unity of plan is not less marked than the astonishing variety of the
phenomena.
One circumstance common to all the bodies of the solar system forcibly strikes the
imagination. It is, that these enormous masses—these globes, many of which are much
heavier than the earth, and lastly, the earth itself—are not only suspended in space, but move
through the ether with velocities truly stupendous.
Imagine yourself a spectator, standing immovable in space. A luminous body appears in
the distance, little by little you see it approach and increase in size; its immense
circumference, which exceeds a hundred thousand leagues, is in rapid rotation, which makes
each point on its periphery travel through nine miles a second. The globe itself passes before
you, carried through space with a velocity twenty-four times greater than that of a cannon-
ball. In such a way Jupiter would appear to you traveling in its orbit. This headlong course
would banish it forever to the most remote regions of the visible universe, if it were not
subdued and held by the powerful attraction of a globe a thousand times larger than its own
—by the sun himself. Not only does astronomy show, by undeniable proofs, the reality of
these marvelous movements—not only has she arrived at the knowledge of their invariable
constancy, at least during thousands of centuries; but she has found in their very rapidity the [33]
cause of the stability of all the celestial bodies.
If there is difficulty in imagining such masses freely circulating in the ether, how much
more are we impressed when we consider that these rapid movements are not confined to
the planets; and when we look upon the sun with all his retinue as moving in an orbit yet
unknown, himself attracted no doubt by a more powerful sun, or by a group of suns! All the
stars which by reason of their infinite distances appear immovable, move in different
directions; and we shall see later, that if these movements are performed with extreme
slowness, the slowness is apparent only. In reality, these are the most rapid celestial
movements that we know of.
Thousands of centuries will be necessary before these immense sidereal voyages are
accomplished. Their vast periods are to the length of our year what the dimensions of the
earth are to the distances of the stars; and, according to the happy expression of Humboldt,
they make of the universe an eternal timekeeper. Thus, in the contemplation of celestial
phenomena, the idea of infinite duration impresses itself on the mind with the same
irresistible power as the idea of the infinity of space.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Via Lactea. It is also called the Galaxy, from the Greek word for the same thing.
SPACE.—Richard A. Proctor
A lthough astronomy tells us in the clearest words of the vast depths of space which
surround our earth on all sides, we are not thereby enabled to realize their enormous
extension. It is not merely that the unknown depths beyond the range of our most powerful [34]
telescopes are inconceivable, but that the parts of space which we can examine are on too
large a scale for us to conceive their real dimensions. It is hardly going too far to say that
our powers of actual conception are limited to the extent of space over which the eye seems
to range in the daytime. Of course, in the daytime, at least in clear weather, there is one
direction in which the eyesight ranges over a distance of many millions of miles—namely,
where we see the sun. But the sense of sight is not cognizant of that enormous distance, and
simply presents the sun to us as a bright disk in the sky, or perhaps rather nearer to us than
the sky. Even the distance of the sky itself is underestimated. A portion of the light we
receive from the sky on a clear day comes from parts of the atmosphere distant more than
thirty or forty miles from us; but the eye does not recognize the fact. The blue sky seems a
little further off than the clouds, but not much; the light clouds of summer seem a little, but
not much, further off than the heavier clouds of a winter sky; a cloud-covered winter sky
seems a little further off than heavy rain-clouds. The actual varieties of distance among
clouds of various kinds are not much more clearly discerned than the actual varieties of
distance among the heavenly bodies. The estimate formed of the distance of a cloud-covered
sky overhead probably amounts to little more than a mile, and it is very doubtful whether
the mind presents the remotest depths of a blue sky overhead at more than two miles.
Toward the horizon the distance seems greater, and probably on a cloudy day the sky near [35]
the horizon is unconsciously regarded as at a distance of about five miles, while blue sky
near the horizon may be regarded as lying at a distance of six or seven miles, the arch of a
blue sky seeming to be far more deeply curved than that of a cloud-covered sky.
It is to distances such as these that the mind unconsciously refers the celestial bodies. We
know that the moon is about 2,000 miles in diameter, but the mind refuses to present her to
us as other than a round disk much smaller than those other objects in sight which occupy a
much larger portion of the field of vision. The sun can not be conceived to exceed the moon
enormously in size, seeing that he appears no larger; and all the multitude of stars are judged
by the sight to be mere bright points of light in reality as they appear to be.
How, then, can we hope to appreciate the vastness of space whereof astronomy tells us?
To the student of science attempting to conceive the immensities of whose existence he is
assured, the same lesson might be taught in parable which the child of St. Augustine’s vision
taught the Numidian theologian. As reasonably might an infant hope to pour the waters of
ocean into a hollow, scooped with his tiny fingers in the sand, as man to picture in his
narrow mind the length and breadth and depth of the abysses of space in which our earth is
lost.
Yet, as a picture of a great mansion may be so drawn on a small scrap of paper as to
convey just ideas of its proportions, so may the great truths which astronomy has taught us [36]
about the depths of space be so presented that just conceptions may be formed of the
proportions of at least those parts of the universe which lie within the range of scientific
vision, though it would be hopeless to attempt to conceive their real dimensions.
When we learn that a globe as large as our earth, suspended beside the moon, would seem
to have a diameter exceeding hers nearly four times, so that the globe would cover a space
in the heavens about thirteen times as large as the moon covers, we form a just conception
of the size of the moon as compared with the earth, though the mind can not conceive such a
body as the moon or the earth really is. When, in turn, we are told that if a globe as large as
the earth, but glowing as brightly as the sun, were set beside the sun, it would look a mere
point of light, we not only learn to picture rightly to ourselves how largely the sun exceeds
the earth, but also how enormous must be the real distance of the sun.
Another step leads us to a standpoint whence we can form a correct estimate of the vast
distance of the fixed stars; for we can learn that so enormous is the distance of even the
nearest fixed star, that the tremendous space separating the earth from that star sinks in turn
into the merest point, insomuch that if a globe as bright as the sun had the earth’s orbit as a
close-fitting girdle, then this glorious orb (with a diameter of some 184,000,000 of miles)
would look very much smaller than such a globe as our earth would look at the sun’s
distance—would, in fact, occupy but about one-fortieth part of the space in the sky which [37]
she, though she would then look a mere point, would occupy if viewed from that distance.
But there is a way of viewing the immensities of space which, though not aiding us
indeed to conceive them, enables the mind to picture their proportions better than any other.
The dimensions of the earth’s path around the sun sink into insignificance beside those of
the outermost planets; but these in their turn dwindle into nothingness beside those of some
among the comets. From the path of these comets, if only sentient and reasoning beings
could trace out in a comet’s company those mighty orbits, and could have for the duration of
their existence not the brief span of time which measures the longest human life, but many
circuits of their comet home around the same ruling orb (as we live during many circuits of
our globe around the sun), the dimensions of the star-depths, which even to scientific insight
are all but immeasurable, would be directly discernible. Not only would the proportions of
that mighty system be perceived, whose fruits and blossoms are suns and worlds, but even
the gradually changing arrangement of its parts could be discerned.
Some comets, indeed, do not travel around the sun, but flit from sun to sun on journeys
lasting millions of years, paying each sun but a single visit. A being inhabiting such a comet,
and having these interstellar journeys as the years of his existence, so that he could live
through many of them, would have a wonderful insight into the economy of the stellar
system. If his powers of conception as far exceeded ours as the range of his travels and the [38]
duration of his existence, he would be able to recognize the proportions of a large part of the
stellar universe as clearly as we recognize the proportions of the solar system.
But leaving these wonderful wanderers, whose journeys are as far beyond our powers of
conception as the immensity of the regions of star-strewn space, we may find, among the
comets belonging to the sun’s domain, bodies whose range of travel would give their
inhabitants far clearer views of the architecture of the heavens than even the profoundest
terrestrial astronomer can possibly obtain.
Such a comet as Halley’s, for instance, though one of comparatively limited range in
space, yet travels so far from the sun that, from the extreme part of its path, it sees the stars
displaced nearly twenty times as much (owing to its own change of position) as they are
from the earth on opposite sides of her comparatively narrow orbit. And the length of this
comet’s year, if it indicated the lives of all creatures traveling along with it, would suggest a
power of patiently watching the progress of changes lasting not a few of our years only, but
for centuries. Seventy-five or seventy-six years elapse between each return of this comet to
the sun’s neighborhood, and one who should have lived during sixty or seventy circuits of
this body around its mighty orbit would have been able to watch the rush of stars, with their
velocities of many miles per second, until visible displacements had taken place in their
positions.
This, however, is as nothing compared with the mighty range in space and the enormous [39]
period of the orbit of the great comet of the year 1811. This comet is, on the whole, the most
remarkable ever known. It was visible for nearly seventeen months, and though it did not
approach the sun within 100,000,000 miles, and was therefore not subject to that violence of
action which has caused enormous tails to be thrown out from comets which have come
within a few million miles of him, or even within less than a quarter of his own diameter, it
flourished forth a tail 120,000,000 of miles in length. Its orbit has, according to the
calculations of the astronomer Argelander, a space exceeding the earth’s distance from the
sun 211 times, and thus surpassing even the mighty distance of Neptune fully seven times. It
occupies in circuiting this mighty path no less than 3,065 of our years (with a possible error
either way of about forty-three years). So that, according to Bible chronology, this comet’s
last appearance probably occurred during the rule of the Judge Tola, son of Puah, son of
Dodo, over the children of Israel, though it may have occurred during the rule of his
predecessor Abimelech, or during that of his successor Jair.[2] During one-half of the
enormous interval between that time and 1811 the comet was rushing outward into space, [40]
reaching the remotest part of its path somewhere about the year 278 (a. d.), and from that
time to 1811 it was on its return journey. It is strange to think, however, that though the
remotest part of its path lay 211 times further from the sun than the earth’s orbit, yet even
this mighty path, requiring more than 3,000 years for a single circuit, can not be said to have
carried the comet into the star-depths. If the earth were to shift its position by the some
enormous amount, the nearest fixed star would have its apparent position changed only by
about an eighth part of the apparent diameter of the sun or moon, or by about one-quarter of
the distance separating the middle star of the Bear’s tail from its close companion.
But this fact of itself is most strikingly suggestive of the vast distance of the stars. For
consider what it means. Imagine the middle star of the Bear’s tail to be the really nearest of
all the stars instead of lying probably twenty or thirty times further away. Conceive a comet
belonging to that sun after making its nearest approach to it to travel away upon an orbit
requiring 3,000 years for each circuit. Then (supposing that star equal to our sun in mass)
the comet, though rushing away from its sun with inconceivable velocity during 1,500
years, would, at the end of that vast period, seem to be no further away than one-fourth of
the distance separating the sun from its near companion. Look at the middle star of the
Bear’s tail on any clear night, and on its small satellite, remembering this fact, and the awful
immensity of the star-depths are strongly impressed upon the mind. But the observer must [41]
not fail to remember that the star really is many times more remote than we have here for a
moment supposed, and that such a comet’s range of travel would be proportionately
reduced. Moreover, many among the stars are doubtless hundreds, even thousands, of times
still further away.
Let us turn lastly to the amazing comet of the year 1744. We find that though it had the
longest period of any which has ever been assigned to a comet as the result of actual
mathematical calculation, yet its range in space would scarcely suffice to change the
position of the stars in such sort that the aspect of the familiar constellations would be
materially altered. Euler, the eminent mathematician, calculated for this comet a period of
122,683 years, which would correspond, I find, to a distance of recession equal to 2,469
times the distance of the earth from the sun, or about eighty times the distance of Neptune.
Yet this is but little more than twelve times the greatest distance of the comet of 1811.
Probably the actual range of such an orbit from the middle star of the Bear’s tail would be
equal in appearance to the range described above on the supposition that the star is no
further from us than the nearest known star (Alpha Centauri). That is, such a comet, if it
could be seen and watched during a period of about 122,000 years, would seem to recede
from the star to a distance equal to about one-fourth the space separating it from its close
companion, and then to return to the point of nearest approach to its ruling sun.
Such are the immensities of star-strewn space! The journey of a comet receding from the [42]
sun with inconceivable velocity during hundreds of thousands of years carries it but so small
a distance from him compared with the distance of the nearest star as scarcely to change the
appearance of the celestial landscape; and yet the distances separating the sun from the
nearest of his fellow suns are but as hairbreadths to leagues when compared with the
proportions of the scheme of suns to which he belongs. These distances, though so mighty
that by comparison with them the inconceivable dimensions of our own earth sink into utter
nothingness, do not bring us even to the threshold of the outermost court of that region of
space to which the scrutiny of our telescopes extends. Yet the whole of that region is but an
atom in the infinity of space.
FOOTNOTES:
[2] It might be suggested that the appearance of this blazing comet among the stars
drove the more superstitious of the Israelites at that time to the worship of star-
gods, as we read how, during the Judgeship of Jair, they “served Baalim and
Ashtaroth, and the gods of Syria and the gods of Moab, and the gods of the
Philistines, and forsook the Lord and served not Him.” To a people like the Jews,
who seem to have been in continual danger of returning to the Sabaistic worship
of their Chaldean ancestors, the appearance of a blazing comet may have been a
frequent occasion of backsliding.
EXTENT OF THE SIDEREAL HEAVENS.—Sir Robert S. Ball
O f all the discoveries that have ever been made in science there are two which especially
baffle our powers of comprehension. They lie at the opposite extremes of nature. One
relates to objects which are infinitely small, the other relates to objects which are almost
infinitely great. The microscope teaches us that there are animals so minute that if a
thousand of them were ranged abreast they would easily swim without being thrown out of
line through the eye of the finest cambric needle. Each of those minute creatures is a highly
organized number of particles, capable of moving about, of finding and devouring its food, [43]
and of behaving in all other respects as becomes an animal as distinguished from an
unorganized piece of matter. The mind is capable of realizing the structure of these little
creatures, and of fully appreciating their marvelous adaptation to the life they are destined to
lead. If these animals excite our astonishment by reason of their extreme minuteness, there
is an appeal made to conceptions of an entirely different character when we learn the lessons
which the telescope teaches. As the microscope reveals the excessively minute, so does the
telescope disclose the sublimely great. In each case myriads of objects are submitted to our
astonished view, but while the microscope brings before us creatures of which countless
millions could swim about freely in a thimbleful of water, the telescope conducts our vision
to uncounted legions of stars, many of them millions of times larger than the earth.
The grandest truth in the whole of nature is conveyed in that first lesson in astronomy
which answers the question: What are the stars? This is a question that a child will ask, and I
have heard of a child’s pretty idea that the stars were little holes in the sky to let the glory of
heaven shine through. The philosopher will replace this explanation by another hardly less
poetical, which will enable us to form some more adequate notion of the real magnificence
of the universe. Each star that we see is, it is true, only a glittering little point of light, but
that is merely because we are a long way from it. An electric light which will dazzle your
eye when quite close will be reduced to an agreeable illumination if it is at a little distance, [44]
will become a faint light a mile away, and at no great distance will become altogether
invisible. We must remember that out in space there is plenty of room—there are no bounds;
and therefore when we see light glistening in the far distant depths we can not at once
conclude that the light is a faint one because it appears to us to be faint. It may be that the
light is only faint because it comes from such a tremendous distance. In fact, the brightest
light conceivable could be reduced to the insignificance of a small star if only it were
removed sufficiently far.
The most intense light we know of comes, of course, from the light which rules by day,
from our sun himself. The sun pours his unrivaled beams around us in all directions with
prodigal abundance, notwithstanding his enormous distance of ninety-three millions of
miles. Let me describe an experiment with respect to our sun, an experiment, it is needless
to say, which could never be performed, but the results to which it leads us are none the less
certain. Astronomers have demonstrated them in many other ways.
Suppose that the sun were gradually to be moved away further and further into space;
suppose that by this time to-morrow the great luminary should be twice as far as it is now,
and the next day should be three times as far, and the day after that four times, and so on
until in a year’s time we should find that the sun was 365 times the distance from us that it is
at present. Let us now trace the changes which we should see in the brilliancy of our orb of [45]
day. When he had reached double his distance from us, we should find that the light had
decreased to a quarter of its present amount, and the heat which we derived from his beams
would have decreased in the same proportion. In ten days we should find that the light had
become so feeble as to be only one-hundredth part of that which we enjoy now. The
apparent size of the sun would also be steadily decreasing, for as the distance of a body
increases its apparent dimensions diminish. Sometimes the diminution of apparent size with
distance is well illustrated on a clock tower. You would hardly believe that the hands and
face of a clock like that at Westminster were so large until you happen to see a man cleaning
or repairing it, when he appears a mere pigmy in comparison with the mighty dial which
points out the hours. In a similar way with every increase of distance, the apparent size of
the sun would decline, and in the lapse of a year the sunlight would be reduced to a feeble
twilight. The sun itself would remain visible for many years, even if it were steadily moving
away, though its lustre would continually decline, and its size would continually diminish,
until at last it would have shrunk to the insignificance of a small point of light, still visible as
a glittering object, but too minute to enable any definite form to be perceived.
Further still, the sun might recede until it passed beyond the reach of vision of the
unaided eye; the telescope would, however, be able to pursue the retreating luminary until at
last it sank into the depths of space beyond the reach of any instrument whatever. [46]
This little argument will prepare us for an explanation of the stars. They merely appear to
us to be points of light of varying degrees of brightness, but we have seen that our own sun
might be reduced in lustre to that of the very dimmest of the stars if only it were removed
sufficiently far. If, therefore, the stars are at a great enough distance from our system, it may
indeed be that they also are suns, possibly equaling, or possibly even surpassing, our own
sun in magnificence.
Here is indeed an imposing suggestion. Can it be that the host of stars which adorn our
midnight sky are actually suns themselves of an importance comparable with that of our
own? This is a great thought, and we desire to test it by every means in our power. You will
see from the reasoning I have given that the whole question turns simply on one point, and
that is: How far off are the stars?
The tiniest point of light that is just seen as a glimmer in the mightiest of telescopes may
be indeed a sun as great, or indeed a million times greater, than our sun, if only that star be
sufficiently far off. To find the distance of a star is a problem which taxes the utmost powers
of the painstaking astronomer; every refinement of skill in making his measurements and of
care in the calculation of his observations have to be lavished on the operation. Alas! it but
too often happens that the astronomer’s labors prove to be futile. The surveying navigator
often has to mark on his chart that no bottom could be found in the depths of the sea. His [47]
appliances would not work, or work reliably, in those ocean abysses; so, too, the astronomer,
when he tries to sound the depths of space to the distances of the stars, has also to mark,
generally speaking, “No bottom here,” as the result of most of his investigations. When this
is the case we know for certain that the star on which his calculations have been made must
be a gorgeous sun, because we are assured of the greatness of its distance, even though we
have not been able to find out what that distance was. There are, however, some few places
through the sky where the astronomer’s sounding line can, so to speak, touch bottom; there
are a few stars of which we do know the distance, and the result is not a little significant.
Were our sun to be withdrawn from us to a distance so great as that of the very nearest of the
stars, our magnificent ruler and benefactor would certainly have lost all his splendor; he
would, in fact, have shrunk to the similitude of a little star not nearly so bright as many of
those which we see over our heads every night. Imagine the sun’s light subdivided into two
hundred thousand parts, each of which would give us only a feeble illumination, and then
imagine that each of these parts was again divided into two hundred thousand parts more,
and it is one of these last fragments that would represent the miserable lustre which the sun
would then display.
From these considerations we can enunciate the magnificent truth which astronomy
discloses to us. I do not think that in the whole range of nature there is any thought so
magnificent or so imposing as that which teaches us to regard every star of every [48]
constellation as a sun. We can not indeed assert that they are all so great as our sun, but we
can affirm with certainty that many of them are far greater and far more splendid.
Considering that our sun presides over a system of worlds of which the earth is one, that it
gives light and heat to those worlds, and guides them in their movements, it would greatly
enlarge our conceptions of the universe if we were assured that there was even one more sun
as large and as splendidly attended as is our own. But now we find that not only is there one
additional sun, but that they teem in uncounted thousands through space. Look, for example,
on the next fine night at the Great Bear, the best known of all our northern constellations,
and there you see seven stars forming the well-known feature. Figure in your mind’s eye
each one of those stars in the likeness of a majestic sun, as big, warm, and bright as our sun,
and look at other parts of the sky and repeat the process with the other constellations, and
your conception of the magnificence of the starry system will begin to assume proper
proportions. But this is only the first step, you must next look at the smaller stars, and reflect
that they, too, are also suns, only much further off as a general rule than the brighter stars,
though this is by no means invariably the case. Thus your estimate of the number of suns in
the universe will rise to thousands, but you will not stop there, you will get a telescope to
help you, and, to your extreme delight and wonder, you will find that there are hosts of stars
—too faint to be visible to the eye, but which the telescope will immediately disclose. You [49]
will get a more powerful instrument, and then you will perceive that the stars are to be
numbered by tens of thousands, and even by millions, and with every fresh accession of
power in your telescope fresh troops and myriads of suns are revealed. Suns in clusters, suns
strewn thickly here and sparsely there, so as to give us the notion that the only limit to the
number we can see is the power of the telescopes we are using. Attempts at actual
numeration are futile, for who can tell the number of the stars?
We can, however, form an estimate, and by taking samples, so to speak, of the sky here
and other samples there, we have been enabled to learn the overwhelming fact that our
universe does contain at the very least one hundred millions of suns.
In discussing the extent of the visible universe, it must always be borne in mind that the
further a source of light is from us the fainter is the illumination which we receive from it.
Suppose that a star which just lies on the limits of naked-eye visibility were somehow to be
transported to a distance which is twice as great, then the lustre of that star would be
diminished to one-fourth of its original amount. It would, therefore, be of course invisible to
the unaided eye, but could still be easily perceived by a telescope. Indeed, the very word
telescope means an instrument for looking at objects a long way off, and the effect of the
telescope is to reduce the apparent distance of the object.
The bulk of a grain of sand as compared with the bulk of a football may illustrate the [50]
space accessible to our eyes when compared with the space accessible to one of the great
telescopes. The larger of these spaces has a thousand times the diameter of the others;
therefore, the relative quantities of these spaces are to be obtained by multiplying 1,000 by
1,000 and by 1,000 again. Thus we finally learn that the amplitude of our vision is
augmented to one thousand million times its original extent by the use of our greatest
telescopes. It need, therefore, be no matter for surprise that the number of stars visible
through our great telescopes or recorded on the sensitive films of photographic plates should
number scores of millions. In fact, it would sometimes seem surprising that the number of
telescopic stars is not even greater than it actually appears to be. If we are able to explore
one thousand million times as much space, we might expect that the number of objects
disclosed would be also increased about a thousand million-fold, but this is certainly not the
case. The truth seems to be that our sun is but one star of a mighty cluster of stars; we
happen to lie near the middle of the cluster, and the rest of the stars belonging to it form
what we know as the Milky Way. There are, of course, other clusters scattered through the
heavens, some of them, perhaps, as great as that body of stars which forms the Milky Way.
Owing to our residence in this cluster we see the neighboring suns in multitudes, and thus
we receive the impression that the solar system lies in an exceptionally rich part of the
universe in as far as the distribution of stars is concerned.
[51]
On the outskirts of the universe lie those faintest and dimmest of objects which we can
just perceive through our greatest telescopes. We know that many of the stars around us
would still remain visible in great instruments, even though they were removed a thousand
times as far off. Among the myriads of faint stars which we see from our observatories,
there may be many, indeed there must be many, which are fully a thousand times as distant
as the bright stars which twinkle in our comparative neighborhood. We thus obtain some
conception of the stupendous distance at which the outskirts of the universe are situated.
There are different ways of illustrating this point, but I think the simplest, as well as the
most striking, is that which is founded on the velocity of light. It is a remarkable fact that the
beautiful star known as Vega[3] has a distance from us so tremendous that its light must have
taken somewhere about eighteen years to travel hither from thence. Notwithstanding that the
light dashes along with such inconceivable speed that it will cover 185,000 miles in every
second, notwithstanding that a journey at this pace will complete the entire circuit of this
globe seven or eight times between two successive ticks of the clock, the light will,
nevertheless, take eighteen years to reach our eye from the time it leaves Vega. We do not,
therefore, see the star as it is at present; we see it as it was eighteen years ago. For the light
which this evening enters our eyes has been all that time on its journey. Indeed, if Vega were [52]
actually to be blotted out from existence it would still continue to shine out as vividly as
ever for eighteen years before all the light on its way had reached us.
We have been led to the belief that among the more distant stars in the universe there
must be many which are fully a thousand times as far from us as is Vega, hence we arrive at
the startling conception that the light they emit has been on its journey for 18,000 years
before it reached us. When we look at those lights to-night we are actually viewing them as
they were 18,000 years ago. In fact, those stars might have totally vanished 17,000 years
ago, though we and our descendants may still see them glittering for yet another thousand
years.
We shall realize a little more fully what this reasoning involves if we suppose that
astronomers dwelt on such a star, and that they had eyes and telescopes sufficiently keen not
only to discern our little earth, but even to scrutinize its surface with attention. Let us
suppose that the stellar astronomers looked at England: do you think they would see a
network of railways joining mighty and populous cities, furnished with immense
manufactories and with countless institutions? Such would be the England of to-day. But
from the distance at which these astronomers are situated light takes 18,000 years for its
journey, and, therefore, what they would see would be England as it was 18,000 years ago.
To them England would even now appear as a country mainly covered with forests inhabited
by bears and wolves, and totally void of any trace of civilization. This illustration will, at all [53]
events, serve to convey some conception of the distance at which the outskirts of our visible
universe are plunged in the depths of space.
FOOTNOTES:
[3] Vega is the brightest star in the Lyre and is nearly always at night directly
overhead in our latitude.—E. S.
THE STARS.—Amédée Guillemin
We here give the names of the twenty most brilliant stars of the two hemispheres which it
is usual to consider as forming the first class. They are here arranged in the order of their
brightness:
1. Sirius 11. Achernar
2. Eta Argus 12. Aldebaran
3. Canopus 13. Beta Centauri
4. Alpha Centauri 14. Alpha Crucis
5. Arcturus 15. Antares
6. Rigel 16. Altair
7. Capella 17. Spica
8. Vega 18. Fomalhaut
9. Procyon 19. Beta Crucis
10. Betelgeuse 20. Pollux
Lastly, Regulus, a bright star in the constellation of the Lion, is also ranked by some
astronomers in the first magnitude, while others only admit in this class the first seventeen [58]
stars in the above list. These divergences are of no importance.
In proportion as the scale of brilliancy or magnitude is descended, the number of the stars
contained in each class rapidly increases. The number of second magnitude stars in the
heavens is about 65; of the third, about 200; of the fifth, 1,100; and of the sixth magnitude,
3,200. Adding these numbers together, we obtain a few over 5,000 stars of the first six
magnitudes, and these comprise very nearly all those that can be seen with the naked eye.
The smallness of this number nearly always astonishes those who have not tried to form
an exact estimate of the number of stars which shine in the celestial vault on the most
favorable nights.
The aspect of the multitude of sparkling points which are scattered over the sky makes us
disposed to believe that they are innumerable, and to be counted, if not by millions, at all
events by hundreds of thousands. This is, nevertheless, an illusion. All observers who have
taken the trouble to make an exact enumeration of the stars visible to the naked eye have
arrived at a maximum of 3,000 as the mean number which can be observed in every part of
the heavens, visible at the same time, at the same place; this, of course, is but half of the
entire heavens.
Argelander has published an exact catalogue of the stars visible on the horizon of Berlin
during the course of the year. This catalogue comprises 3,256 stars. According to Humboldt,
there are 4,146 visible on the horizon of Paris in the whole course of the year; and as this [59]
number increases in proportion as we approach the Equator, that is to say, in proportion as
the double movement of the earth unfolds to us during a year a more extensive portion of
the heavens, 4,638 stars are already visible to the naked eye on the horizon of Alexandria.
We repeat, the maximum number is comprised between 5,000 and 6,000 stars for the
entire heavens, including those seen by the most piercing and most accustomed eyes in the
best nights for observation. When the atmosphere is lit up by the moon, or by twilight, or, as
happens in the great centres of population, by the illumination of the houses and streets, the
lowest magnitude stars are effaced altogether, and the number of those visible is
consequently much more limited. We may add in conclusion, that the more the scintillation,
the more easy it is to distinguish very faint stars.
A word now on the number of stars that can be seen with the help of the telescope. Here
we shall find the numbers which our imagination had erroneously led us to believe are
visible to the naked eye.
According to the illustrious director of the Observatory of Bonn—Argelander—the
seventh magnitude comprises nearly 13,000 stars; the eighth, 40,000; and, lastly, the ninth,
142,000. The calculations of Struve give the total number of stars visible in the entire
heavens by the aid of Sir William Herschel’s 20-foot reflector as more than 20,000,000. But,
without doubt, these approximate numbers are much below the real ones. It will be seen,
besides, that the richness of the heavens in stars is very unequal. The bright zone known [60]
under the name of the Milky Way alone contains, according to Herschel, 18,000,000.
THE LUCID STARS.—J. E. Gore
T he term “lucid” has been applied to the stars visible to the naked eye, without optical aid
of any kind.[4] Many people think that the number of stars visible in this way is very
large. But in reality the number visible to the naked eye is comparatively small. Some
persons are, of course, gifted with very keen eyesight—“miraculous vision” it is sometimes
called—and can see more stars than others; but to average eyesight the number visible in
this way, and which can be individually counted, is very limited. The famous Hipparchus
formed a catalogue of stars in the year 127 b. c. This presumably contained all the most
conspicuous stars he could see in his latitude, and it includes only 1,025 stars. Al-Sûfi, the
Persian astronomer, in his Description of the Fixed Stars, written in the Tenth Century,
describes the positions of only 1,018 stars, although he refers to a number of other faint
stars, of which he does not record the exact places. Pliny thought that about 1,600 stars were
visible in the sky of Europe.
In modern times, however, a considerable number of fainter stars have been recorded as
visible to the naked eye. The famous German astronomer, Heis, who had keen eyesight,
records the positions of 3,903 stars north of the Equator, and 1,040 between the Equator and [61]
20 degrees south declination, or a total of 4,943 stars between the North Pole and 20 degrees
south of the Equator. This would, I find, give a total of about 7,366 stars for both
hemispheres if the stars were equally distributed. Behrmann, in his Atlas of Southern Stars,
between 20 degrees south declination and the South Pole, shows 2,344 stars as visible to the
naked eye. This would give a total of 7,124 for both hemispheres. The actual number seen
by Heis and Behrmann in both hemispheres is 4,943 + 2,344, or 7,287 stars. The Belgian
astronomer, Houzeau, published a catalogue and atlas of the stars in both hemispheres, made
from his own observations in Jamaica and South America, and finds a total of 5,719 stars in
the whole sky. As all these observers had good eyesight, we may take a mean of the above
results as the total number visible to the naked eye in the whole star sphere. This gives 6,874
stars, or in round numbers we may say that there are about 7,000 stars visible to average
eyesight in both hemispheres. This gives, of course, about 3,500 stars to one observer at the
same time at any point on the earth’s surface.
As the whole star sphere contains an area of 41,253 square degrees, we have an average
of one star to six square degrees. In other words there is, on an average, one lucid star in a
space equal to about thirty times the area covered by the full moon! This result may seem
rather surprising considering the apparently large number of stars visible to the naked eye on
a clear night, but the fact can not be denied. The stars are not, of course, equally distributed [62]
over the surface of the sky, but are gathered together in some places, and sparsely scattered
in others, and this may perhaps help to give the impression of a greater number than there
really are.
That the stars are of various degrees of brightness was recognized by the ancient
astronomers. Ptolemy divided them into six classes, the brightest being called first
magnitude, those considerably fainter the second, those much fainter still the third, down to
the sixth magnitude, which were supposed to be the faintest just visible to the naked eye on
a clear moonless night. Ptolemy only recorded whole magnitudes, but Al-Sûfi, in the Tenth
Century, divided these magnitudes, for the first time, into thirds. Thus a star slightly less
than an average star of the second magnitude he called 2—3, that is nearer in brightness to 2
than to 3; one a little brighter than the third he recorded as 3—2, or nearer to 3 than to 2, and
so on. This method has been followed by Argelander, Behrmann, Heis, and Houzeau, but in
the photometric catalogues of Harvard, Oxford, and Potsdam the magnitudes are measured
in decimals of a degree. This has been found necessary for greater accuracy, as the heavens
contain stars of all degrees of brightness.
The term “magnitude” means the ratio between the light of a star of a given magnitude
and that of another exactly one magnitude fainter. This ratio has been variously estimated by
different astronomers, and ranges from 2.155, found by Johnson in 1851, to 3.06, assumed
by Pierce in 1878. The value now universally adopted by astronomers is 2.512 (of which the [63]
logarithm is 0.4). This number is nearly a mean of all the estimates made, and agrees with
the value found by Pogson in 1854 by means of an oil flame, and by Rosen with a Zöllner
photometer in 1870. It simply means that an average star of the first magnitude is 2.512
times the brightness of a star of the second magnitude; a star of the second, 2.512 times
brighter than one of the third, and so on. This makes a star of the first magnitude just 100
times brighter than one of the sixth.
There are several stars brighter than an average star of the first magnitude, such as
Aldebaran. These are Sirius, which is nearly 11 times brighter than Aldebaran (according to
the revised measures at Harvard); Canopus, the second brightest star in the heavens, and
about two magnitudes brighter than Aldebaran; Arcturus, Capella, Vega, Alpha Centauri,
Rigel, Procyon, Alpha Eridani, Beta Centauri, and Alpha Orionis. Al-Sûfi rated 13 stars of
the first magnitude, visible at his station in Persia, and Halley enumerates 16 in the whole
sky. According to the Harvard photometric measures, there are 13 stars in both hemispheres
brighter than Aldebaran, which is rated 1.07.
As average stars of the different magnitudes the following may be taken as examples,
derived from the Harvard measures: First magnitude, Aldebaran and Spica; second
magnitude, β Aurigæ and β Canis Majoris; third magnitude, ι Aurigæ and β Ophiuchi;
fourth magnitude, θ Herculis and ε Draconis; and fifth magnitude, ρ Ursæ Majoris and ω
Sagittarii. Stars of about the sixth magnitude are, of course, numerous, and lie near the limit [64]
of naked-eye vision for average eyesight, although on clear moonless nights still fainter stars
may be “glimpsed” by keen-eyed observers.
The stars have been divided into groups and constellations, now chiefly used for the
purpose of reference, but in ancient times they were associated with the imaginary figures of
men and animals, etc. The origin of these constellation figures is doubtful, but they are
certainly of great antiquity. Ptolemy’s constellations were 48 in number, but different writers
from the First Century b. c. give different numbers, ranging from 43 to 62. Bayer’s
Uranometria, published in 1603, contains 60, 12 new constellations in the Southern
Hemisphere having been added by Theodorus to Ptolemy’s original 48.
The figures representing the constellations were originally drawn on spheres, or celestial
globes, as they are now called. The ancient astronomers attributed the invention of the
sphere to Atlas. It seems certain that a celestial sphere was constructed by Eudoxus in the
Fourth Century b. c. Strabo speaks of one made by Krates about the year 130 b. c., and
according to Ovid, Archimedes had constructed one at a considerably earlier period. None
of these ancient spheres has been preserved. There is, however, in the Vatican a fragment in
marble of a Græco-Egyptian planisphere, and a globe in the museum of Arolsen, but these
are of much later date. Our knowledge of the original constellation figures is derived from
the accounts given by Ptolemy and his successors, and from a few globes which only date [65]
back to the Arabian period of astronomy. Among the Arabian globes still existing the most
famous is one made of copper, and preserved in the Borgia Museum at Velletri in Italy. It is
supposed to have been made by a person called Caisar, who was executed by the Sultan of
Egypt in a. d. 1225. The most ancient of all is one discovered some years ago at Florence. It
is supposed to date back to a. d. 1081, and to have been made by Meucci. There is also one
in the Farnese Museum at Naples, made in a. d. 1225. Of modern celestial globes the oldest
is one made by Jansson Blaeu in 1603. This gives all the constellations of the Southern
Hemisphere as well as the Northern.
Ptolemy’s figures of the constellations were restored by the famous painter Albert Dürer
of Nuremberg in 1515. The figures on modern globes and maps have been copied from this
restoration. Dürer’s maps are now very rare.
In 1603, an atlas was published by Bayer. This was the first atlas to show the southern
sky, and the first to designate the brightest stars by the letters of the Greek alphabet.[5]
Flamsteed published an atlas in 1729. Maps and catalogues of the lucid stars have been [66]
published in recent times by Argelander, Behrmann, Heis, Houzeau, Proctor, and others. Of
these Heis’s is, perhaps, the most reliable, at least so far as accurate star magnitudes are
concerned. Houzeau shows both hemispheres, all the stars had been observed by himself in
Jamaica and South America. Behrmann’s maps are confined to the Southern Hemisphere,
between the South Pole and 20 degrees south of the Equator. The maps of the Uranometria
Argentina, made at Cordoba in the Argentine Republic, show all the southern stars to the
seventh magnitude, but many of these are beyond the reach of ordinary eyesight.
It is a well-known fact that the planets Venus and Jupiter are bright enough to form
shadows of objects on a white background. It has also been found that the brightest stars,
especially Sirius, are sufficiently brilliant to cast shadows. Kepler stated that a shadow was
formed by even Spica, but I am not aware that this has been confirmed by modern
observations.
There are some remarkable collections or clusters of stars visible to the naked eye, of
these the Pleiades are probably the best known. To ordinary eyesight 6 stars are visible, but
Möstlin, Kepler’s tutor, is said to have seen 14 with the naked eye, and some observers in
modern times have seen 11 or 12. Other naked-eye clusters are the Hyades in Taurus, called
Palilicium by Halley, and the Præsepe, or Bee-Hive in Cancer. Of larger groups, the Plow or
Great Bear, Cassiopeia’s Chair, and Orion are probably known to most people.
Many of the lucid stars are double, that is, consist of two components, but most of these [67]
are only visible in powerful telescopes. There are, however, a few objects visible to the
naked eye as double, and these have been called “naked-eye doubles,” although not strictly
double in the correct sense of the term.
Ptolemy applied the term double to the star ν Sagittarii, which consists of two stars
separated by a distance of fourteen minutes of arc, or about half the apparent diameter of the
moon. According to Riccioli, Van der Hove saw two naked-eye doubles, one in Capricornus,
5 to 5½ minutes distant, and the other in the Hyades, 4½ or 5 minutes apart. The one in
Capricornus was probably α, and the one in the Hyades θ Tauri. The middle star in the tail
of the Great Bear, or handle of the Plow, has near it a small star, Alcor, which to many eyes
is distinctly visible without optical aid. The famous Belgian astronomer, Houzeau, who
seems to have had excellent sight, saw the star χ Tauri double, and 51 and 56 Tauri
separated, also ι Orionis, and others.
Many of the stars are variable in their light, and several hundred of these curious and
interesting objects are now known to astronomers. In a few of these the light changes may
be followed with the naked eye. It is an interesting question whether any of the lucid stars
have disappeared or changed in brightness since the early ages of astronomical observations.
Al-Sûfi failed to find seven of Ptolemy’s stars, and Ulug Bekh, comparing his observations
with the catalogues of Ptolemy and Al-Sûfi, announced twelve cases of supposed [68]
disappearance. Some of these may, however, be due to errors of observation. Montanari,
writing in 1672, mentions two stars as having disappeared, namely β and γ of the
constellation Argo, but these stars are now visible in the positions originally assigned to
them.
In a careful examination of Al-Sûfi’s description of the stars written in the Tenth Century,
and a comparison with modern estimates and measures, I have found several very
interesting cases of apparent change in the brightness of the lucid stars. Al-Sûfi was an
excellent and careful observer, and as a rule his estimates agree well with modern
observations. We can therefore place considerable reliance on his estimates of star
magnitudes. The Story of Theta Eridani has been well told by Dr. Anderson, and there seems
to be no doubt that this southern star, which is now only of the third magnitude, was a bright
star of the first magnitude in Al-Sûfi’s time! The following are other interesting cases of
apparent change which I have met with in my examination of Al-Sûfi’s work. The Pole Star
was rated third magnitude by both Ptolemy and Al-Sûfi, but it is now of the second
magnitude, or a little less. The star γ Geminorum was rated third magnitude by Ptolemy and
Al-Sûfi, or equal to δ Geminorum, but γ is now of the second magnitude, and its great
superiority in brightness over δ is noticeable at a glance. Another interesting case is that of ζ
and ο Persei, two stars which lie near each other, about seven degrees north of the Pleiades.
Al-Sûfi distinctly describes these stars as both of the 3—4 magnitude; but Argelander, Heis, [69]
and the photometric measures at Harvard agree in making ζ about one magnitude brighter
than ο. The stars being close are easily compared, and their present great difference in
brightness is very noticeable. This is one of the most remarkable cases I have met with in
Al-Sûfi’s work, and strongly suggests variation in ο, as ζ is still about the same brightness
as Al-Sûfi made it. The identity of the stars is beyond all doubt, as Al-Sûfi describes their
positions very clearly, and says there is no star between them and the Pleiades, a remark
which is quite correct for the naked eye. The remarkable decrease in brightness of β Leonis
(Denebola) since Al-Sûfi’s time has been considered in my paper on Some Suspected
Variable Stars. That it was a bright star of the first magnitude is fully proved by the
observations of Al-Sûfi and Tycho Brahe. These were careful and accurate observers, and
they could not have been mistaken about a star of the first magnitude. β Leonis is now
fainter than an average star of the second magnitude, and there can be no reasonable doubt
that it has faded considerably since the Tenth Century.
There are some other discrepancies between Al-Sûfi’s observations and modern estimates,
but the above are perhaps the most remarkable. With reference to lucid stars not mentioned
by Al-Sûfi, he has not, I think, omitted any star brighter than the fourth magnitude in that
portion of the sky visible from his station. There are, however, a number of stars between
the fourth and sixth magnitudes which he does not mention. Of these the brightest seem to [70]
be ε Aquilæ, ρ and μ Cygni, and ζ Coronæ Borealis.
With reference to the distribution of the lucid stars in the sky there seems to be a well-
marked tendency to congregate on the Milky Way. It is a remarkable fact that of the 15
brightest stars in the heavens, no less than 11 lie on or near the Milky Way, although the
space covered by the Galaxy does not exceed one-fifth or one-sixth of the whole sky. From a
careful enumeration of the stars in or near the Milky Way which I made some years ago, I
found that of stars brighter than the fourth magnitude there are 118 on the Milky Way out of
a total of 392, or about 30 per cent. From the Southern catalogue known as the Uranometria
Argentina, Colonel Markwick, F.R.A.S., found 121 out of 228 stars to fourth magnitude, or
a percentage of 53 per cent. These results seem to show some intimate relation between the
lucid stars and the Galaxy.
FOOTNOTES:
[4] Except concave spectacles used by short-sighted persons.
[5] This custom has since prevailed. The following are the letters and their names:
T he earth is forgotten, with its small and ephemeral history. The sun himself, with all his
immense system, has sunk in the infinite night. On the wings of inter-sidereal comets
we have taken our flight toward the stars, the suns of space. Have we exactly measured,
have we worthily realized the road passed over by our thoughts? The nearest star to us
reigns at a distance of 275,000 times 37 millions of leagues—that is to say, at ten trillions[6] [71]
of leagues (about twenty-five billions of miles); out to that star an immense desert surrounds
us, the most profound, the darkest, and the most silent of solitudes.
The solar system seems to us very vast, the abyss which separates our world from Mars,
Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune appears to us immense; relatively to the fixed stars, however,
our whole system represents but an isolated family immediately surrounding us: a sphere as
vast as the whole solar system would be reduced to the size of a simple point if it were
transported to the distance of the nearest star. The space which extends between the solar
system and the stars, and which separates the stars from each other, appears to be entirely
void of visible matter, with the exception of nebulous fragments, cometary or meteoric,
which circulate here and there in the immense voids. Nine thousand two hundred and fifty
systems like ours (bounded by Neptune), would be contained in the space which isolates us
from the nearest star!
If a terrible explosion occurred in this star, and if the sound could traverse the void which
separates it from us, this sound would take more than three millions of years to reach us.
It is marvelous that we can perceive the stars at such a distance. What an admirable
transparency in these immense spaces to permit the light to pass, without being wasted, to
thousands of billions of miles! Around us, in the thick air which envelops us, the mountains [72]
are already darkened and difficult to see at seventy miles; the least fog hides from us objects
on the horizon. What must be the tenuity, the rarefaction, the extreme transparency of the
ethereal medium which fills the celestial spaces!
Let us suppose ourselves, then, on the sun nearest to ours. From there our dazzling
furnace is already lost like a little star, hardly recognizable among the constellations: earth,
planets, comets sail in the invisible. We are in a new system. If we thus approach each star
we find a sun, while all the other suns of space are reduced to the rank of stars. Strange
reality!—the normal state of the universe is night. What we call day only exists for us
because we are near a star.
The immense distance which isolates us from all the stars reduces them to the state of
motionless lights apparently fixed on the vault of the firmament. All human eyes, since
humanity freed its wings from the animal chrysalis, all minds since the minds have been,
have contemplated these distant stars lost in the ethereal depths; our ancestors of Central
Asia, the Chaldeans of Babylon, the Egyptians of the Pyramids, the Argonauts of the Golden
Fleece, the Hebrews sung by Job, the Greeks sung by Homer, the Romans sung by Virgil—
all these earthly eyes, for so long dull and closed, have been fixed from age to age on these
eyes of the sky, always open, animated, and living. Terrestrial generations, nations and their
glories, thrones and altars have vanished: the sky of Homer is always there. Is it astonishing
that the heavens were contemplated, loved, venerated, questioned, and admired even before [73]
anything was known of their true beauties and their unfathomable grandeur?
Better than the spectacle of the sea calm or agitated, grander than the spectacle of
mountains adorned with forests or crowned with perpetual snow, the spectacle of the sky
attracts us, envelops us, speaks to us of the infinite, gives us the dizziness of the abyss; for,
more than any other, it seizes the contemplative mind and appeals to it, being the truth, the
infinite, the eternal, the all. Writers who know nothing of the true poetry of modern science
have supposed that the perception of the sublime is born of ignorance, and that to admire it
is necessary not to know. This is assuredly a strange error, and the best proof of it is found in
the captivating charm and the passionate admiration which divine science now inspires, not
in some rare minds only, but in thousands of intellects, in a hundred thousand readers
impassioned in the search for truth, surprised, almost ashamed at having lived in ignorance
of and indifference to these splendid realities, anxious to incessantly enlarge their
conception of things eternal, and feeling admiration increasing in their dazzled minds in
proportion as they penetrate further into Infinitude. What was the universe of Moses, of Job,
of Hesiod, or of Cicero, compared to ours! Search through all the religious mysteries, in all
the surprises of art, painting, music, the theatre, or romance, search for an intellectual
contemplation which produces in the mind the impression of truth, of grandeur, of the [74]
sublime, like astronomical contemplation! The smallest shooting star puts to us a question
which it is difficult not to hear; it seems to say to us, What are we in the universe? The
comet opens its wings to carry us into the profundities of space: the star which shines in the
depths of the heavens shows us a distant sun surrounded with unknown humanities who
warm themselves in his rays. Wonderful, immense, fantastic spectacles, they charm by their
captivating beauty and transport into the majesty of the unfathomable the man who permits
himself to soar and wing his flight to Infinitude.
Nel ciel che più della sua luce prende
Fu’ io, e vidi cose che ridire
Né sa, né può qual di lassù discende.
“I have ascended into the heavens, which receive most of His light, and I have seen things
which he who descends from on high knows not, neither can repeat,” wrote Dante in the first
canto of his poem on “Paradise.” Let us, like him, rise toward the celestial heights, no longer
on the trembling wings of faith, but on the stronger wings of science. What the stars would
teach us is incomparably more beautiful, more marvelous, and more splendid than anything
we can dream of.
Chart of the Northern Constellations
Showing the principal Stars of the first five magnitudes visible to the naked eye
Among the innumerable army of stars which sparkle in the infinite night, the gaze is
especially arrested by the most brilliant lights and by certain groups which vaguely present a
mysterious bond between the worlds of space. These groups have been noticed at all epochs, [75]
even among the rudest races of men, and from the earliest ages of humanity they have
received names, usually derived from the organic kingdom, which give a fantastic life to the
solitude and the silence of the skies. Thus were early distinguished the seven stars of the
North, or the Chariot, of which Homer speaks; the Pleiades, or the “Poussinière”; the giant
Orion; the Hyades in the head of Taurus; Boötes, near the Chariot or Great Bear. These five
groups were already named more than 3,000 years ago, and so were the brightest stars of the
sky, Sirius and Arcturus, etc.
The epoch of the formation of the constellations is unknown, but we know that they were
established successively. The centaur Chiron, Jason’s tutor, has the reputation of having first
divided the sky on the sphere of the Argonauts. But this is mythology; and, besides, Job
lived before the epoch at which Chiron is supposed to have flourished, and Job had already
spoken of Orion, the Pleiades, and the Hyades 3,000 years ago. Homer also speaks of these
constellations in describing the famous shield of Vulcan. “On its surface,” says he, “Vulcan,
with a divine intelligence traces a thousand varied pictures. He represents the earth, the
heavens, the sea, the indefatigable sun, the moon at its full, and all the stars which wreath
the sky: the Pleiades, the Hyades, the brilliant Orion, the Bear, which they also call the
Chariot, and which revolves round the pole; this is the only constellation which does not dip
into the ocean waves” (Iliad, chapter xviii.).
Several theologians have affirmed that it was Adam himself, in the terrestrial paradise, [76]
who gave their names to the stars; the historian Josephus assures us that it was not Adam,
but his son Seth, and that in any case astronomy was cultivated long before the Deluge. This
nobility is sufficient for us.
Attentive observation of the sky also noticed from the beginning the beautiful stars Vega
of the Lyre, Capella of Auriga, Procyon of the Little Dog, Antares of the Scorpion, Altair of
the Eagle, Spica of the Virgin, the Twins, the Chair of Cassiopeia, the Cross of the White
Swan, stretched in the midst of the Milky Way. Although noticed at the epoch of Hesiod and
Homer, these constellations and stars were probably not yet named, because doubtless men
had not yet felt the necessity of registering them for any application to the calendar, to
navigation, or to voyages.[7]
At the epoch when the maritime power of the Phœnicians was at its apogee, about 3,000 [77]
years ago, or twelve centuries before our era, it was the star β of the Little Bear which was
the nearest bright star to the pole, and the skilful navigators of Tyre and Sidon (O purpled
kings of former times! what remains of your pride?) had recognized the seven stars of the
Little Bear, which they named the Tail of the Dog, Cynosura; they guided themselves by the
pivot of the diurnal motion, and during several centuries they surpassed in precision all the
mariners of the Mediterranean. The Dog has given place to a Bear, doubtless on account of
the resemblance of the configuration of these seven stars to the seven of the Great Bear, but
the tail remains long and curled up, in spite of the nature of the new animal.
Thus the stars of the North at first served as points of reference for the first men who
dared to venture on the seas. But they served at the same time as guides on the mainland for
the nomadic tribes who carried their tents from country to country. In the midst of savage
nature, the first warriors themselves had nothing but the Little Bear to guide their steps.
Imperceptibly, successively, the constellations were formed. Some groups resemble the
names which they still bear, and suggested their denomination to the men of ancient times,
who lived in the midst of nature and sought everywhere for relations with their daily
observations. The Chariot; the Chair; the Three Kings, also named the Rake; Jacob’s Staff
and the Belt of Orion; the Pleiades, or the Hen and Chickens; the Arrow (Sagitta); the [78]
Crown; the Triangle; the Twins; the Dragon; the Serpent; and even the Bull, the Swan, the
Giant Orion, the Dolphin, the Fishes, the Lion, Water and Aquarius (the Water-bearer), etc.,
have given rise to the analogy. These resemblances are sometimes vague and far-fetched,
like those we find in the clouds; but it appears much more natural to admit this origin than to
suppose, with the classic authors, that these names were suggested by the concordance
between the seasons or the labors of the fields and the presence of the stars above the
horizon. That the name of the Balance (Libra) was given to the constellation of the equinox
because then the days are equal, seems to us more than questionable; that Cancer (the Crab)
signifies that the sun goes back to the solstice, and that the Lion has for its object to
symbolize the heat of summer, and Aquarius the rain and inundations, appears to us no less
imaginary. However, they have also had other origins. Thus, the Great Dog Sirius certainly
announced the rising of the Nile and the dog-days (which remain in our calendar as a fine
type of anachronism). Poetry, gratitude, the deification of heroes, mythology, afterward
transferred to the sky the names of personages and sovereigns—Hercules, Perseus,
Andromeda, Cepheus, Cassiopeia, Pegasus; later, in the Roman epoch, they added the Hair
of Berenice and Antinous; later still, in modern times, they added the Southern Cross, the
Indian, the Sculptor’s Workshop (Cœlum), the Lynx, the Giraffe (Camelopardus), the
Greyhounds (Canes Venatici), the Shield of Sobieski, and the little Fox (Vulpecula). They [79]
even placed in the sky a Mountain, an Oak, a Peacock, a Swordfish, a Goose, a Cat, a Crane,
a Lizard, and a Fly, for which there was no necessity.
This is not the place to describe and draw in detail all these constellations, with their more
or less strange figures. The important point for us here is to form a general idea.
The sky remains divided into provinces, each of which continues to bear the name of the
primitive constellation. But it is important to understand that the positions of the stars
themselves, as we see them, are not absolute, and that the different configurations which
they may show us are only a matter of perspective. We already know that the sky is not a
concave sphere on which brilliant nails could be attached; that it is not a species of vault;
that an immense infinite void envelops the earth on all sides, in all directions. We know also
that the stars, the suns of space, are scattered at all distances in the vast immensity. When,
therefore, we remark in the sky several stars near each other, that does not imply that these
stars form the same constellation, that they are on the same plane, and at an equal distance
from the earth. By no means; the arrangement which they assume to our eyes is but an
appearance caused by the position of the earth relatively to them. This is a mere matter of
perspective. If we could leave our world, and transport ourselves to a point in space
sufficiently distant, we should see a variation in the apparent arrangement of the stars so
much the greater as our station of observation were more distant from where we are at
present. A moment’s reflection is sufficient to convince us of this fact, and save us from [80]
insisting further on this point.
Once these illusions are appreciated at their true value, we can begin the description of
the figures with which the ancient mythology has constellated the sphere. A knowledge of
the constellations is necessary for the observation of the heavens and for the researches
which a love of the sciences and curiosity may suggest; without it we find ourselves in an
unknown country, of which the geography has not been made, and where it would be
impossible to know our exact position. Let us make, then, this celestial geography; let us see
how to find our way, in order to read readily in the great book of the heavens.
There is a constellation which everybody knows; for greater simplicity we will begin with
it. It will serve us well as a point of departure from which to go to the others, and as a point
of reference to find its companions. This constellation is the Great Bear, which has also
been named the Chariot of David.
It may well boast of being celebrated. If, notwithstanding its universal notoriety, some of
our readers have not yet made its acquaintance, the following is a description by which they
may recognize it.
Fig. 2
Turn yourself toward the north—that is to say, opposite to the point where the sun is
found at noon. Whatever may be the season of the year, the day of the month, or the hour of [81]
the night, you will always see there a large constellation formed of seven fine stars, of which
four are in a quadrilateral, and three at an angle with one side; all are arranged as we see in
Fig. 2.
You have all seen it, have you not? It never sets. Night and day it watches above the
northern horizon, turning slowly in twenty-four hours round a star of which we shall speak
directly. In the figure of the Great Bear, the three stars of the extremity form the tail, and the
four in the quadrilateral lie in the body. In the Chariot, the four stars of the quadrilateral
form the wheels, and the other three the pole, the horses, or the oxen. Above the second of
these latter stars, ζ, good sight distinguishes quite a little star named Alcor, which is also
called the Cavalier. It serves to test the power of the sight. Each star is designated by a letter
of the Greek alphabet: α and β mark the first two stars of the quadrilateral, γ and δ the two
following, ε, ζ, η, the three of the pole. Arabic names have also been given to these stars,
which we will pass in silence, because they are generally obsolete, with the exception,
however, of that of the second horse—Mizar. With reference to the Greek letters, many
persons think that it would be preferable to suppress them and to replace them by numbers.
But this would be impossible in the practice of astronomy; and, moreover, inevitable
confusion would result, on account of the numbers which the stars bear in the catalogues.
The Latins gave to plowing oxen the name of triones; instead of speaking of a chariot and [82]
three oxen, they came to call them the seven oxen (septemtriones). From this is derived the
word septentrion, and there are now doubtless but few persons who, in writing this word,
know that they are speaking of seven oxen. It is the same, however, with many other words.
Who remembers, for example, in using the word tragedy, that he speaks of a song of a goat:
tragôs-ode?
Let us go back to Fig. 2. If we draw a straight line through the two stars marked α and β
which form the right side of the square, and produce it beyond α to a distance equal to five
times that from β to α, or to a distance equaling that from α to the end of the tail, η, we find
a star a little less brilliant than at the extremity of a figure similar to the Great Bear, but
smaller and pointing in the opposite direction. This is the Little Bear, or the Little Chariot,
also formed of seven stars. The star to which our line leads us—that which is at the tip of the
tail of the Little Bear, or at the end of the pole of the Little Chariot—is the polar star.
Fig. 3
The polar star enjoys a certain fame, like all persons who are distinguished from the
common, because, among all the bodies which scintillate in the starry night, it alone remains [83]
motionless in the heavens. At any moment of the year, by day or by night, when you observe
the sky, you will always find it. All the other stars, on the contrary, turn in twenty-four hours
round it, taken as the centre of this immense vortex. The pole star remains motionless at the
pole of the world, from whence it serves as a fixed point to navigators on the trackless
ocean, as well as to travelers in the unexplored desert.
Fig. 4
In looking at the pole star, motionless in the midst of the northern region of the sky, we
have the south behind us, the east to the right, the west to the left. All the stars turn round
the pole star in a direction contrary to that of the hands of a watch; they should, then, be
recognized according to their mutual relations rather than by reference to the cardinal points.
On the other side of the pole star, with reference to the Great Bear, is found another
constellation which we can also recognize at once. If from the middle star, δ, we draw a line [84]
to the pole, and produce this line by the same distance (see Fig. 3), we arrive at Cassiopeia,
formed of five principal stars arranged somewhat like the strokes of the letter M. The little
star χ, which completes the square, gives the constellation the form of a chair. This group
assumes all possible positions in turning round the pole; it is found sometimes above,
sometimes below, sometimes to the right, and sometimes to the left; but it is always easily
recognized, for, like the preceding group, it never sets, and is always opposite to the Great
Bear. The pole star is the axle round which both these constellations turn.
Fig. 5 Fig. 6
If, now, we draw from the stars α and δ of the Great Bear two lines through the pole, and
produce them beyond Cassiopeia, we come to the Square of Pegasus (see Fig. 4), which
shows a line of three stars somewhat similar to the tail of the Great Bear. These three stars
belong to Andromeda, and lead to another constellation, Perseus. The last star of the Square
of Pegasus is, as we see, the first (α) of Andromeda; the three others are named γ, α, and β. [85]
To the north of β of Andromeda is found, near a little star, ν, an oblong nebula, which can be
distinguished with the naked eye. In Perseus, α, the brightest—on the prolongation of the
three principal stars of Andromeda—appears between two others less brilliant, which form
with it a concave arc very easy to distinguish. This arc serves us for a new alignment.
Producing it in the direction of δ, we find a very brilliant star of the first magnitude; this is
Capella (the Goat). Forming a right angle with this prolongation toward the south we come
to the Pleiades (Fig. 5). Not far from that is a variable star, Algol, or the Head of Medusa,
which varies from the second to the fourth magnitude[8] in 2 days, 20 hours, 48 minutes, 51
seconds. We may add, that in this region the star γ of Andromeda is one of the most
beautiful double stars (it is even triple).
Fig. 7 Fig. 8
If, now, we produce beyond the Square of Pegasus (Fig. 6) the curved line of Andromeda,
we reach the Milky Way, and we meet in these parts Cygnus, like a cross; the Lyre, where
Vega shines (Fig. 7); the Eagle, and Altair (not Atair, as it is sometimes written) with two
companions (Fig. 8).
Such are the principal constellations visible in the circumpolar regions on one side; we [86]
shall make a fuller acquaintance with them directly. While we are tracing the lines of
reference let us still have a little patience and finish our summary review of this part of the
sky.
Fig. 9
Look now at the side opposite to that of which we have just spoken. Let us return to the
Great Bear. Producing the tail along its curve, we find at some distance from that a star of
the first magnitude, Arcturus (Fig. 9), or α of Boötes. A little circle of stars which we see to
the left of Boötes constitutes the Northern Crown (Corona Borealis). In the month of May,
1866, there was seen shining there a fine star, the brightness of which lasted only fifteen
days. The constellation of Boötes is traced in the form of a pentagon. The stars which
compose it are of the third magnitude, with the exception of Arcturus, which is of the first.
This is one of the nearest to the earth; at least, it is one of a small number whose distance
has been measured. It shines with a beautiful golden yellow color. The star ε, which we see
above it, is double—that is to say, the telescope resolves it into two distinct stars, one [87]
yellow, the other blue.
Fig. 10.
This technical description is far from the poetry of Nature; but it is especially important
here to be clear and precise. Let us suppose ourselves, however, under the starry vault on a
beautiful summer’s night, splendid and silent, and let us consider that each of these points
which we seek to recognize is a world, or rather a system of worlds. Look at this equilateral
triangle (Fig 10); it permits us to cast our eyes successively on three important suns: Vega of
the Lyre, Arcturus of Boötes, and the pole star, which watches above the solitudes of our
mysterious North Pole. Many martyrs of science have died looking at it! In twelve thousand
years our descendants will see the Lyre at the pole, ruling the harmony of the heavens. [88]
The stars which are near the pole, and which have for that reason received the name of
circumpolar stars, are distributed in the groups which have just been indicated. I earnestly
invite my readers to profit by fine evenings, and try to find for themselves these
constellations in the sky.
We have here the principal stars and constellations of the Northern Hemisphere, the North
Pole being at the centre of the circle. We come now in the order of our description to the
twelve constellations of the zodiacal belt, which makes the circuit of the sky, inclined at 23°
to the Equator, and of which the ecliptic, the apparent path of the sun, forms the centre line.
The name of zodiac, given to the zone of stars which the sun traverses during the course
of the year, comes from ζώδια, animals, an etymology which is due to the species of figures
traced on this belt of stars. Animals, in fact, predominate in these figures. The entire
circumference of the sky has been divided into twelve parts, which have been named the
twelve signs of the zodiac; our ancestors called them the “houses of the sun,” or “the
monthly abodes of Apollo,” because the day star visits them each month, and returns every
spring to the beginning of the zodiacal city. Two memorable Latin verses of the poet
Ausonius present to us these twelve signs in the order in which the sun travels through them,
and this still appears the easiest method of learning them by heart.
Sunt Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, [89]
Libraque, Scorpius, Arciteneus, Caper, Amphora, Pisces;
or, in English, the Ram ♈︎, the Bull ♉︎, the Twins ♊︎, the Crab ♋︎, the Lion ♌︎, the Virgin
♍︎, the Balance ♎︎, the Scorpion ♏︎, the Archer ♐︎, Capricornus ♑︎, Aquarius ♒︎, and
the Fishes ♓︎ . The signs placed beside these names are a vestige of the primitive
hieroglyphics which described them: ♈︎ represents the horns of the Ram, ♉︎the head of the
Bull; ♒︎ is a stream of water, etc.
If we now know our northern sky, if its most important stars are sufficiently noted down
in our mind, with the reciprocal relations which they preserve among themselves, we have
no more confusion to fear, and it will be easy to recognize the zodiacal constellations. This
zone may be of use to us as a line of division between the north and the south. Here is a
description of it:
The Ram, which, moving in front of the herd, and regulating, so to say, the march,
opens the series. This constellation has in itself nothing remarkable; the brightness of
its stars indicates the base of one of the horns of the leader of the sheep; it is but of
the second magnitude. After the Ram comes the Bull. Admire on a fine winter’s night
the charming Pleiades which scintillate in the ether; not far from them shines a fine
red star—this is the eye of the Bull—Aldebaran, a star of the first magnitude and one
of the finest of our sky. We now arrive at the Twins, whose heads are marked by two
fine stars of the second magnitude, situated a little above a star of the first magnitude
—Procyon, or the Little Dog; Cancer, or the Crab, a constellation very little
conspicuous (its most visible stars are but of the fourth magnitude, and occupy the
body of the animal); the Lion, a fine constellation, marked by a star of the first
magnitude, Regulus, by one of the second, β, and by several others of the second and
third magnitudes arranged in a trapezium; the Virgin, indicated by a very brilliant star
of the first magnitude; Spica, situated in the neighborhood of a star, also of the first [90]
magnitude, Arcturus, which is found on the prolongation of the tail of the Great Bear;
the Balance (Libra), indicated by two stars of the second magnitude, which would
exactly resemble the Twins if they were nearer to each other; the Scorpion, a
remarkable constellation; a star of the first magnitude, of a fine red color, marks the
Heart (Antares), in the middle of two stars of the third magnitude, above which are
three bright stars arranged in a diadem; Sagittarius, the Archer, of which the arrow,
indicated by three stars of the second and third magnitudes, is pointed toward the tail
of the Scorpion; Capricornus, a constellation not conspicuous, which is recognized by
two stars of the third magnitude very near each other, and representing the base of the
horns of the hieroglyphic animal; Aquarius, indicated by three stars of the third
magnitude arranged in a triangle, of which the most northern occupies a point on the
equator; Pisces, the Fishes, composed of stars, barely conspicuous, of the third to
fourth magnitudes, situated to the south of a large and magnificent quadrilateral—the
Square of Pegasus—of which we have already spoken.
We have now enumerated the zodiacal constellations in the order of the direct motion
(from west to east) of the sun, moon, and planets which traverse them. They marked at the
epoch of their formation, the monthly passage of the sun into each of them. The distribution
of the stars in figurative groups was the first truly hieroglyphical writing; it was engraved on
the firmament in indelible characters.
The zodiac has played a great part in the ancient history of every nation—in the formation
of the calendar, in the appointment of public festivals, and in the constitution of eras. The
zodiac of Denderah, discovered by the French savants in Egypt at the end of the Eighteenth
Century, was at first believed to have an antiquity of 15,000 years; but it is now proved that
it is necessary to deduct from that number of years half the cycle of precession—that is to [91]
say, nearly 13,000 years—which brings down the date of this sculpture to 2,000 years before
our epoch; and this in fact corresponds with the evidence of archæology. It is remarkable
that all the ancient zodiacs and calendars which have been preserved to us begin the year
with the constellation of the Bull, as we have already noticed. The zodiac of the Elephanta
Pagoda (Salsette) has at the head of the procession the sign of the sacred Bull, the ox Apis,
Mithra—of which the promenade of the fat ox, which is still performed in the environs of
Paris, is a vestige. The ceiling of a sepulchral chamber at Thebes shows the Bull at the head
of the procession. The zodiac of Esne, the astronomical picture discovered by Champollion
in the Ramesseum of Thebes, carries us back to the same origin, between two and three
thousand years before our era; Biot supposes the date of this to be the year 3285, the vernal
equinox passing through the Hyades on the forehead of Taurus. Father Gaubil has proved
that from ancient times the Chinese have referred the beginning of the apparent motion of
the sun to the stars of Taurus; and we have a Chinese observation of the star η of the
Pleiades as marking the vernal equinox in the year 2357 before our era. Hesiod sings of the
Pleiades as ruling the labors of the year, and the name of Vergilia, which the ancient Romans
gave them, associates them with the beginning of the year in spring.
Fig. 11
Without entering into any details of the different zodiacs which have been preserved to us
from the most ancient and diverse nations, a glance at those which are reproduced here will [92]
lead us to appreciate the part which they have played in ancient religions. Several zodiacal
signs have become veritable gods. The zodiac represented by Fig. 11 was engraved, in the
Thirteenth Century, on an Arabic magic mirror, and dedicated to the sovereign prince
Aboulfald, “Victorious Sultan, Light of the World,” if we are to believe the bombastic
inscription which encircles it. Fig. 12 shows an ancient Hindoo zodiac. Fig. 13 shows a [93]
Chinese zodiac stamped upon a talisman, even now in use. The twelve signs differ from
ours; they are: the Mouse, the Cow, the Tiger, the Rabbit, the Dragon, the Serpent, the
Horse, the Ram, the Ape, the Hen, the Dog, and the Pig. Fig. 14 represents a Chinese medal,
on which we see the constellation Teou, the Great Bear[9] (which they call the Bushel), the
Serpent, the Sword, and the Tortoise. This is a talisman intended to give courage; it appears [94]
that it is in great demand among the Chinese, and is as well circulated as the medals of the
Immaculate Conception are in France.
Fig. 12.—Ancient Hindoo Zodiac
Of all the zodiacal constellations, that of the Bull has played the principal rôle in ancient
myths; and in this constellation it was the sparkling cluster of the Pleiades which appears to
have regulated the year and the calendar among all the ancient nations. The Mosaic deluge
itself, referred to 17 Athir (November), in commemoration of an important inundation, had
its date coincident with the appearance of the Pleiades.[10]
Our general review of the starry sky must now be completed by the stars of the southern
heavens.
Below Taurus and Gemini, to the south of the zodiac, you notice the giant Orion, who [96]
raises his club toward the forehead of the Bull. Seven brilliant stars are here distinguished;
two of them, α and β, are of the first magnitude; the five others are of the second magnitude,
α and γ mark the shoulders, κ the right knee, β the left knee; δ, ε, ζ mark the belt or girdle.
Below this line is a luminous train of three stars, very near each other; this is the Sword.
Between the western shoulder and Taurus is seen the Shield, composed of a row of small
stars. The head is marked by a little star (λ) of the fourth magnitude.
On a fine winter’s night turn toward the south, and you will immediately recognize this
giant constellation. The four stars, α, γ, β, κ, occupy the angles of a great quadrilateral. The
three others, δ, ε, ζ, are crowded in an oblique line in the middle of this quadrilateral; α, at
the northeast angle, is named Betelgeuse (not Beteigeuse, as some books print it); β, at the
southeast angle, is called Rigel.
The line of the Belt, produced both ways, passes to the northeast near Aldebaran, the Eye
of the Bull, which we know already, and to the southeast near Sirius, the finest star of the
sky, which we shall soon consider.
It is during the fine nights of winter that this constellation shines in the evening above our
heads. No other season is so magnificently constellated as the months of winter. While
nature deprives us of certain enjoyments in one way, it offers us in exchange others no less
precious. The marvels of the heavens present themselves from Taurus and Orion in the east [97]
to Virgo and Boötes on the west. Of eighteen stars of the first magnitude which are counted
in the whole extent of the firmament, a dozen are visible from nine o’clock to midnight, not
to mention some fine stars of the second magnitude, remarkable nebulæ, and celestial
objects well worthy of the attention of mortals. It is thus that nature establishes a
harmonious compensation, and while it darkens our short and frosty days of winter, it gives
us long nights enriched with the most opulent creations of the sky.
The constellation of Orion is not only the richest in brilliant stars, but it conceals for the
initiated treasures which no other is known to afford. We might almost call it the California
of the sky.
To the southeast of Orion, on the line of the Three Kings, shines the most magnificent of
all the stars, Sirius, or α of the constellation of the Great Dog. This star of the first
magnitude marks the upper eastern angle of a great quadrilateral, of which the base near the
horizon of London, is adjacent to a triangle. This constellation rises in the evening at the end
of November, passes the meridian at midnight at the end of January, and sets at the end of
March. It played the greatest part in Egyptian astronomy, for it regulated the ancient
calendar. It was the famous Dog Star; it predicted the inundation of the Nile, the summer
solstice, great heats and fevers; but the precession of the equinoxes has in 3,000 years
moved back the time of its appearance by a month and a half, and now this fine star
announces nothing, either to the Egyptians who are dead or to their successors. [98]
The Little Dog, or Procyon, is found above the Great Dog and below the Twins (Castor
and Pollux), to the east of Orion. With the exception of α Procyon, no brilliant star
distinguishes it.
Hydra is a long constellation, which occupies a quarter of the horizon, under Cancer, the
Lion, and the Virgin. The head, formed of four stars of the fourth magnitude, is to the left of
Procyon, on the prolongation of a line drawn from that star to Betelgeuse. The western side
of the great trapezium of the Lion, like the line from Castor and Pollux, points to α, of the
second magnitude. This is the Heart of Hydra; we remark the asterisms of the second class,
Corvus the Crow, and Crater the Cup.
Eridanus, Cetus, Piscis Australis, and the Centaur are the only important constellations
which remain to be described. We find them, in the order which we have indicated, to the
right of Orion. Eridanus is a river composed of a train of stars winding from the left foot of
Orion and losing itself below the horizon. After following long windings, it ends with a fine
star of the first magnitude, α Eridani, or Achernar. This is the river into which Phaeton fell
when he unskilfully directed the Chariot of the Sun. It was placed in the sky to console
Apollo for the death of his son.
To find the Whale (Cetus), we may notice below the Ram a star of the second magnitude
which forms an equilateral triangle with the Ram and the Pleiades; this is α of Cetus, or the
Jaw; α, μ, ξ, and γ form a parallelogram which represents the head. The base, α, γ, may be [99]
produced to a star of the third magnitude, δ, and to a star of the neck marked ο. This star is
one of the most curious in the heavens. It is named the Wonderful, Mira Ceti. It belongs to
the class of variable stars. Sometimes it equals in brightness stars of the second magnitude,
sometimes it becomes completely invisible.[11] Its variations have been followed since the
end of the Sixteenth Century, and it has been found that they are reproduced periodically
every 331 days on the average. The study of these singular stars presents us with curious
phenomena.
Lastly, the constellation of the Centaur is situated below Spica of the Virgin. The star θ,
of the second magnitude, and the star ι, of the third, mark the head and the shoulder. This is
the only part of this figure which rises above our horizon. The Centaur contains the nearest
star to us (α) of the first magnitude, the distance of which is about twenty-five billions of
miles. The feet of the Centaur touch the Southern Cross, formed of four stars of the second
magnitude, always hidden below our horizon. It reigns in silence above the icy solitudes of
the Southern Pole, where ships proceed only with difficulty. Further on, at the centre of the
other hemisphere, is the southern celestial pole, which is not marked by any remarkable star.
It was from this region, Dante relates, that, having visited hell, inclosed in the centre of [100]
the earth, he went to the Mountain of Purgatory, and from there to the Heights of Paradise.
These beautiful dreams have disappeared in the sunshine of modern astronomy.
We will complete these descriptions by a little astronomical chronology, which is not
without interest. From a careful examination of the most ancient historical sources of
classical astronomy, the following is the order in which the constellations appear to have
been noticed, formed, and named, beginning with the most ancient:
Most Ancient Reference
Job (ch. xxxviii. ver. 32) (Seventeenth Century before our
The Great Bear
era), Homer (Ninth Century).
Orion Job (ch. ix. ver. 9), Homer, Hesiod.
The Pleiades (the Hyades) Job (ch. xxxviii. ver. 31), Homer, Hesiod.
Hesiod mentions it. Homer calls Sirius the Star of
Sirius and the Great Dog
Autumn.
Aldebaran (Taurus) Homer, Hesiod.
Boötes, Arcturus Job (ch. xxxviii. ver. 32), Homer, Hesiod.
The Little Bear Thales (Seventh Century), Eudoxus, Aratus.
Draco (the Dragon) Eudoxus (Fourth Century), Aratus (Third Century).
The Man on his Knees, or Hercules Id.
The Branch and Cerberus[12] Id.
Corona Borealis Id.
Ophiuchus or Serpentarius Id.
The Scorpion Id.
Virgo and Spica Eudoxus (Fourth Century), Aratus (Third Century) [101]
Gemini (the Twins) Id.
Procyon Id.
Cancer (the Crab) Id.
Leo (the Lion) Id.
Auriga (the Charioteer) Id.
Capella (the Goat, the Kids) Id.
Cepheus Id.
Cassiopeia Id.
Andromeda Id.
Pegasus (the Horse) Id.
Aries (the Ram) Id.
The Triangle Id.
Pisces (the Fishes) Id.
Perseus Id.
Lyra Id.
The Bird, or Cygnus (the Swan) Id.
Aquila (the Eagle) Id.
Aquarius Id.
Capricornus Id.
Sagittarius Id.
Sagitta (the Arrow) Id.
Delphinus (the Dolphin) Id.
Lepus (the Hare) Id.
Argo (the Ship) Id.
Canobus (afterward written
Id.
Canopus)
Eridanus Id.
Cetus (the Whale) Id.
Piscis Australis (the Southern Fish) Id.
Corona Australis Id.
The Altar Id.
The Centaur Id.
The Wolf (Lupus) Id.
Hydra Id.
Crater (the Cup) Id.
Corvus (the Crow) Id.
Manetho (Third Century b. c.) Geminus (First Century)
Libra (the Balance)
b. c.).
Such are the constellations, ancient and modern, venerable or recent, into which the
celestial sphere has been divided. The ancient names are respectable and respected, on [104]
account of their relations, known or unknown, with the origins of history and religion; the
new ones must be ephemeral. It is useful to know them, because several stars celebrated
under different titles have for their principal designation their position in these asterisms;
but what we should wish would be to see them disappear.[14]
Many other substitutions have, however, been attempted. I have in my library a splendid
folio of the year 1661, containing twenty-nine engraved plates, illuminated in gold and
silver, among which are two which represent the sky delivered from the pagans and peopled
with Christians. Instead of divinities more or less virtuous, in place of animals of forms
more or less fantastic, we behold the elect—apostles, saints, popes, martyrs, sacred persons [105]
of the Old and New Testament—seated in the celestial vault, clothed in rich costumes of all
colors, embroidered with gold, and carefully installed in the place of all the pagan heroes
who for so many ages reigned in the sky.
The author of this metamorphosis was named Jules Schiller, and it was in the year 1627
that he introduced it, coupling his name with that of John Bayer. He began his dissertation
by showing how the pagan constellations are opposed to Christian opinion and even to
common-sense. He quoted the Fathers of the Church who expressly disapprove of them:
Isodorus, who treats them as diabolical; Lactantius, who condemns the corruption of the
human race; Augustine, who sends their heroes to hell, etc.
These constellations formed by chance, in the course of ages, without a fixed object; their
inconvenient size, the uncertainty of their boundaries; the complicated designations, for
which it was sometimes necessary to exhaust whole alphabets; the bad taste with which
observers have introduced into the southern sky the frigid nomenclature of instruments used
in science alongside mythological allegories—all these accumulated defects have often
suggested plans of reform for the stellar divisions, and even the banishing of all
configuration. But ancient customs are difficult to overcome, and it is very probable that,
except the recently named groups, which we may now suppress, the venerable constellations
will always reign.
Such are the provinces of the sky. But these provinces are of no intrinsic value; the [106]
important point for us is to make acquaintance with the inhabitants.
FOOTNOTES:
[6] The French trillion is equivalent to the English billion, or a million times a
million (1,000,000,000,000).—J. E. G.
[7] The Chinese had designated them all, it is true, at the same epoch, but their
groups as well as their denominations are absolutely different from ours, and do
not appear to have exercised any influence on the foundations of astronomical
history. It was another world, other methods, other inspirations, as if Asia and
Europe formed two distinct planets. A distinguished author, M. Schlegel,
published in 1875 a Chinese Uranography, which is composed of 670 asterisms,
and of which he believes he can trace back the origin to 17,000 years before our
era. His argument is not convincing, and it seems to me that the origin of the
astronomy of the Celestial Empire can not be very much anterior to the reign of
the Emperor Hoang-Ti—that is to say, to the Twenty-seventh Century before our
era—and would go back at furthest to the time of Fou-Hi that is to say, to the
Twenty-ninth Century. It was about the same epoch—the Twenty-eighth Century
before our era—that the Egyptians, observing Sirius, the early rising of which
announced the inundation of the Nile, formed their canicular year of 365 days.
[8] More correctly, from 2.3 magnitude to 3.5 magnitude.—J. E. G.
[9] The author possesses in the Museum of the Observatory at Juvisy a Japanese
executioner’s sword, on the guard of which this constellation is engraved. Was it
believed that the souls of executed criminals were sent there?
[10] See Astronomical Myths, based on Flammarion’s History of the Heavens. By J. F.
Blake. London, 1876.
[11] That is, to the naked eye; it never descends below the tenth magnitude, and
always remains visible in a 3-inch telescope.—J. E. G.
[12] A constellation wrongly attributed by Arago and others to Hevelius. It is found on
the sphere of Eudoxus.
[13] Constellations incorrectly attributed to Tycho Brahe. The first is given by
Eratosthenes, the second dates from the Emperor Adrian.
[14] Especially those which are absolutely superfluous, and occupy places stolen from
the ancient constellations, like the Heart of Charles II, the Fox and Goose, the
Lizard, the Sextant, the Shield of Sobieski, Mount Mænalus, the Reindeer, the
Solitaire, the Messier, the Bull of Poniatowski, the Honors of Frederick, the Harp,
the Telescope, the Mural Circle, the Air Balloon, the Electrical Machine, the
Printer’s Workshop, and the Cat. I know, however, with reference to this last
animal, that Lalande wrote: “I love cats! I adore cats! I may be pardoned for
having placed one in the sky after my sixty years of assiduous labors.” But the
illustrious astronomer had no necessity for this plea in order that his name should
remain inscribed in letters of gold on the tablets of Urania. The Heart of Charles
II is but the flattery of a courtier; the Shield of Sobieski, the Bull of Poniatowski,
should fall from the sky; the Messier is but a play on words which makes the
celestial flocks guarded by a pastor whose name is the same as that of the prolific
hunter of comets, Messier. As for the Honors of Frederick, they usurp an
unmerited place, for, in order to make room for them, Andromeda has been
obliged to draw in her arm, which she had stretched out there for three thousand
years.
THE ARABIAN HEAVENS.—Ludwig Ideler
The country is a treeless and waterless plain covered with naked rocks and sand-drifted
hills, on which lie scattered single oases watered by springs and glorified with a luxuriant
vegetation. On these the Arabs camp with their herds, and do not leave them until the
provender is consumed, or until more powerful tribes force them to depart. They call
themselves Bedâvi (Bedouins), that is, Scenitæ, Nomads, as they were called by the Greeks.
These nomads, cut off from all intercourse with the world around them, who have never
been subjugated by a foreign power, have preserved their character and their customs
unchanged for several thousand years. Their most important occupation is cattle-breeding.
Besides this, they follow the chase, or war upon their enemies, regarding as such all those
not belonging to their race or who are not under their protection. They dwell in tents.
Several families are under a Schech and several Schechs generally under an Emîr, who rules
over the whole tribe.
The majority of these nomadic Arabs were Sabians, or Star-worshipers, before the
adoption of Islam. History has preserved for us the names of several tribes who paid divine
honors to single planets, or conspicuous fixed stars. No wonder that they should have fallen
into such idolatry! The dust raised by the desert wind, which, as a rule, only blows during
the day, and the heat of the sun compel them to pasture their herds and to undertake their
hostile expeditions during the night. Leisure and necessity bid them gain information by [118]
directing their gaze at the starry sky, which is presented to them in a splendor of which we
in our northern regions can scarcely form any idea. Since, therefore, the aborigines must
have noticed at an early period that the nearly regular succession of changes in their climate
took place in conformity with the annually recurring phenomena of the fixed stars, they
ascribed to the latter a divine power. Thus originated the worship of the stars; and this once
established, no other motives were needed to induce them to devote their constant attention
to the starry skies. One result of this was that they applied proper names to the most
conspicuous stars and groups of stars which were borrowed partly from the animal world
around them, partly from their simple household effects, partly from various qualities and
circumstances which they noticed in the stars. One tribe selected one name; another,
another; and so it came to pass that one star, or group of stars, frequently bears more than
one name. When, on the other hand, stars no less bright bear no names at all, the probable
reason is that only fragments of the astronomical nomenclature of the Arab nomads have
come down to us.
After this terminology had been transmitted by oral tradition, and especially by folk-
songs, for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years in its original condition, it was combined
into an entirely heterogeneous mass—that variegated mixture which we find in the works of
Kazwini, Ulug Bekh, and others.
When the Arabs in their fanatic zeal for the spread of Mohammed’s doctrines had [119]
conquered a great part of Asia, Africa, and Europe, and established in the heart of the
ancient world a mighty empire, they adopted from the Greeks, with whom they had now
come in contact, their astronomy among other sciences, and with it the Greek constellations
and their method of distinguishing the stars according to their position in the figures.[15]
Their astronomers now generally discriminated between the two classes of names in
attributing the one to the Arabs, the other to the astronomers.
Abdelrahman Sufi, in the preface to his work on the constellations, says there are two
kinds of heavens to become acquainted with—that of the astronomers and that of the Arabs.
In the work itself he first describes the constellations used by the astronomers, i. e., the
Greek ones, and then the old constellations of the Arabs. Kazwini in every case mentions a
genuine Arabic star-name when he speaks of the Arabic, which is the case with almost every
constellation.
Our early astronomers had very false notions of this relation of the nomadic heavens of
the ancient Arabs to the mythological one of the Greeks adopted by their descendants.
Schickard, in his Astroscopium, says: “Instead of the Dragon the Arabs depict two wolves
and five dromedaries.” He means the two jackals and the family of camels which the [120]
nomads represented under the five stars on the head of the Dragon. The Arab astronomers
drew the Greek dragon on their charts and globes just as we do. They only looked on the old
jackals and camels as names for some of its stars. In Golius and Hyde we find a more
correct view of the case.
FOOTNOTES:
[15] Already in the ancient book of Job, whose hero has quite the characteristics of a
Nomadic Emir, we find some astronomical terms whose analogy with the true
Arabic star-names is unmistakable. See Job, ix. 9; xxxviii. 31, 32.
ASTRONOMY WITHOUT A TELESCOPE.—J. E. Gore
I t must be remembered that astronomy was studied ages before the invention of the
telescope, and that the ancient astronomers gained, without any optical assistance, a
considerable amount of knowledge respecting the heavenly bodies.
Let us first consider the stars visible to the naked eye. The number of these down to the
sixth magnitude—about the faintest that average eyesight can see—is, for both hemispheres,
about 6,000. The number, therefore, visible at one time from any given place is about 3,000.
Possibly double this number might be seen by those gifted with exceptionally keen eyesight;
but even this is a comparatively small number, scattered as it is over so large an area. Those
who do not possess the power of effective enumeration estimate the number visible to the
naked eye as considerably greater than is really the case. This is partly due to the irregular
distribution of the lucid stars over the celestial vault, and partly to the effect which the
aspect of the starry sky produces on the imagination; the fact of the stars increasing in
number as they diminish in brightness inducing us to suspect the presence of points of light [121]
which we do not actually see. An attempt to count those visible with certainty in any
selected portion of the sky will, however, convince any intelligent person that the number,
far from being large, is really very small, and that the idea, which some entertain, of a
countless multitude is merely an optical illusion, and a popular fallacy which has no
foundation in fact. Of course, the number visible in telescopes is very considerable. Perhaps
with the largest telescopes 100,000,000 could be seen; but even this large number is very far
from being “countless.” The present population of the earth is about 1,400,000,000, or about
fourteen times the number of the visible stars!
The first thing to be done in studying the heavens with the naked eye is to learn the
positions and names of the brighter stars; and from these the fainter ones may easily be
identified by means of a star atlas. Those who study the stars in this way have probably a
more intimate knowledge of the starry heavens than professional astronomers, who
generally find the stars—at least the fainter ones—by referring to a catalogue of stars, and
then setting their telescope to the place indicated by the figures given in the catalogue.
Although the famous astronomer Sir William Herschel possessed several large telescopes,
he also studied the stars with the naked eye, and it is related of this great observer that he
could without hesitation identify any star he could see in this way by its name, letter, or
number! Such an exhaustive knowledge of the heavens is, of course, very rare; but an
acquaintance with all the brighter stars can easily be acquired by any person of ordinary [122]
intelligence.
The “Plow,” or Great Bear,[16] is familiar to most people. This remarkable group of seven
stars will be found very useful in identifying some of the brighter stars. The two stars
furthest from the “tail” are called “pointers,” as they point nearly to the Pole Star, or star to
which the axis of the earth nearly points. I say “nearly,” for the Pole Star is not exactly at the
pole, but distant from it about three diameters of the moon. The northern of these stars is
known to astronomers by the Greek letter Alpha and the southern as Beta. The others,
following the order of the figure, are known by the letters Gamma, Delta (the faintest of the
seven), Epsilon, Zeta, and Eta.[17] Now, if the curve formed by the three stars in the tail,
Epsilon, Zeta, and Eta, is continued on, it will pass near a very bright star. This is Arcturus
(Alpha of the constellation Boötes), one of the brightest stars visible. Again, if we draw an
imaginary line from Gamma to Beta, and produce it, it will pass near another bright star.
This is Capella (Alpha of Auriga, “the Charioteer” referred to by Tennyson).
Again, if we draw a line from Delta to Beta, and produce it, it will pass near the tolerably
bright stars, Castor and Pollux (Alpha and Beta of the constellation Gemini, or the Twins),
the northern of the two being Castor. Another line from Delta to Gamma produced will pass [123]
near a bright star called Regulus (Alpha of Leo, the Lion). Another line from Beta to Eta
will pass near a group called Corona Borealis, or the Northern Crown.
On the opposite side of the Pole Star from the Plow, a group of five conspicuous stars will
be found, forming a figure shaped somewhat like a W. This is Cassiopeia’s Chair.
Commencing with the most westerly of the five, these stars are known as Beta, Alpha,
Gamma, Delta, and Eta. Like the stars of the Plow, those of Cassiopeia’s Chair may be used
to find other stars. For instance, a line drawn from Beta to Alpha passes close to a star
known as Gamma in Andromeda; and the same line produced in the opposite direction will
pass a little north of the bright star Vega (Alpha Lyræ), one of the brightest stars in the
northern heavens. A line from Gamma to Alpha produced will pass through the well-known
“Square of Pegasus.”
To the east of Vega lies Cygnus, or the Swan, a well-known northern constellation. It may
be recognized by the long cross formed by its principal stars, Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta,
and Epsilon; Alpha, or Deneb, being the most northern and brightest, and Beta the most
southern and faintest of the five.
To the southeast of Cassiopeia’s Chair lies the constellation Perseus, distinguished by its
well-known festoon, or curve, of stars. South of this lies the constellation Taurus or the Bull,
which contains the well-known groups or clusters, the Pleiades and the Hyades. The [124]
Pleiades form perhaps the most remarkable group of stars in the heavens, and are easily
found, when above the horizon. To ordinary eyesight the cluster consists of six stars. Some
persons gifted with exceptionally keen eyesight have, however, seen eleven or twelve. A
map of the Pleiades made in the sixteenth century shows eleven stars very correctly. This
was drawn, of course, from observations made with a measuring instrument, but without the
aid of a telescope. The observer (I think it was Möstlin, Kepler’s tutor) must have possessed
wonderfully sharp eyesight. The Hyades form a V-shaped figure, and contain the bright
reddish star Aldebaran.
South of Taurus and Gemini will be found the splendid constellation of Orion, perhaps the
most brilliant group of stars visible in either hemisphere. A remarkable quadrilateral figure is
formed by its four stars, Betelgeuse (Alpha) and Gamma[18] on the north, and Rigel (Beta)
and Kappa on the south. Of these Betelgeuse and Rigel are bright stars of the first
magnitude. Betelgeuse is distinctly reddish and also slightly variable in its light. Rigel is a
beautiful white star. In the middle of the quadrilateral are three stars of the second
magnitude, nearly in a straight line, known as Delta, Epsilon, and Zeta, Delta being the
northern of the three. These form Orion’s “belt.” South of these are three faint stars, also in a
straight line, forming the “sword” of Orion. Surrounding the central star of the “sword” is
“the great nebula of Orion,” one of the finest objects in the heavens. It is barely visible to the [125]
naked eye, but may be seen with a good opera-glass.
To the southeast of Orion will be found Sirius, the brightest star in the heavens. It is the
chief star of the constellation Canis Major, or the Great Dog, and has been well termed “the
monarch of the skies,” from its great brilliancy.
The bright star Regulus, referred to above, is situated in a remarkable group of stars
shaped like a sickle, and known as “the Sickle in Leo.” Regulus lies at the extremity of the
handle. Leo is well placed for observation in April and May.
The famous group called the Southern Cross forms a conspicuous object in the southern
heavens. It has formed a subject of interest since the earliest ages of antiquity. Its component
stars, are, however, not so brilliant as some suppose, the two brightest being between the
first and second magnitudes, the next of the second, and one between the third and fourth
magnitudes. Near the Southern Cross are two bright stars known as Alpha[19] and Beta of the
Centaur.
Among the stars are many objects known as “double stars.” These consist of two stars
very close together, but which appear to the naked eye only as single stars. Some are triple,
and even quadruple. Of these double stars there are now about 10,000 known to
astronomers, but they are only visible with a telescope. Some, indeed, are so close that the
highest powers of the very largest telescopes are necessary to see them as anything but [126]
single stars. Of the naked-eye stars there are, however, some apparently so close that they
present very much the appearance of real double stars as seen in a telescope. These,
although not recognized by astronomers as double stars, have been termed “naked-eye
doubles.” Houzeau found that the brighter the stars are the easier it is to separate them; and
that for small stars, about 15′ of arc, or half the moon’s apparent diameter, is about the limit
below which the naked eye can not see a faint star double.
Fig. 15.—Constellation of the Great Bear
Of the “naked-eye doubles,” perhaps the most remarkable is Mizar, the middle star in the
“tail” of the Great Bear. Close to it is a small star, sometimes called “Jack on the Middle
Horse.” It was known to the ancient astronomers as Alcor, or “the test,” as it was then [127]
considered a test of excellent eyesight. Whether it has really brightened seems doubtful, but
at present it is perhaps visible to ordinary eyesight. Some, however, fail to see it, while to
others with keener vision it seems as plain as the proverbial “pike-staff.” The star Alpha
Capricorni consists of two stars which, although closer than Mizar and Alcor, are more
equal in brightness, and may be easily seen with the naked eye on a clear night. Nu
Sagittarii may also be seen double in this way. Theta Tauri, in the Hyades, is another object
which some eyes can see distinctly double; also Kappa Tauri, a little to the north of the
Hyades; Omicron Cygni, a little to the west of Alpha Cygni (Deneb), is another example.
On a very fine night two stars may be seen in Iota Orionis, the most southern star in the
“sword.” Near Gamma Leonis, one of the brightest stars in the “sickle,” is a star of the sixth
magnitude, which some can see without optical aid.
The most severe test is, however, Epsilon Lyræ, the northern of two small stars which
form a little triangle with the brilliant Vega. This, to some eyes, appears double. The famous
German astronomer Bessel is said to have seen it at thirteen years of age. To most people,
however, it will perhaps appear only elongated. This is a very remarkable star, as each of the
components is seen to be a close double when examined with a good telescope; and between
the pairs are several fainter stars.
Among those interesting objects, the variable stars, are several which may be well
observed without optical assistance. Of these may be mentioned Algol, of which all the [128]
fluctuations of light may be easily observed with the naked eye; Mira Ceti, which may be
well observed when at its brightest; Lambda Tauri, a variable star of the Algol type;
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis), which is slightly variable; Zeta Geminorum, a fourth magnitude
star, which varies about three-quarters of a magnitude in a period of about ten days; R.
Hydræ, which is visible to the naked eye at maximum; Beta Lyræ, period about thirteen
days; Eta Aquilæ, period about seven days; and Delta Cephei, which varies about one
magnitude in a period of a little over five days. Of all these stars useful observations may be
made without optical assistance of any sort.
Observations, and even discoveries, of new or “temporary” stars may also be made with
the naked eye. This occurred in the case of the “temporary” stars of 1572, 1604, 1670, 1866,
and 1870, but, of course, these were bright objects at the time of their discovery. Hind’s
“new star” of 1848 in Ophiuchus was, however, only of the fifth magnitude when it
appeared, and it might have escaped detection with the naked eye. A star of this magnitude
might, however, be easily detected by an observer who is familiar with the principal stars of
a constellation.
The Milky Way may, perhaps, be better seen with the naked eye than with any instrument,
although an opera-glass brings out well, in some places, its more delicate details. A mere
passing glance might lead a casual observer to suppose that the Galaxy stretched as a band
of nearly uniform brightness across the heavens. But good eyesight, careful attention, and a [129]
clear sky will soon disclose numerous details previously unsuspected; streams and rays of
different brightness, intersected by rifts of darkness, and interspersed with spots and
channels of comparatively starless spaces. An excellent drawing of the Milky Way—the
result of five years’ observations with the naked eye alone—has recently been completed by
Dr. Otto Boeddicker at Lord Rosse’s observatory in Ireland. This beautiful picture is
exquisitely drawn, and shows a wonderful amount of detail. A writer in the Saturday Review
of November 30, 1889, says: “His maps are in many respects a completely new disclosure.
Features barely suspected before come out in them as evident and persistent; every previous
representation appears, by comparison, structureless.” This shows what can be done with
the naked eye in the study of this wonderful zone.
Among the nebulæ and clusters there are not many objects visible to the naked eye. A
hazy appearance about the middle star in Orion’s “sword” indicates the presence of the
“great Nebula,” one of the finest objects in the heavens. The “great Nebula in Andromeda,”
aptly termed “the Queen of the Nebulæ,” is distinctly visible to the naked eye on a very
clear night. It lies near the four and a half magnitude star, Nu Andromedæ (a few degrees
north of Beta Andromedæ), and may be well seen in the early evening hours in the month of
January, when it is high in the sky. It somewhat resembles a small comet. This nebula was
known long before the invention of the telescope, and it was described by one of the earlier
astronomers as resembling “a candle shining through horn,” a not inapt description. [130]
Of star clusters visible without optical aid may be mentioned the double cluster Chi
Persei, which appears to the eye as a luminous spot in the Milky Way; the cluster known as
35 Messier, a little north of Eta Geminorum, just visible to the naked eye on a very clear
night; and there are others in the Southern Hemisphere, notably the globular cluster known
as Omega in the Centaur, which shines as a hazy star of the fourth magnitude. Among the
clusters may perhaps be included the Præsepe, or the “Beehive,” in Cancer, which has a
nebulous appearance to the naked eye.
Coming now to the Solar System, the sun and moon, of course, first attract attention.
Cases of sun-spots visible to the naked eye are recorded, but, of course, spots of such
enormous size are of rare occurrence. Of lunar detail little can be seen without a telescope of
some sort, but the larger markings are sufficiently distinct to good eyesight to convince the
observer that they do not alter perceptibly, thus showing clearly that the moon always turns
the same side to the earth.
Of the planets, nothing of their appearance in the telescope can, of course, be seen with
the naked eye, but it is easy to identify the brighter planets. Mercury, owing to its proximity
to the sun, is rarely visible in Europe and North America, but when favorably situated, it
may sometimes be detected near the sun shortly after sunset or a little before sunrise.
Notwithstanding the difficulty of seeing it, it was well known to the ancients, an observation [131]
of the planet dating back to 264 b. c. It is easier, however, to see in more southern latitudes,
and I have frequently observed it as bright as a star of the first magnitude in the clear air of
the Punjab sky. I have also seen it on several occasions in Ireland, and the Rev. S. S.
Johnson, F.R.A.S., tells me he has seen it with the naked eye no less than one hundred times
in the south of England. The brilliant planet Venus can hardly be mistaken when seen in the
morning or evening sky. When at its brightest it considerably exceeds Jupiter and Mars, and
far surpasses Sirius, the brightest star in the heavens.
If a very bright planet is seen rising at sunset, it can not be Venus, which is never seen
beyond a limited distance from the sun. The observer may, therefore, conclude with
certainty that the planet is either Jupiter or Mars. The latter, which occasionally rivals
Jupiter in brilliancy, may be easily distinguished from the “giant planet” by its distinctly
reddish color. Saturn shines with a yellowish light, and is never so bright as Mars or Jupiter
when at their brightest. The planet Uranus is just visible to the naked eye, and may be found
without optical assistance when its position is accurately known.
Some observers think that they can see the crescent of Venus with the naked eye when the
planet is in that phase, but this seems very doubtful. Cases have been recorded of one or two
satellites of Jupiter having been seen with the unaided eyesight, but few are gifted with such
keen vision.
Occultations of bright stars may be well seen with the naked eye, especially when they [132]
pass behind the moon’s dark limb, and as the disappearance of a star is practically
instantaneous, really valuable observations may be made without a telescope, by merely
noting the exact time at which the star vanishes.
Most of the comets discovered by astronomers are small and faint, and only visible in
good telescopes. At intervals, however, a brilliant visitor appears on the scene, and its path
among the stars may be watched from night to night with the naked eye. Before the
invention of the telescope, bright comets were watched in this way, and their course
recorded so carefully that it has been found possible to calculate their orbits with some
approach to accuracy. In these days of large telescopes and instruments of almost
mathematical precision, such a method of observation is, of course, superseded; but we may
still watch the movements of a bright comet with interest, and note its apparent path across
the sky with pleasure and profit. Shooting stars and fire-balls may be best observed with the
naked eye, and the excellent work done in this way by Mr. W. F. Denning, F.R.A.S., should
encourage others to take up this interesting branch of astronomy.
Another object which may be well seen with the naked eye—indeed, it may best be
observed in this way—is the Zodiacal Light. This is a lenticular or cone-shaped beam of
light, which makes its appearance at certain times of the year, above the eastern horizon
before the dawn, and above the western horizon after sunset, when the sky is clear and the
moon absent. In the tropics it is much more easily seen, the twilight being shorter, and I [133]
have often observed it in India shining with great brilliancy.
From the above sketch my readers will see how much may be learned of astronomy
without optical assistance of any kind, and I hope that those who do not possess a telescope
will use their eyes instead, and thus gain some knowledge of the wonders and beauties of
the starry heavens. The knowledge thus gained will stimulate their curiosity and will give
them keener interest in reading books which describe the still greater wonders revealed by
the telescope.
FOOTNOTES:
[16] Also known as the Dipper and Charles’s Wain.—E. S.
[17] The Arabian names Dubhe (Alpha), Merak (Beta), Phecda (Gamma), Megrez
(Delta), Alioth (Epsilon), Mizar (Zeta), and Alkaid (Eta).—E. S.
[18] Bellatrix.
[19] This is the nearest star to the earth.—E. S.
THE MILKY WAY.—Richard A. Proctor
T o those who rightly appreciate its meaning the Milky Way is the most magnificent of all
astronomical phenomena. However opinions may vary as to the configuration of the
star-streams composing this object, no doubt now exists among astronomers that the Milky
Way consists really of suns, some doubtless falling short of our own sun in brilliancy, but
many probably surpassing it. Around these suns, we may fairly conceive, there revolve
systems of dependent orbs, each supporting its myriads of living creatures. We have
afforded to us a noble theme for contemplation in the consideration of the endless diversities
of structure, and of arrangement, which must prevail throughout this immensity of systems.
The Galaxy traverses the constellation Cassiopeia. Thence it throws off a branch toward
Alpha Persei (Mirfak), prolonged faintly toward the Pleiades. The main stream, here faint, [134]
passes on through Auriga, between the feet of Gemini and the Bull’s horns, over Orion’s
club to the neck of Monoceros. Thence, growing gradually brighter, the stream passes over
the head of Canis Major, in a uniform stream, until it enters the prow of Argo, where it
subdivides. One stream continues to Gamma Argus, the other diffuses itself broadly,
forming a fan-like expanse of interlacing branches, which terminate abruptly on a line
through Lambda and Gamma Argus. Here there is a gap beyond which the Milky Way
commences in a similar fan-shaped grouping, converging on the brilliant (and in other
respects remarkable) star Eta Argus. Thence, it enters the Cross by a narrow neck, and then
directly expands into a broad, bright mass, extending almost to Alpha Centauri. Within this
mass is a singular cavity known as the Coal-Sack. At Alpha Centauri the Milky Way again
subdivides, a branch running off at an angle of 20°, and losing itself in a narrow streamlet.
The main stream increases in breadth, until, “making an abrupt elbow,” it subdivides into
one continuous but irregular stream, and a complicated system of interlacing streams
covering the region around the tail and following claw of Scorpio. A wide interval separates
this part of the Galaxy from the great branch on the northern side, terminating close on Beta
Ophiuchi.
The main stream, after exhibiting several very remarkable condensations, passes through
Aquila, Sagitta, and Vulpecula to Cygnus. In Cygnus there is a “confused and patchy”
region marked by a broad vacancy, not unlike the Coal-Sack. From this region there is [135]
thrown off the offset to Beta Ophiuchi, already mentioned; the main stream is continued to
Cassiopeia.
Fig. 16.—The Midnight Sky, with Milky Way
FOOTNOTES:
[20] Field means the actual space covered by the lens.—E. S.
[21] Sometimes a singular regularity of curvature is noticed, and a spiral is formed
closely resembling in configuration some of the great spiral nebulæ, as drawn by
Lord Rosse, so that one is tempted to see in the centrifugal tendency of the
disturbed water, and the centripetal effects caused by reflection from the basin’s
surface, causes which may in some sense illustrate the laws operating in wider
domains of space.
THE MAGELLANIC CLOUDS—ZODIACAL LIGHT—STAR
GROUPS.—Amédée Guillemin
W hen we look on the region of the celestial vault which surrounds the South Pole, we
can not help being struck with the contrast presented by the small quantity of stars
which it contains, with the brilliant zone which borders the Milky Way, from Orion and
Argo to the Centaur, passing by the Southern Cross. One solitary star of the first magnitude,
Achernar, more distant from the pole than are the beautiful stars of the Centaur and of the
Cross, shines in this part of the sky.
But even this circumstance renders the singular aspect of the two nebulous spots, which
seem two detached pieces of the great galactic zone, still more striking. These half-stellar,
half-nebulous systems, unequal in magnitude and brightness, but easily seen with the naked
eye on a clear, moonless night, are situated, one, the larger and more brilliant, between the
pole and Canopus, in the constellation of Doradus; the other, the smaller and less brilliant,
ordinarily visible during the full moon, in Hydrus, between Achernar and the pole.
Both are known by astronomers and navigators under the name of “Cape Clouds,” or
again, “Magellanic Clouds.” And, to distinguish them, we have again the Great Cloud
(Nebecula Major) and the Small Cloud (Nebecula Minor).
The Clouds of Magellan are distinguished from all other nebulæ by their great apparent [148]
dimensions, and by their physical structure; this last character distinguishes them from most
of the branches and offshoots of the Milky Way, with which, we may also add, they do not
appear connected in any way.
The Great Cloud extends over a space which embraces not less than forty-two square
degrees—about two hundred times the apparent surface of the lunar disk. The Small Cloud
occupies in extent four times less than the other; according to Humboldt, it is surrounded
“with a kind of desert,” where, it is true, shines the magnificent stellar cluster of Toucan. If
the exterior aspect of these two remarkable nebulæ, and their situation in a celestial region
poor in stars, give to the southern sky a peculiar appearance, their real structure makes them
one of the wonders of the heavens.
In the Great Cloud, Herschel has counted 582 single stars, among which one only is of
the fifth magnitude; six others are of the order immediately inferior, and would doubtless be
visible to the naked eye if their light were not effaced by the general glare.
In the Small Cloud, the single stars are proportionally more numerous, since 200 have
been counted, among which three are of the sixth magnitude, while it only includes thirty-
seven of the nebulæ and seven star-clusters. These immense aggregations, the elements of
which are themselves swarms of suns, remind us of the largest, in appearance at least, of all
the clusters which the eye contemplates in the depths of the sky—the Milky Way.
In the evenings, about the time of the vernal equinox—in March and April, when in our [149]
climate the twilight is of short duration—if we examine the horizon toward the west, a little
after sunset, we may perceive a faint light that rises in the form of a cone among the starry
constellations.
This is what astronomers call the Zodiacal Light. Those unfamiliar with it, or little
accustomed to the ordinary aspect of the sky, might confuse the glimmering either with the
Milky Way or with the ordinary twilight, or even with an aurora. But, with a little attention,
it is impossible to mistake it.
The triangular form of this luminous cone, its elevation and its inclined position to the
horizon, make it a thing apart, and one eminently deserving particular mention.
As the days lengthen, and with them the duration of twilight, the Zodiacal Light
disappears; it becomes invisible, at least in our climate. But it may again be seen in the
morning, in the east, about the time of the autumnal equinox, in September and October,
when the dawn has an equally short duration—again, however, to disappear during the
period of long nights and long twilights.
It is needless to add that the sky must be clear and the night moonless for observations of
the Zodiacal Light to be possible.
Among the explanations that have been given, the most probable one is that which likens
the Zodiacal Light to a flattened nebulous ring surrounding the sun at some distance. It is to
be remarked that the direction of the axis of the cone, or of the pyramid, prolonged below [150]
the horizon, always passes through the sun.
It was believed at first that this direction precisely coincided with the solar equator; but it
seems more certain that it coincides with the plane of the earth’s orbit, or the ecliptic.
Now, what is the nature of this luminous mass? Must it be considered as a zone of vapors
thrown off by the sun, when in the process of consolidation, when our central star passed
from a nebulous state to that of a condensed fluid sphere? This was the opinion of Laplace.
Another hypothesis, also connected with the first, is that the Zodiacal Light is formed of
myriads of solid particles, analogous to the aerolites, possessing a general movement, but
traveling separately around the focus of our solar world. The light of the ring would be thus
produced by the accumulation of this multitude of brilliant points, reflecting toward us the
light borrowed by each of them from the sun.
This explanation accounts for the intensity of the Zodiacal Light at different epochs; it
would suffice to admit that the condensation of the particles or the density of the ring is not
the same throughout its extent, and that its movement of circulation round the sun presents
successively different parts to the earth. In this case, it becomes a question whether this
lenticular ring of matter is distinct from the zone of aerolites.
Lastly, some astronomers regard the Zodiacal Light as a vaporous ring which belongs to
the earth, surrounding it at some distance. But this is an opinion which appears somewhat [151]
wild, and is utterly at variance with observation.
Are the stars that are visible to the naked eye spread orderless on the celestial vault? or is
there not between those apparently most closely connected some real or physical connection
which requires us to rank them in natural groups?
These questions have been already partly solved by what is known of the double and
multiple star systems. Soon, exploring the regions of the sky visible by means of the
telescope, we shall have to pass in review a multitude of stellar associations, in which suns
are found so compact and so numerous, and the form of the groups so regular, that it is
impossible to deny their reciprocal dependence.
But long before the discovery of these islands, these archipelagos as worlds, scattered
with such astonishing profusion over the infinite, the naked eye had already distinguished a
certain number of groups, the stars composing which were so near together that it was
impossible to doubt their physical connection.
Such, for example, is the group of the Pleiades. Such, again, are the groups known under
the names of the Hyades, of Præsepe, and of Berenice’s Hair. All are visible to the naked
eye, and good eyes distinguish without difficulty the principal stars of the first-named
groups. The Pleiades are situated in the constellation of the Bull, which we can distinguish
so easily to the northwest of Orion and Aldebaran.
Of about eighty stars which form the group of the Pleiades, six are visible without the
help of telescopes. Formerly, the Latin poet tells us, seven were counted, which may be held [152]
to prove that one of them is variable, and has diminished in brightness, or else has
disappeared.
The most brilliant, Alcyone, is of the third magnitude; Electra and Atlas are of the fourth;
Merope, Maïa, and Taygete of the fifth. Three others again have received particular names,
although they are below the limit of ordinary vision; these are Pleione, Celeno, and
Asterope, from the sixth to the eighth magnitude. All the others are only visible by the aid of
a telescope; but with an ordinary glass it is possible to distinguish a large number. The
Pleiades are known under the name of the Hen-coop, doubtless because Alcyone appears in
the group as a hen surrounded with her chickens.
The Hyades, which are near the Pleiades, form a less numerous and more scattered group.
The bright light of Aldebaran, which is, as is known, of the first magnitude, renders them
more difficult to distinguish with the naked eye.
They appear in the rainy season. Hence their name of Hyades, from the Greek word
which signifies to rain.
The connection of the stars which compose this group is not so striking as in the case of
the Pleiades. Nevertheless, it seems difficult to admit that they are quite independent of each
other’s attraction. In examining the position of these two groups in the vicinity of the Milky
Way, and observing that both are situated in the prolongation of a branch of the great zone,
we are almost entitled to consider them as two clusters of stars, belonging to the immense [153]
stellar stratum which surrounds us, and in the midst of which the sun himself is placed.
In Berenice’s Hair, most of the stars are visible to the naked eye, and are perfectly
distinguished in the sky, a little to the east of the Lion. No very brilliant star in the vicinity
inconveniences the eye by effacing their light.
The next group is situated in the Crab, and is known under the name of Præsepe: it is
visible to the unassisted sight; but it is impossible to distinguish the separate stars without
the help of a telescope. Nevertheless, an instrument of moderate power easily separates
them.
The groups which we have just described form a transition between the stars scattered
over the celestial vault and the more condensed clusters, the undefined aspect of which
caused them formerly to be designated under the general name of nebulæ.
Doubtless, if we could place ourselves in space, and contemplate from a sufficiently
distant standpoint the whole of the stars which appear to us isolated, we should see them
condensed into one or several distinct groups, analogous to those of the Pleiades; while,
were we to penetrate into the midst of one of those compact clusters, we should see the stars
of which it is formed separated and scattered over the celestial vault in such a way as to give
it the aspect of our own heavens.
[154]
W e will now consider the nebulæ, properly so called, that is to say, objects which the
spectroscope shows to consist of glowing gas. These are sometimes large and
irregular in form, like the great nebula in the “Sword” of Orion, sometimes with spiral
convolutions, and sometimes of a definite shape, like the planetary and annular nebulæ.
Of the large and irregular nebulæ, one of the most remarkable is that known as “the great
nebula in Orion.” It surrounds the multiple star, Theta Orionis. It is a curious fact that it
escaped the searching eye of Galileo, although he gave special attention to the constellation
of Orion, for even with a good opera-glass a nebulous gleam is distinctly visible round the
central star of the “Sword.” The nebula seems to have been discovered by Cysat, a Swiss
astronomer, in the year 1618, and it was sketched by Huygens in 1656. It has been called the
“fish-mouth” nebula, from the fancied resemblance of the centre portion to the mouth of a
fish. A number of small stars are visible over the surface of the nebula, and at one time Lord
Rosse thought it showed indications of resolution into stars when examined with his giant
telescope; but this is now known to have been a mistake, for Dr. Huggins finds, with the
spectroscope, that it consists of nothing but glowing gas.
The brightest line in the nebular spectrum—the “chief nebular line,” as it is called—has [155]
not yet been identified with that of any terrestrial substance.
Mr. W. H. Pickering and Dr. Max Wolf have photographed another nebula surrounding
the star Zeta Orionis—the southern star of the “Belt,” which seems to be connected with the
nebula in the “Sword”; and Professor Barnard, using the “lens of a cheap oil lantern” of 1½
inches aperture and 3½ inches focal length, has photographed “an enormous curved
nebulosity” stretching over nearly the whole of the constellation of Orion, and involving the
“great nebula.”
Professor Keeler found, with the spectroscope, that the Orion nebula is apparently
receding from the earth at the rate of nearly eleven miles a second, but this motion may be,
in part at least, due to the sun’s motion in space in the opposite direction. Professor
Pickering considers that the parallax of the nebula is probably not more than 0.″003, which
corresponds to a thousand years’ journey for light!
In the southern constellation, Argo is a magnificent nebula, somewhat similar in
appearance to the great nebula in Orion. It surrounds the famous variable star Eta Argûs. It
is sometimes spoken of as the “keyhole” nebula, owing to a curious opening of that shape
near its centre. It was carefully drawn by Sir John Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope in the
years 1834-38. It lies in a very brilliant portion of the Milky Way, and Sir John Herschel
thus describes it: “It is not easy for language to convey a full impression of the beauty and
sublimity of the spectacle which the nebula offers as it enters the field of view of a [156]
telescope, fixed in right ascension, by the diurnal motion, ushered in as it is by so glorious
and innumerable a procession of stars, to which it forms a sort of climax, and in a part of the
heavens otherwise full of interest,” and he adds: “In no part of its extent does this nebula
show any appearance of resolvability into stars, being, in this respect, analogous to the
nebula of Orion. It has, therefore, nothing in common with the Milky Way, on the ground of
which we see it projected, and may therefore be, and not improbably is, placed at an
immeasurable distance behind that stratum.” Sir John Herschel’s conclusion as to its
physical constitution has been fully confirmed by the spectroscope, which shows it to
consist of luminous gas. As in the Orion nebula, there are numerous stars scattered over it.
Some of these may possibly have a physical connection with the nebula, while others may
belong to the Milky Way. The nebula is of great extent, covering an apparent space about
five times the area of the full moon, and its real dimensions must be enormous. It was
photographed by Mr. Russell, director of the Sydney Observatory, in July, 1890, and the
photograph shows that “one of the brightest and most conspicuous parts of the nebula”—the
swan-shaped form near the centre of Herschel’s drawing—has “wholly disappeared,” and its
place is now occupied by “a great, dark oval.” Mr. Russell first missed the vanished portion
of the nebula in the year 1871, while examining it with a telescope of 11½ inches aperture,
and the photograph now confirms the disappearance, which is very remarkable, and shows
that changes are actually in progress in these wonderful nebulæ, changes which may be [157]
detected after a comparatively short interval of time.
Smaller than the nebula in Argo, but somewhat similar in general appearance, is that
known as 30 Doradus, which forms one of the numerous and diverse objects which together
constitute the greater Magellanic Cloud. Sir John Herschel drew it carefully at the Cape of
Good Hope, and describes it as “one of the most singular and extraordinary objects which
the heavens present,” and he says “it is unique even in the system to which it belongs, there
being no other object in either nubecula to which it bears the least resemblance.” It is
sometimes called the “looped nebula,” from the curious openings it contains. One of these is
somewhat similar to the “key-hole” opening in the Argo nebula. Near its centre is a small
cluster of stars, and scattered over the nebula are many faint stars, of which Sir John
Herschel gives a catalogue of 105, ranging from the ninth to the seventeenth magnitude. I do
not know whether this nebula has been examined with the spectroscope, but its appearance
would suggest that it is gaseous. It is remarkable as being the only object of its class which
is found outside the zone of the Milky Way.
Among the nebulæ of irregular shape, although its spectrum is said to be not gaseous,
may be mentioned that known as the “trifid nebula,” or 20 Messier. It lies closely north of
the star 4 Sagittarii in a magnificent region of the heavens. In the drawing made by Sir John
Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope, the principal portion consists of three masses of [158]
nebulous matter separated by dark “lanes” or “rifts.” Near the junction of the three “rifts” is
a triple star. A beautiful drawing of this nebula has also been made by Trouvelot. It agrees
fairly well with that of Sir John Herschel, but shows more detail.
Among other gaseous nebulæ may be mentioned that called by Sir John Herschel the
“dumb-bell” nebula. It lies a little south of the sixth magnitude star 14 Vulpeculæ, and was
discovered by Messier in 1779, while observing Bode’s comet of that year. In small
telescopes it has the appearance of a dumb-bell, or hour-glass, but in larger telescopes the
outline is filled in with fainter nebulous light, giving to the whole an elliptical form. Several
faint stars have been seen in it, but these probably belong to the Milky Way, as Dr. Huggins
finds the spectrum gaseous. Dr. Roberts has photographed it, and he thinks that “the nebula
is probably a globular mass of nebular matter which is undergoing the process of
condensation into stars, and the faint protrusions of nebulosity in the south following and
north preceding ends are the projections of a broad ring of nebulosity which surrounds the
globular mass. This ring, not being sufficiently dense to obscure the light of the central
region of the globular mass, is dense enough to obscure those parts of it that are hidden by
the increased thickness of the nebulosity, thus producing the ‘dumb-bell’ appearance. If
these inferences are true, we may proceed yet a step, or a series of steps, further, and predict
that the consummation of the life-history of this nebula will be its reduction to a globular [159]
cluster of stars.”
Among the gaseous nebulæ may also be included those known as “annular nebulæ.”
These are very rare objects, only a few being known in the whole heavens. The most
remarkable is that known as 57 Messier, which lies between the stars Beta and Gamma
Lyræ, south of the bright star Vega. It was discovered by Darquier, at Toulouse, in 1779,
while following Bode’s comet of that year. Lord Rosse thought it resolvable into stars, and
so did Chacornac and Secchi, but no stars are perceptible with the great American
telescopes, and Dr. Huggins finds it to be gaseous. The central portion is not absolutely dark,
but contains some faint nebulous light. Examined with the great telescope of the Lick
Observatory, Professor Barnard finds that the opening of the ring is filled in with fainter
light “about midway in brightness between the brightness of the ring and the darkness of the
adjacent sky. The aperture was more nearly circular than the outer boundary of the nebula,
so that the ends of the ring were thicker than the sides.” The entire nebula was of a milky
color. A central star, noticed by some observers, was usually seen by Professor Barnard, but
was never a conspicuous object. He found the extreme dimensions of the nebula about 81″
in length by about 59″ in width, or more than double the apparent area of Jupiter’s disk. It
has been beautifully photographed by Dr. Roberts, and he says “the photograph shows the
nebula and the interior of the ring more elliptical than the drawings and descriptions
indicate; and the star of the following side is nearer to the ring than the distance given. The [160]
nebulosity on the preceding and following ends of the ring protrudes a little, and is less
dense than on the north and south sides. This probably suggested the filamentous
appearance which Lord Rosse shows. Some photographs of the nebula have been taken
between 1887 and 1891, and the central star is strongly shown on some of them, but on
others it is scarcely visible, which points to the star being variable.” On a photograph taken
by MM. Androyer and Montaugerand of the Toulouse Observatory, with an exposure of nine
hours (in multiple exposures), about 4,800 stars are visible on and near the nebula in an area
of three square degrees.
Another object of the annular class will be found a little to the southwest of the star
Lambda Scorpii. It is thus described by Sir John Herschel: “A delicate, extremely faint, but
perfectly well defined, annulus. The field crowded with stars, two of which are on the
nebula. A beautiful, delicate ring of a faint, ghost-like appearance, about 40″ in diameter in a
field of about 150 stars, eleven and twelve magnitude and under.”
Near the stars 44 and 51 Ophiuchi is another object of the annular class, which Sir John
Herschel describes as “exactly round, pretty faint, 12″ diameter, well terminated, but a little
cottony at the edge, and with a decided darkness in the middle, equal to a tenth magnitude
star at the most. Few stars in the field, a beautiful specimen of the planetary annular class of
nebula.”
The Planetary Nebulæ form an interesting class. They were so named by Sir William [161]
Herschel from their resemblance to the disks of the planets, but, of course, much fainter.
They are generally of uniform brightness, without any nucleus or brighter part in the centre.
There are numerous examples of this class, one of the most remarkable being that known as
97 Messier, which is situated about two degrees southeast of Beta Ursæ Majoris—the
southern of the two “pointers” in the Plow. It is of considerable apparent size, and even
supposing its distance to be not greater than that of 61 Cygni, its real dimensions must be
enormous. Lord Rosse observed two openings in the centre with a star in each opening, and
from this appearance he called it the “owl nebula.” One of the stars seems to have
disappeared since 1850, and a photograph recently taken by Dr. Roberts confirms the
disappearance.
Another fine object of the planetary class is one which lies close to the pole of the
ecliptic. Webb saw it “like a considerable star out of focus.” Smyth found it pale blue in
color. Dr. Huggins finds a gaseous spectrum, the first discovery of the kind made. Professor
Holden, observing it with the great Lick telescope, finds its structure extraordinary. He says
it “is apparently composed of rings overlying each other, and it is difficult to resist the
conviction that these are arranged in space in the form of a true helix,” and he ranks it in a
new class which he calls “helical nebulæ.”
A somewhat similar nebula lies a little to the west of the star Nu Aquarii. Secchi believed
it to be in reality a cluster of small stars, but Dr. Huggins finds its spectrum gaseous. A small [162]
nebula on each side gives it an appearance somewhat similar to the planet Saturn, with the
rings seen edgewise. The great Lick telescope shows it as a wonderful object—“a central
ring lies upon an oval of much fainter nebulosity.” Professor Holden says “the color is a pale
blue,” and he compares the appearance of the central ring “to that of a footprint left in the
wet sand on a sea beach.”
About two degrees south of the star Mu Hydræ is another planetary nebula, which Smyth
describes as resembling the planet Jupiter in “size, equable light and color.” Webb saw it of
“a steady, pale blue light,” and Sir John Herschel, at the Cape of Good Hope, speaks of its
color as “a decided blue—at all events, a good sky-blue,” a color which seems characteristic
of these curious objects. Although Sir William Herschel, with his large telescopes, failed to
resolve it into stars, Secchi thought he saw it breaking up into stars with a “sparkling ring.”
Dr. Huggins, however, finds the spectrum to be gaseous, so that the luminous points seen by
Secchi could not have been stellar.
Sir John Herschel, in his Cape Observations, describes a planetary nebula which lies
between the stars Pi Centauri and Delta Crucis. He says it is “perfectly round, very
planetary, color fine blue ... very like Uranus, only about half as large again, and blue.... It is
of the most decided independent blue color when in the field by itself, and with no lamplight
and no bright star. About 10′ north of it is an orange-colored star, eighth magnitude. When [163]
this is brought into view, the blue color of the nebula becomes intense ... color, a beautiful
rich blue, between Prussian blue and verditer green.”
There are some rare objects called “nebulous stars.” The star Epsilon Orionis—the centre
star of Orion’s Belt—is involved in a great nebulous atmosphere. The triple star Iota Orionis
is surrounded by a nebulous haze. The star Beta in Canes Venatici is a 4½ magnitude star
surrounded by a nebulous atmosphere.
The term elliptical nebulæ has been applied to those of an elliptical or elongated shape.
This form is probably due in many cases to the effect of perspective, their real shape being
circular, or nearly so. Perhaps the most remarkable object of this class is the well-known
“nebula in Andromeda,” known to astronomers as 31 Messier. It can be just seen with the
naked eye, on a clear moonless night, as a hazy spot of light near the star Nu Andromedæ,
and it is curious that it is not mentioned by the ancients, although it must have been very
visible to their keen eyesight in the clear Eastern skies. It was, however, certainly seen so far
back as 905 a. d., and it is referred to as a familiar object by the Persian astronomer, Al-Sûfi,
who wrote a description of the heavens about the middle of the Tenth Century. Tycho Brahe
and Bayer failed to notice it, but Simon Marius saw it in December, 1612, and described it
“as a light seen from a great distance through half-transparent horn plates.” It was also
observed by Bullialdus, in 1664, while following the comet of that year. It has frequently [164]
been mistaken for a comet by amateur observers in recent years. Closely northwest of the
great nebula is a smaller one discovered by Le Gentil in 1749, and another to the south,
detected by Miss Caroline Herschel in 1783. The great nebula is of an elliptical shape and
considerable apparent size. The American astronomer, Bond, using a telescope of 15 inches
aperture, traced it to a length of about four degrees, and a width of two and a half degrees. A
beautiful photograph taken by Dr. Roberts in December, 1888, shows an extension of nearly
two degrees in length, and about half a degree in width, or considerably larger than the
apparent size of the full moon. Bond could not see any symptom of resolution into stars, but
noticed two dark rifts or channels running nearly parallel to the length of the nebula. In Dr.
Roberts’s photograph these rifts are seen to be really dark intervals between consecutive
nebulous rings into which the nebula is divided. Dr. Roberts says: “A photograph which I
took with the 20-inch reflector on October 10, 1887, revealed for the first time the true
character of the great nebula, and one of the features exhibited was that the dark bands,
referred to by Bond, formed parts of divisions between symmetrical rings of nebulous
matter surrounding the large diffuse centre of the nebula. Other photographs were taken in
1887, November 15; 1888, October 1; 1888, October 2; 1888, December 29; besides several
others taken since, upon all of which the rings of nebulosity are identically shown, and thus
the photographs confirm the accuracy of each other, and the objective reality of the details [165]
shown of the structure of the nebula.” Dr. Roberts adds: “These photographs throw a strong
light on the probable truth of the Nebular Hypothesis, for they show what appears to be the
progressive evolution of a gigantic stellar system.”
The largest telescopes have hitherto completely failed to resolve this wonderful object
into stars. Dr. Huggins, however, finds that the spectrum is not gaseous, so that if the nebula
really consists of stellar points, they must be of very small dimensions.
The question may be asked, What is the probable size and distance of this wonderful
nebula? and could it be an external universe?
The temporary star which appeared near the nucleus of the nebula in August, 1885, was
of the seventh magnitude. I find that our sun, if placed at the distance indicated by a parallax
of 1/200th of a second, would be reduced to a star of about the eleventh magnitude, or four
magnitudes fainter than the temporary star appeared to us. That is to say, the star would have
been—with the assumed distance—about forty times brighter than the sun. With any greater
distance, the star would have been proportionately brighter, compared with the sun. This
seems improbable, and tends to the conclusion that the nebula is not an external galaxy, but
a member of our own sidereal system, a system which probably includes all the stars and
nebulæ visible in our largest telescopes. Dr. Common, indeed, suggests that it may be
comparatively near our system. He says: “It is difficult to imagine that such an enormous
object, as the Andromeda nebula must be, is not very near to us; perhaps it may be found to [166]
be the nearest celestial object of all beyond the Solar System. It is one that offers the best
chance of the detection of parallax, as it seems to be projected on a crowd of stars, and there
are well-defined points that might be taken as fiducial points for measurement,” and he adds:
“Apart from the great promise this nebula seems to give of determining parallax, there is a
fair presumption that in the course of time the rotation of the outer portion may perhaps be
detected by observation of the positions of the two outer detached portions in relation to the
neighboring stars.”
The spiral nebulæ are wonderful objects, and were discovered by the late Lord Rosse with
his great six-foot telescope. Their character has been fully confirmed by photographs taken
by Dr. Roberts. One of the most remarkable of these extraordinary objects is that known as
51 Messier. It lies about three degrees southwest of the bright star Eta Ursæ Majoris—the
star at the end of the Great Bear’s tail. It was discovered by Messier while comet-hunting on
October 13, 1773. Telescopes of moderate power merely show two nebulæ nearly in contact,
but Lord Rosse saw it as a wonderful spiral, and his drawing agrees fairly well with a
photograph taken by Dr. Roberts in April, 1889. The nebula has also been photographed by
Dr. Common. Dr. Roberts says: “The photograph shows both nuclei of the nebula to be
stellar, surrounded by dense nebulosity, and the convolutions of the spiral in this as in other
spiral nebulæ are broken up into star-like condensations with nebulosity around them. Those [167]
stars that do not conform to the trends of the spiral have nebulous trails attached to them,
and seem as if they had broken away from the spirals.” A tendency to a spiral structure in
the smaller nebula is also visible on the original negative. Dr. Huggins finds that the
spectrum is not gaseous.
The nebula known as 99 Messier is of the spiral form. It lies on the borders of Virgo and
Coma Berenices, near the star 6 Comæ. In large telescopes it somewhat resembles a
“Catherine wheel.” D’Arrest and Key thought it resolvable into stars. It has been
photographed by M. Von Gothard.
Among the clusters and nebulæ, we may class the Magellanic Clouds, or Nubeculæ in the
Southern Hemisphere, as they consist of stars, clusters, and nebulæ.
Among the so-called nebulæ are many objects which, when examined with telescopes of
adequate power, are seen to be resolved into myriads of small stars; their comparative
isolation from surrounding objects impresses us forcibly with the idea that they form, as it
were, families of stars connected by some physical bond of union. Of these clusters, as they
are called, we have naked-eye examples in the Pleiades and the “Bee-Hive” in Cancer.
Others may be partially seen with a good opera-glass or binocular, but most of them require
telescopes of considerable power to view them to advantage. They are of various forms and
of all degrees of condensation. Some are comparatively large and irregular, others small and
compressed, with the component stars densely crowded. Many are of such uniform shape as [168]
to have received the name of globular clusters. These have been aptly termed “balls of
stars,” and are among the most interesting objects in the stellar heavens.
The most remarkable object of this class visible in the Northern Hemisphere is that
known as 13 Messier. It lies between the tolerably bright stars Zeta and Eta Herculis, nearer
the latter star. It may be seen with an opera-glass as a hazy-looking star of about the sixth
magnitude, with a star on each side of it. Examined with a powerful telescope, it is resolved
into numerous small stars. Sir William Herschel estimated them at 14,000, but the real
number is probably much less. Assuming the average magnitude of the components at
twelve and a half, I find that an aggregation of 14,000 stars of this brightness would shine as
a star of about the second magnitude, or a little fainter.
Another object of the globular class, but less resolvable, is that known as 92 Messier,
which lies between the stars Eta and Iota in Hercules, nearer the latter. Sir William
Herschel’s telescopes showed it as seven or eight minutes of arc in diameter. It is
considerably brighter at the centre. The larger components are easily visible in moderate-
sized telescopes, but even Lord Rosse’s giant instrument failed to resolve the central blaze.
There is no doubt, however, that it consists wholly of small stars, as the unerring eye of the
spectroscope shows a stellar spectrum, similar to that of the neighboring 13 Messier.
[169]
Another fine example of the globular class is 5 Messier, which lies closely north,
preceding the fifth magnitude star, 5 Serpentis. It is considerably compressed at the centre.
Sir William Herschel counted 200 stars, but failed to resolve the central nebulosity. Messier,
its discoverer, found it visible with a telescope only one foot long.
Another fine object is 3 Messier, in Boötes. Admiral Smyth describes it as “a brilliant and [170]
beautiful globular aggregation of not less than 1,000 small stars.” It is beyond the power of
small telescopes, but it was resolved by Buffham, even in the centre, with a 9-inch reflector.
Numerous fine examples of the globular class are found in the Southern Hemisphere,
which indeed seems to be richer in these marvelous objects than the northern sky. Of these
the most interesting are those known as Omega Centauri and 47 Toucani. Omega Centauri,
from its great apparent size—about two-thirds of the moon’s diameter—and its visibility to
the naked eye, may perhaps be considered as the most remarkable object of its kind in the
heavens. It shines as a hazy star of the fourth magnitude, and I have often so seen it in the
Punjab sky. Its large size and globular form are clearly visible in a binocular field-glass, but,
of course, its component stars are far beyond the reach of such an instrument. Sir John
Herschel, observing it with his large telescope at the Cape of Good Hope, found it a “truly
astonishing object. All clearly resolved into stars of two magnitudes, viz., thirteen and
fifteen, the larger lying in lines and ridges over the smaller;... the larger form rings like lace-
work on it.” If we take the average magnitude of the components at thirteen and a half, the
apparent brightness of the cluster would imply that it contains about 15,000 stars.
The Great Nebula in the Constellation Cygnus
The other wonderful cluster is that known as 47 Toucani, which lies close to the smaller
Magellanic Cloud. It is smaller in apparent size than Omega Centauri, but Dr. Gould, [171]
observing it at Cordoba, speaks of it as “one of the most impressive and perhaps the
grandest of its kind in either hemisphere,” and he estimates its magnitude at four and a half,
as seen with the naked eye. It is thus described by Sir John Herschel: “A most magnificent
globular cluster. It fills the field with its outskirts, but within its more compressed part I can
insulate a tolerably defined, circular space, of 90″ diameter, wherein the compression is
much more decided, and the stars seem to run together, and this part, I think, has a pale
pinkish or rose color, which contrasts, evidently, with the white light of the rest. The stars
are equal, fourteen magnitude, immensely numerous and compressed.... Condensation in
three distinct stages.... A stupendous object.” Sir John Herschel’s drawing of this cluster
reminds one of a swarm of bees, and perhaps suggested to Tennyson the lines:
“Clusters and beds of worlds, and bee-like swarms
Of suns and starry streams.”
There are other interesting specimens of the globular class in the Southern Hemisphere,
but not of such large apparent dimensions as those already described. Of these may be
mentioned 22 Messier, which lies about midway between the stars Mu and Sigma Sagittarii.
It is described by Sir John Herschel as a fine globular cluster, with stars of two magnitudes,
namely eleven or twelve, and fifteen or sixteen, the larger being visibly reddish, and he
suggested that it consists of “two layers, or one shell over another.” Owing to the [172]
comparative brightness of the larger components, this cluster forms a good object for small
telescopes. I saw the brighter stars well with a 3-inch refractor in the Punjab sky, but, of
course, the greater portion of the cluster has a nebulous appearance in a telescope of this
size.
Between Alpha and Beta Scorpii there is a condensed globular cluster. With small
telescopes it very much resembles a telescopic comet, but with larger instruments its true
character is revealed. Sir William Herschel considered it “the richest and most condensed
mass of stars in the firmament.” In May, 1860, a “temporary star” of the seventh magnitude
suddenly appeared in the centre, almost blotting out the cluster by its superior light. The star
faded away before the end of June of the same year, and has not been seen with any
certainty since. It has been suggested that this temporary star lay between the cluster and the
earth, but it seems to me much more probable that the outburst took place in the cluster
itself, and that it was possibly caused by a collision between two of the component stars, or
by a swarm of meteors rushing with a high velocity through the cluster.
The beauty and sublimity of the spectacle presented by these globular clusters, when
viewed with a powerful telescope, is such as can not be adequately described, and it has
been said that when seen for the first time, “few can refrain from a shout of rapture.” The
component stars, although distinctly visible as points of light, defy all attempts at counting
them, and seem literally innumerable. Placed like a mass of glittering diamond-dust on the [173]
dark background of the heavens, they impress us forcibly with the idea that if each of these
lucid points is a sun, the thousands which seem massed together in so small a space must be
in reality either relatively close and individually small, or else the system of suns must be
placed at a distance almost approaching the infinite.
The distance of these globular clusters from the earth is, however, certainly very great.
Attempts to accurately determine their position in space have not been attended with
success. As the component stars are at practically the same distance from the eye, we have
no comparison stars to measure from, and their exact distance, therefore, remains unknown.
We may, however, estimate their probable distance with some show of plausibility. We may
assume that the stars of the Hercules cluster would, if concentrated in a point, shine as a star
of about the fourth magnitude. As the components are of about the twelfth and thirteenth
magnitudes, this would imply that the cluster consists of about 2,500 stars. With the data
assumed, we may therefore conclude that the components of the Hercules cluster are suns of
comparatively small size, separated by considerable distances, but apparently massed
together by the effect of distance.
Among less condensed star clusters there are many interesting objects. The Pleiades have
been already referred to. On a photograph of this remarkable group, taken at the Paris
Observatory, over 2,000 stars can be counted of all degrees of brilliancy, from those visible [174]
without optical aid down to points of light so faint as to be invisible to the eye in the
telescope with which they were photographed. Here we have a cluster of probably larger
size than that in Hercules, probably at a greater distance from the earth, and with its larger
components of considerably greater mass than our sun.
Near the bright star Pollux, I see a small cluster of stars of about the seventh and eight
magnitudes, which, with a binocular field-glass, very much resembles the Pleiades as seen
with the naked eye. A smaller cluster (known as 39 Messier) may be seen near the star Pi
Cygni.
The well-known Chi Persei may be also seen with an opera-glass, but a telescope is
necessary to show the component stars to advantage, and the larger the telescope the greater
the number of faint stars in these wonderful objects.
The cluster known as 35 Messier, a little north of the star Eta Geminorum, is visible in an
opera-glass, but a small telescope is required to see the component stars. A well-marked
clustering tendency is visible among the brighter stars of the group, two, three, four, and
sometimes five stars being grouped together in subordinate collections. Admiral Smyth says:
“It presents a gorgeous field of stars from the ninth to the sixteenth magnitude, but with the
centre of the mass less rich than the rest. From the small stars being inclined to form curves
of three or four, and often with a large one at the root of the curve, it somewhat reminds one
of the bursting of a sky-rocket.” This tendency to “stream” formation in the components of [175]
star clusters is also well marked in a photograph of the cluster 38 Messier (kindly sent to me
by MM. Henry of the Paris Observatory). It was described by Webb as “a noble cluster
arranged in an oblique cross,” and Smyth says: “The very unusual shape of this cluster
recalls the sagacity of Sir William Herschel’s speculations upon the subject, and very much
favors the idea of an attractive power lodged in the brightest part. For although the form is
not globular, it is plainly to be seen that there is a tendency toward sphericity, by the swell
of the dimensions as they draw near the most luminous part, denoting, as it were, a stream or
tide of stars, setting toward the centre.”
Sir W. Herschel, speaking of a compressed cluster in Perseus, says “the large stars are
arranged in lines like interwoven letters,” and Webb says “it is beautifully bordered by a
brighter foreshortened pentagon.”
Observing with a 3-inch telescope in India, I noticed a beautiful cluster of stars, about 4°
north of Gamma and Upsilon Scorpii, resembling in shape a bird’s foot, with remarkable
streams of stars. This cluster is visible to the naked eye as a star of about the fifth
magnitude.
Although these loosely associated star clusters do not show such evidence in favor of
family connection as the more closely compacted globular clusters, still we can hardly
escape from the conviction that their apparent aggregation is really due to some physical
bond of union, and not merely the result of a fortuitous scattering of stars at different
distances in the line of sight.
[176]
T he telescope, ever an ally in the study of the heavens, is in this part of the science
absolutely indispensable. In other branches of astronomy we can learn something
without its aid. Indeed, many great astronomical discoveries were made long before the
telescope was invented. But ere this memorable event in the history of science it was
impossible for us to know anything of the existence of the nebulæ. It is indeed true that there
is one of these objects which can be just detected by the naked eye. It lies in the
constellation of Andromeda, where, on a clear and dark night, a faint spot of light can just be
discerned by a good eye. But a mere glimpse gives us really no adequate notion of the true
character of the object. It might only, so far as the naked eye discloses its nature, be a cluster
of stars like that we have already discerned in Perseus, or like the similar group that, under
the name of the Beehive, is comparatively familiar in the constellation of Cancer. With the
single exception of the nebula in Andromeda, all the objects so called are entirely telescopic,
yet how important a constituent the nebulæ form in the contents of the heavens will be
shown by a look at some of the lists of these objects. There are now several thousands of
nebulæ known, and their positions in the sky, as well as the details of their appearances, are
set forth in the catalogues.
The most glorious constellation of stars in the firmament is undoubtedly that of Orion. [177]
This splendid group is seen in the south during the winter months, and toward the close of
January it is situated in a very convenient position for observing early in the evening. The
group is specially characterized by the number of unusually bright stars which it includes,
and the three stars in the centre, forming the so-called Belt of Orion, is as well known a
celestial figure as the sky contains. Directly under the belt are three much smaller stars
nearly in a line, which points straight upward to the middle star of the belt. These three
lower stars are usually known as the sword handle of Orion, this being the position which
they occupied in the fanciful old sketches of the constellation. The three stars of the sword
handle of Orion are plunged in the Great Nebula. This object can not be seen by the
unassisted eye, though doubtless around the central star a little haziness is perceptible, and
even the slightest telescopic aid will suffice to indicate that the central star of the sword
handle is attended by a surrounding glow of light, which renders it quite unlike other stars.
This can indeed be sufficiently shown with an ordinary opera-glass, one glance through
which will awaken in the beholder a keen desire to study the object under more favorable
conditions. But to do justice to the object, telescopes of large power are desirable.
To realize fully the magnificence of the Great Nebula, the observer who is being
introduced to the object for the first time should not, strange to say, direct the telescope at
the nebula; the instrument should rather be pointed at the heavens, just a little to the west of [178]
the nebula. The clock driving the equatorial should not be started, and the observer should
take his seat and look through the eye-piece before the nebula has entered the field. He will
see, no doubt, a few stars on the black background, which gradually pass in procession
across his field of view. This is merely the ordinary diurnal journey of the heavens, by which
all the objects move slowly from east to west; I ought rather to say appear to move, for, of
course, the motion on the heavens is only apparent, the fact being that it is the earth which is
turning round.
After the observer’s eye for a minute or so has become familiarized with the dark aspect
of the heavens under ordinary circumstances, he will begin to perceive on the eastern side (it
will appear in the telescope no doubt as on the western side) a faint dawn of light. Gradually
there will steal across his field of view a sort of ghostlike luminosity that is in marked
contrast to the darkness in the rest of the field; as the seconds move on, this object will
disclose itself until the full splendor of the Great Nebula comes into view; then the entire
field will be filled with the light, and then it will gradually advance and gradually pass away
again to emphasize the contrast between the brilliance of the nebula and the darkness of the
sky. Unless this method is adopted, the full interest of a telescopic view of the Great Nebula
is not attained, for when the entire field is full of the glow the beginner will hardly recognize
the nebula. He will be apt to think that the fainter part of the field he sees is the ordinary [179]
groundwork of the sky, and this illusion can only be dispelled by enabling him to witness
the actual contrast in the way I have described. The central portions of the nebula are,
however, so brilliant and so wonderfully marked with interesting detail, that even a small
instrument will suffice to reveal much of its beauties.
In the centre of the nebula is the star known to astronomers at Theta Orionis, the most
prominent star of the sword handle. To the eye this looks like an ordinary star, but the
telescope speedily dispels that notion. Theta Orionis is found to consist of four, or rather six,
stars all so close together that the unaided eye fails to distinguish them separately. A
structure so complex gives to this star quite a special, indeed a unique, interest, wholly apart
from the marvelous nebula of which it is the focus. We must dwell a little on the
peculiarities of this star. We are familiar with stars which are called double; there are indeed
some ten thousand objects so designated known to astronomers and duly registered in
catalogues.
Many of these double stars are objects of extreme telescopic beauty; sometimes they offer
to our admiration a delightful contrast of colors; perhaps one will be topaz color and the
other bluish, or on rare occasions a pair of emerald gems will be seen with an invisible band
of mutual connection. Sometimes triple stars are found, in which three stars are obviously in
alliance; but multiple stars of greater complexity are comparatively rare; and so marvelous a
spectacle as Theta Orionis, in which no fewer than six stars are obviously an allied group, is [180]
almost unique. It is not a little remarkable that we find the most exquisite multiple star
which the sky can show, beautifully framed or set in the centre of the grandest of the
nebulæ. Of course it might conceivably happen that the apparent concourse of these objects
was fortuitous. The actual phenomenon could be accounted for by the belief that the Great
Nebula was either very much nearer or very much further than the multiple star, and that
they chanced to lie in the same line of sight, and had no other connection. But to me it
appears that this view is quite at variance with every reasonable probability; that the most
wondrous multiple star should have happened to lie in line with the very centre of the most
wondrous nebula would have been a coincidence against the occurrence of which the
probabilities were almost infinite. There can scarcely be any doubt that the multiple star and
the Great Nebula are part of the same system, and that the star is, in truth, placed in the
middle of the nebula, as it actually appears to be.
And now as to the composition of this mysterious object.
The word nebula means, of course, a little cloud, but the expression is apt to be a
misleading one. In a sense no doubt they are little, inasmuch as the patch of the sky which a
nebula covers would be small compared with one of our ordinary clouds. Indeed, a nebula
which covered as large an apparent part of the sky as the size of the moon would be ranked
as a large object of its class, while even the greatest of them is perhaps not more than ten or [181]
twelve times as great. Nor is the word cloud, as applied to nebula, an appropriate one. What
we mean by a cloud is only a vast mass of watery vapor raised by the sun from the sea, and
poised aloft until such time as it shall be again dispersed into invisible water, or until it shall
descend to the earth as rain. Such clouds are, of course, within the limits of our atmosphere,
and are rarely more than a few miles above the earth’s surface. The light which renders
clouds visible only comes from reflected sunbeams, and consequently at night clouds
become invisible, though the astronomer is often only too unpleasantly made acquainted
with their presence by the opacity with which they shut out the stars from his view.
Utterly different in all respects are the nebulæ. They are not masses of watery vapor. It
may no doubt possibly be that water in some form is there, but it is not water which we see.
We are looking at some gaseous material of a bluish hue. The light with which it glows is no
reflected sunlight. The nebula is indeed indebted to no foreign source for that weird—I had
almost said ghostlike—radiance which it gives forth. The light comes from the nebula itself.
But how, it may well be asked, should a purely gaseous substance be able to radiate forth
light? It is easy for us to comprehend how stars or suns or comparatively solid bodies can, in
virtue of their tremendous temperature, glow with heat like red-hot or white-hot iron. It is
true that flame is gas in an incandescent state, but in flame a vehement chemical union of
oxygen with some other substance is in progress, and this is the source of the heat and the [182]
light that flame gives forth. We can not regard the Great Nebula in Orion as originating in
anything resembling flame.
We can, however, in our physical laboratories arrange an experiment which seems to
throw some light on the composition of the nebula. Into a glass tube a small quantity of
hydrogen gas is admitted, the air having been previously extracted. Then, by means of two
wires, one at each end of the tube, an electric current is transmitted through the gas. Here
there is no combustion; the gas is merely the vehicle by which the electricity flows from one
pole to the other. In doing so the gas instantly begins to glow with an intense bluish light,
and a very beautiful effect is produced, which can be renewed or terminated at will by
simply making or breaking the electric current. It would seem as if the gas we see in the
nebula were in a condition somewhat analogous to the gas in the tube. I do not mean that the
passage of electricity through the nebula is the source of its luminosity. There is, indeed, no
ground for such a supposition. It is the property of electricity when passing through a
conductor to warm that conductor; thus we know that if a powerful current be transmitted
through a wire of the most infusible of all metals, platinum, the wire will not only get warm,
but it may become red hot, white hot, and even melt under the influence of the heat which is
generated. In those beautiful incandescent electric lamps which are now happily coming into
extensive use a current of electricity flows through a filament of carbon, and kindles that [183]
exquisite incandescence which is maintained while the current flows. It would appear that so
long as the electricity is flowing through the glass tube its action on the gas is to impart a
very high temperature. It is in consequence of this temperature that the gas glows. Now we
can offer a reasonable account of the luminosity of the Great Nebula in Orion. The particles
of gaseous or vaporous material of which it is formed are of an extremely high temperature,
sufficient to enable them to glow with the brilliancy which renders them visible.
It is now almost twenty years since a marvelous accession to our knowledge of such
objects as the Great Nebula in Orion was made by Dr. Huggins. I have used our gas
hydrogen as an illustration in describing the character of the nebula, but I have now to add
that the presence of hydrogen is no mere fiction but a substantial verity. Truly we here open
up one of the most marvelous chapters which science has to disclose. The chemist can
analyze the different substances on the earth with his test tubes, and he can tell the elements
of which they are composed. But in this old-fashioned chemistry it was at least reasonable
for the chemist to demand a portion of the substance he was expected to analyze. Unless he
were provided with a sample, how could it be possible for him to grind it up or submit it to
the various operations of his laboratory? In these modern days the chemist can perform
operations of which his predecessors never even dreamed. No doubt the old method is still
used—nay, is indeed at this moment cultivated with greater skill and means than in any [184]
previous age—but side by side with the old method, and as an invaluable supplement
thereto, the new method of chemical research, called spectrum analysis, has been created,
and has already conducted to many profoundly interesting discoveries in the most varied
branches of science.
In the application of the spectroscopic method it is not indispensably necessary that we
actually have a fragment of the substance; all we require is a beam of light which that
substance can be made to yield when heated to a sufficiently high temperature.
When a beam of the nebular light is transmitted through the prisms, it declares at once
that the object from which that light has come is totally different from a star like the sun.
Instead of the beautifully colored band, decked in all the glowing hues of the rainbow, the
nebular beam is seen to be composed simply of six or seven widely separated strips. It is
important to test the character of the light in these strips. Fortunately this can be done in a
way that is completely satisfactory. We can produce artificial lights from known sources,
and observe them through the spectroscope simultaneously with the light of the nebula.
There are in the composition of this globe some sixty or seventy different elementary
substances, and under suitable conditions each one of these substances can afford a perfectly
characteristic spectrum. Thus the way of making the comparison with the nebula is to try the
different elements one after another, until one can be discovered which pours forth a light
that behaves under the prism as does the light from the nebula. Pursuing this inquiry, Dr. [185]
Huggins found that when hydrogen gas was ignited to incandescence by the passage of
electricity, it emitted light which, after passage through the prisms, came to coincidence
with one of the lines in the spectrum of nebula; and the hydrogen character of two of the
other lines has been since demonstrated. It was thus established that hydrogen is one of the
constituents of the Great Nebula in Orion. Further confirmation of this important discovery
was forthcoming when the photographs of the spectrum of the Great Nebula were
subsequently obtained. On these photographs lines were present which are constituted by
light of such a nature as to be wholly invisible to the eye, though perceptible on the
photographic plate. It is of the greatest interest to discover that these invisible rays from the
nebula are also indicative of the presence of hydrogen. Thus we obtain a beautiful
confirmation of the fact that the nebula is partly composed of glowing hydrogen.
There are, however, some remaining lines, the character of which has not yet been
ascertained.
It would be a little premature to assert that there must be some substance in the Great
Nebula not at present known to us on the earth. This would be, no doubt, one interpretation
of the facts. We must, however, admit the possibility of another explanation. It is frequently
found that the lines yielded by an incandescent material vary to some extent when the
physical conditions of temperature and of pressure are modified. It is, therefore, not
impossible that the unknown lines in the spectrum of the Great Nebula may be due to some [186]
element known to us, but which has not yet been tested under the conditions which would
make it yield the particular rays we are speaking of.
The composition of a nebula as disclosed to us by these researches is very instructive.
Here we are looking at an object which seems to lie at the very limits of the visible universe
—an object so remote that our attempts to fathom its distance are quite unsuccessful; yet in
this inconceivably distant part of our system we find at least one ingredient which we know
well on the earth. Previous to actual trial no one would have expected, I think, to find the
Great Nebula largely constituted from such a familiar element as hydrogen. This gas enters
into the composition of water, and is thus an element of extreme abundance on the earth.
That an element so common with us here should also be abundant in these awfully distant
regions of the universe is one of the most astonishing facts that modern science has
revealed.
As the eye follows these ramifications of the Great Nebula, ever fading away in
brightness until it dissolves in the blackness of the sky; as we look at the multitudes of
bright stars which sparkle out from the depths of the great glowing gas; as we ponder on the
marvelous outlines of a portion of the nebula, we are tempted to ask what the true
magnitude of this object must really be. Here, again, we have to confess that science is
unable to satisfy this very legitimate curiosity. The only means of learning the true length [187]
and breadth of a celestial object depends upon our first having discovered the distance from
us at which the object is situated. Unhappily we are, as I have said, entirely ignorant of what
this distance may be in the case of the Great Nebula in Orion. Our ordinary methods of
conducting such an inquiry are hardly applicable to such an object, and its position so near
the Equator introduces fresh difficulties into the problem. We shall, however, certainly not
err on the side of exaggeration if we assert that the Great Nebula must be many millions of
times larger than that group of bodies which we call the Solar System.
COLORED, DOUBLE, MULTIPLE, BINARY, VARIABLE AND
TEMPORARY STARS.—J. E. Gore
O n a clear night a careful observer will notice a marked difference in the colors of the
brighter stars. The brilliant white or bluish-white light of Sirius, Rigel, and Vega
contrasts strongly with the yellowish color of Capella, the deeper yellow, or orange, of
Arcturus, and the ruddy light of Aldebaran and Betelgeuse. These colors are, however,
limited to various shades of yellow and red. No star of a decided blue or green color is
known, at least among those visible to the naked eye in the Northern Hemisphere. The third
magnitude star Beta Libræ is described by Webb as of a “beautiful pale green hue,” but
probably such a tint in the light of this star will to most people prove quite imperceptible.
Dr. Gould, observing it in the Southern Hemisphere—under, of course, more favorable [188]
conditions—says: “There is a decidedly greenish tinge to the light of Beta Libræ, although
its color can not properly be called conspicuous.”
Among the ruddy stars visible to the naked eye, Mu Cephei, Herschel’s “garnet star,” is
generally admitted to be the reddest, but it is not sufficiently bright to enable its color to be
well distinguished without the aid of an opera-glass. With such an instrument, however, its
reddish hue is striking and beautiful, and very remarkable when compared with other stars
in its vicinity. Like so many of the red stars, Mu Cephei is variable in its light, but seems to
have no regular period, and often remains for many weeks without perceptible change. It
may be seen near the zenith in the early evening hours toward the end of October, and when
in this position its ruddy color is very conspicuous.
Among the brightest stars, Betelgeuse is perhaps the reddest, and the contrast between its
ruddy tint and the white color of Rigel in the same constellation (Orion) is very noticeable.
Like Mu Cephei, Betelgeuse is irregularly variable in its light, but not to such an extent, and,
like the “garnet star,” it frequently remains for protracted periods nearly constant in
brightness. There are other cases of reddish color among the naked-eye stars. Among these
may be mentioned Antares (Alpha Scorpii), Alphard (Alpha Hydræ), noted as red by the
Persian astronomer Al-Sûfi, in the Tenth Century, and called by the Chinese “The Red [189]
Bird”; Eta and Mu Geminorum; Mu and Nu Ursæ Majoris; Delta and Lambda Draconis;
Beta Ophiuchi; Gamma Aquilæ, and others in the Southern Hemisphere.
But it is among the stars below the limit of naked-eye vision that we meet with the finest
examples of the red stars. Some of these are truly wonderful objects. The small star, No. 592
of Birmingham’s Catalogue of Red Stars (No. 713 of Espin’s edition), which lies a little
south of the 5½ magnitude star 79 Cygni, was described as “splendid red” by Birmingham,
“very deep red” by Copeland and Dreyer, and “orange vermilion” by Franks. The star 248
Birmingham, which lies about 5° south of Gamma Hydræ, is another fine specimen.
Birmingham described it as “fine red” and “ruby”; Copeland as “brown red”; Dreyer as
“copper red”; and Espin as “magnificent blood red.” This star is variable in light, as the
estimates of magnitude range from 6.7 to below 9. About 3° to the northeast of this
remarkable object is another highly-colored star, known as R Crateris. It is easily found, as
it lies in the same telescopic field of view with Alpha Crateris, a 4½ magnitude star. Sir John
Herschel described it as “scarlet, almost blood-color; a most intense and curious color.”
Birmingham called it “crimson”; and Webb “very intense ruby.” Observing it with a 3-inch
refractor in India in 1875, I noted it as “full scarlet.” It varies in light from above the eighth
magnitude to below the ninth, and has near it a star of the ninth magnitude of a paler blue
tint.
Another very red star is No. 4 of Birmingham’s Catalogue, which will be found about 5° [190]
north, preceding the great nebula in Andromeda. It is of about the eighth magnitude, and
may be well seen with a 3-inch refractor. Krüger describes it as “intensiv roth”; Birmingham
as “fine red” and “crimson”; Franks as “fine color, almost vermilion”; and Espin as “intense
red color, most wonderful.”
Another fine object is R Leporis, which forms roughly an equilateral triangle with Kappa
and Mu Leporis. This is also variable from 6½ to 8½ magnitude. It was discovered by Hind
in 1845, and described by him as “of the most intense crimson, resembling a blood-drop on
the background of the sky; as regards depth of color, no other star visible in these latitudes
could be compared with it.” Schönfeld called it “intensiv blutroth,” but Dunér, observing its
spectrum in 1880, gives its color as a less intense red than that of other stars. Possibly it may
vary in color as well as in light.
The variable star U Cygni, which lies between Omicron and Omega Cygni, is also very
red. Webb described it as showing “one of the loveliest hues in the sky.” It varies from about
the seventh to 11½ magnitude, with a period of about 461 days.
Another deeply colored star is the well-known variable R Leonis. Hind says: “It is one of
the most fiery-looking variables on our list—fiery in every stage from maximum to
minimum, and is really a fine telescopic object in a dark sky about the time of greatest
brilliancy, when its color forms a striking contrast with the steady white light of the sixth
magnitude a little to the north.” This latter star is 19 Leonis. [191]
In the Southern Hemisphere there are some fine examples of red stars. Epsilon Crucis,
one of the stars in the Southern Cross, is very red. Mu Muscæ is described by Dr. Gould as
of “an intense orange red.” Delta2 Gruis is a very reddish star of about the fourth magnitude.
Pi1 Gruis was observed by Gould as “deep crimson,” and forming a striking contrast with its
white neighbor Pi2 Gruis, which he notes as “conspicuously white.” The variable L2 Puppis
is described as “red in all its stages, and remarkably so when faint.” Miss Clerke, observing
—at the Cape of Good Hope—R Doradûs, another southern variable, says: “This
extraordinary object strikes the eye with the glare of a stormy sunset,” and with reference to
the variable R Sculptoris, described by Gould as “an intense scarlet,” she says: “The star
glows like a live coal in the field,” a description I have found myself very applicable to other
small red stars.
An eighth magnitude star about 5° north of Beta Pictoris is noted by Sir John Herschel, in
his Cape Observations, as “vivid sanguine red, like a blood-drop. A superb specimen of its
class.” With reference to a star of about 8½ magnitude in the field with Beta Crucis,
Herschel says: “The fullest and deepest maroon red; the most intense blood-red of any star I
have seen. It is like a drop of blood when contrasted with the whiteness of Beta Crucis.”
Of stars of other colors, the asserted green tint of Beta Libræ has already been referred to.
Among the brighter stars of the Southern Hemisphere, Theta Eridani, Epsilon Pavonis, [192]
Upsilon Puppis, and Gamma Tucanæ are said to be decidedly blue. The wonderful cluster
surrounding the star Kappa Crucis contains several bluish, greenish and red stars, and is
described by Sir John Herschel as resembling “a superb piece of fancy jewelry.”
Among the double stars we find many examples of colored suns. Of these may be
mentioned Epsilon Boötis, of which the colors are “most beautiful yellow” and “superb
blue,” according to Secchi; Beta Cephei, “yellow and violet”; Beta Cygni, “golden yellow
and smalt blue”; Gamma Delphini, of which I noted the colors in 1874 as “reddish yellow
and grayish lilac”; Alpha Herculis, “orange and emerald or bluish green,” and described by
Admiral Smyth as “a lovely object, one of the finest in the heavens”; Zeta Lyræ, “pale
yellow and lilac” (Franks); and Beta Piscis Australis, of which I observed the colors in India
as white and reddish lilac.
Some distant telescopic companions to red stars have been described as blue. This may be
in some case due, partly at least, to the effect of contrast. In others the blue color seems to
be real. This has been shown spectroscopically to be the case with the bluish companions of
Beta Cygni.
The physical cause of the difference of color is still more or less a matter of mystery.
Although we can not consider it proved that the red stars are cooling and “dying out” suns,
as has been suggested, we may, I think, conclude that their temperature, although doubtless
very high, must be lower than that of the white stars. We know that a bar of iron when [193]
heated to redness is not so hot as when raised to “white heat,” and although the analogy
between hot iron and stellar photospheres may not be a perfect one, it seems probable that
the higher the temperature of a star, the whiter its color will be. Most of the white stars, as
Sirius, Vega, and those only yellow or slightly colored, show spectra of Secchi’s first and
second types, while the great majority of the red stars exhibit banded spectra of the third and
fourth types.
To this rule there are, however, like other rules, some notable exceptions. For instance,
Aldebaran, Alpha Hydræ, Xi Cygni, and 31 Orionis, although distinctly reddish stars, show
well-marked spectra of the second or solar type. On the other hand, Rho Ursæ Majoris and
Omega Virginis, which, according to Dunér, are only slightly yellow, have well-marked
spectra of the third type.
An apparent change of color seems in some cases to be well established. The supposed
red color of Sirius in ancient times is well known. A certain established change is found in
the case of the famous variable star Algol, which is distinctly described as red by Al-Sûfi in
the Tenth Century. It is now pure white, or nearly so, and this is probably the best attested
instance on record of change of color in a bright star.
Schmidt’s Nova Cygni of 1876 was noted as “golden yellow” on the night of its
discovery. When it had faded to the eighth magnitude, Dr. Copeland called it “decided red,”
but when examined at Lord Crawford’s observatory in September, 1877, its color was [194]
recorded as “faint blue”! The new star in the Andromeda nebula was considered to be
yellowish or reddish by most observers when near its maximum, but about a month later its
color was noted as “bluish.”
Among the red and variable stars, there are many suspected cases of color variation.
Espin and other observers have noted that the wonderful variable Mira Ceti is much less red
at maximum than at minimum. My own observations confirm this. When at its maximum
brightness, Mira does not seem to me a very highly-colored star, while at one of its minima I
noted it as “fiery red.” Possibly, however, the great difference between its maximum and
minimum brilliancy may have an influence on estimations of its color. The remarkable
variable Chi Cygni is said to be “strikingly variable in color.” Espin’s observations in
different years show it “sometimes quite red, at others only pale orange red.” The star
Birmingham 118 was described by Schjellerup in 1863 as “decided red,” but it was found
yellow by Secchi in 1868; “bluish” by Birmingham, 1873-76; “no longer red” by
Schjellerup in March, 1876; and “white” by Franks in 1885. Espin omits it from his revised
edition of Birmingham’s Catalogue.
Birmingham 169 was found red by Struve, blue or bluish-white by Birmingham in 1874,
and white at Greenwich in the same year. Espin also saw it white in March, 1888. The star
Birmingham 30, which lies close to Phi Persei (54 Andromedæ), was described by [195]
Schweizer as a “red star with a little disk” in January, 1843; Birmingham noted it as “light
red” in December, 1875; Copeland “deep red” in January, 1876; and Dreyer “reddish” in
September, 1878; but Espin, in November and December, 1887, found it “certainly not red,
and nothing peculiar in the star’s appearance.” It might be expected that these curious
changes of color, if real, would be accompanied by corresponding changes in the star’s
spectrum. Such may be the case, and observations in this direction would probably lead to
some interesting results.
There seems to be some law governing the distribution of the colored stars. The white
stars appear to be most numerous, as a rule, in those constellations where bright stars are
most abundant, for instance, in Orion, Cassiopeia, and Lyra; yellow and orange stars in large
and ill-defined constellations, such as Cetus, Pisces, Hydra, Virgo, etc. The very reddish
stars are most numerous in or near the Milky Way, and one portion of the Galaxy—between
Aquila, Lyra, and Cygnus—was termed by Birmingham “the red region in Cygnus.”
Many of the stars when examined with a good telescope are seen to be double, some
triple, and a few quadruple, and even multiple. These when viewed with the naked eye, or
even a powerful binocular, seem to be single, and show no sign of consisting of two
components. These telescopic double stars should be carefully distinguished from those
which appear very close together with the naked eye, and which in opera-glasses or
telescopes of small power might be mistaken for wide double stars by the inexperienced [196]
observer. These latter stars, such as Mizar—the middle star in the tail of the Great Bear—
and its small companion, Alcor, have been called “naked-eye doubles,” but they are not,
properly speaking, double stars at all. Telescopic double stars are far closer, and even the
widest of them could not possibly be seen double without optical aid, even by those who are
gifted with the keenest vision. Of these so-called “naked-eye doubles,” we may mention
Alpha Capricorni, which on a very clear night may be seen with the naked eye to consist of
two stars. On a very fine night two stars may be seen in Iota Orionis, the most southern star
in Orion’s Sword. The star Zeta Ceti has near it a fifth magnitude star, Chi, which may be
easily seen with the unaided vision. The star Epsilon Lyræ (near Vega) is a severe test for
naked-eye vision. Bessel, the famous German astronomer, is said to have seen it when
thirteen years of age. Omicron Cygni (north of Alpha and Delta Cygni) forms another
naked-eye double, and other objects of this class may be noticed by a sharp-eyed observer.
The star Mizar, already referred to, is itself a wide telescopic double, and it seems to have
been the first double star discovered with the telescope (by Riccioli in 1650). It consists of
two components, of which one is considerably brighter than the other. It will give an idea of
the closeness of even a “wide” telescopic double when we say that the apparent distance
between Mizar and Alcor is nearly forty times the distance which separates the close [197]
components of the bright star. From this it will be seen that even a powerful binocular field-
glass would fail to show Mizar as anything but a single star. The components may, however,
be well seen with a 3-inch telescope, or even with a good 2-inch. The colors of the two stars
are pale green and white. Between Mizar and Alcor is a star of the eighth magnitude, and
others fainter. Mizar was the first double star photographed by Bond.
The Pole Star has a small companion at a little greater distance than that which separates
the components of Mizar, but owing to the faintness of this small star, the object is not so
easy as Mizar.
The star Beta Cygni is composed of a large and small star, of which the colors are
described as “golden yellow and smalt blue.” This is a very wide double, and may be seen
with quite a small telescope. Another fine double star is that known to astronomers as
Gamma Andromedæ. The magnitudes of the components are about the same as those of
Mizar, but a little closer. Their colors are beautiful (“gold and blue”). This is one of the
prettiest double stars in the heavens. It is really a triple star, the fainter of the pair being a
very close double star; but this is beyond the reach of all but the largest telescopes. The star
Gamma Delphini is another beautiful object, the components being a little more unequal in
magnitude, but the distance between them about the same as in Gamma Andromedæ. I have
noted the colors with a 3-inch telescope as “reddish yellow and grayish lilac.” Gamma
Arietis, the faintest of the three well-known stars in the head of Aries, is another fine double [198]
star, a little closer than Gamma Delphini. This is an interesting object, from the fact that it
was one of the first double stars discovered with the telescope—by Hooke, in 1664, when
following the comet of that year.
Another beautiful double star is Eta Cassiopeiæ, the components being about equal in
brightness to those of Gamma Delphini, but the distance less than one-half. The colors are,
according to Webb, yellow and purple; but other observers have found the smaller star
garnet or red. This is a very interesting object, the components revolving round each other,
and forming what is called a binary star.
Another fine double star is Castor, which is composed of two nearly equal stars separated
by a distance about half that between the components of Gamma Andromedæ. This is also a
binary, or revolving double star, but the period is long. Gamma Virginis is another fine
double star, with components at about the same distance as those of Castor, and the colors
very similar. It is also a remarkable binary star.
Among double stars of which the components are closer than those mentioned above, but
which are within the reach of a good 3-inch telescope—a common size with amateur
observers—the following may be noticed: Alpha Herculis, colors, orange or emerald green;
the light of this star is slightly variable. Gamma Leonis, another binary star with a long
period; colors, pale yellow and purple. Epsilon Boötis, a lovely double star, the colors of
which Secchi described as “most beautiful yellow, superb blue.” [199]
For observers in the Southern Hemisphere, the following fine double stars may be seen
with a 3-inch telescope: Alpha Centauri; this famous star, the nearest of all the fixed stars to
the earth, is also a remarkable binary; its period, as recently computed by Dr. See, is eighty-
one years. Theta Eridani is a splendid pair, but closer than Alpha Centauri. It is, however, an
easy object with a 3-inch telescope, and with a telescope of this size I noted the colors in
India as light yellow and dusky yellow. The star known as ƒ Eridani is a very similar double
to Theta, but the components are fainter. I noted the colors in India as yellowish-white and
very light green.
Of triple, quadruple, and multiple stars, there are several which may be well seen with a
small telescope. Of these may be mentioned Iota Orionis, the lowest star in the Sword of
Orion, which consists of a bright star accompanied by two small companions. In Theta
Orionis, the middle star of the Sword, four stars may be seen forming a quadrilateral figure,
known to observers as the “trapezium.” There are two fainter stars in this curious object,
which lie in the midst of the Orion nebula, but a somewhat larger telescope is required to see
them. Within the trapezium are two very faint stars, which are only visible in the largest
telescopes. In Sigma Orionis—a star closely south of Zeta, the lowest star in Orion’s Belt—
six stars may be seen with a 3-inch telescope.
Double and multiple stars may be either optical or real. Optical double stars are those in
which the component stars are merely apparently close together, owing to their being seen in [200]
nearly the same direction in space. Two stars may seem to be close together, while, in
reality, one of them may be placed at an immense distance behind the other. Just as two
lighthouses at sea may, on a dark night, appear close together when viewed from a certain
point, whereas they may be really miles apart. In the case of double stars it is, of course,
always difficult to determine whether the apparent closeness of the stars is real or merely
optical. But when, from a long series of observations of their relative position, we find that
one is apparently moving round the other, we know that the stars must be comparatively
close, and linked together by some physical bond of union. These most interesting objects
are known to astronomers as binary, or revolving double stars. The probable existence of
such objects was predicted from abstract reasoning by Mitchell in the Eighteenth Century;
but the discovery of their actual existence was made by Sir William Herschel, while
engaged on an attempt to determine the distance of some of the double stars from the earth.
Unlike the planetary orbits, which are nearly circular, at least those of the larger planets of
the Solar System, it is found that the orbits of these double stars differ, in many cases,
widely from the circular form, in some cases, indeed, approaching in shape more the orbit of
a comet than a planet.
The binary stars are among the most interesting objects in the heavens. The number now
known probably amounts to nearly one thousand. In most of them, however, the motion is [201]
very slow, and in only about seventy cases has the change of position, since their discovery,
been sufficient to enable an orbit to be computed.
Savary, in 1830, was the first astronomer who attempted to compute the orbit of a binary
star, namely, the star Xi Ursæ Majoris. This remarkable pair was discovered by Sir William
Herschel in 1780, and as the period of revolution is about sixty-one years, a considerable
portion of the ellipse had been described in 1830, when it was attacked by Savary.
The binary star with the shortest period known at present seems to be the fourth
magnitude star Kappa Pegasi. It was discovered as a wide double star by Sir William
Herschel in 1786, the companion star being of the ninth magnitude. In August, 1880, Mr.
Burnham, the famous American double star observer, examining the star with the 18½-inch
refractor of the Dearborn Observatory, found the brighter star to be a very close double, with
a distance between the components of only a quarter of a second of arc. A few years’
observations showed that this pair were in rapid motion round each other (about eleven
years).
Another binary star, with a period of about the same length, is Delta Equulei, which was
discovered to be a close double by Otto Struve in 1851. Next in order of shortness of period
comes the southern binary star Zeta Sagittarii, for which an orbit was first computed in the
year 1886 by the present writer. The orbit of this star will, I think, require still further [202]
revision, but the period of about eighteen years is probably not far from the truth.
Another remarkably rapid binary star is 85 Pegasi. Next in order of rapidity of motion we
have the southern binary star 9 Argûs.
The star 42 Comæ Berenices has a period of about 25¾ years, according to Otto Struve.
The orbit is remarkable from the fact that its plane passes through, or nearly through, the
earth, and is, therefore, projected into a straight line, the companion star oscillating
backward and forward on each side of its primary.
The star Beta Delphini—the most southern of the four stars in the “Dolphin’s Rhomb”—
is also a fast-moving binary, discovered by Burnham in 1873. Burnham thinks the period
will prove to be about twenty-eight years. The spectrum of the light of Beta Delphini is
similar to that of our sun, so that the two bodies should be comparable in intrinsic brilliancy.
Another remarkable binary star with a comparatively short period is Zeta Herculis. This
pair have now performed three complete revolutions since their discovery in 1782 by Sir
William Herschel. Several orbits have been computed, but Dr. See’s period of thirty-five
years is probably the best. The companion is, however, rather faint, being only 6½
magnitude, while the primary star is of the third.
In the case of the binary star, Eta Coronæ Borealis, it was, some forty years ago, uncertain
whether its period was forty-three or sixty-six years, but now that two complete revolutions
have been performed since its discovery by Sir William Herschel in 1781, the question has [203]
been finally decided in favor of the shorter period.
The brilliant star Sirius is also an interesting binary star. The companion, which is
relatively very faint—about tenth magnitude—was discovered by Alvan Clark in 1862. The
existence of some such disturbing body was previously suspected by astronomers, owing to
observed irregularities in the proper motion of Sirius. Several orbits, giving periods of about
fifty years, have been computed. The great brilliancy of Sirius, the brightest star in the
heavens, naturally suggests a sun of great size. Recent investigations do not favor this idea.
Its spectrum is, however, of the first type, and the star is therefore not comparable with the
sun in brilliancy. The above result would indicate that stars of the first, or Sirian type, are
intrinsically brighter than our sun.
Sirius is about eleven magnitudes brighter than its faint companion. This makes the light
of Sirius about 25,000 times the light of the small star. The two bodies must, therefore, be
differently constituted, and, indeed, the companion must be nearly a dark body. If Sirius has
any planets revolving round it—like those of our solar system—they must forever remain
invisible in our largest telescopes. This remark, of course, applies to all the fixed stars,
single and double. They may possibly have attendant families of planets, like our sun, but if
so, the fact can never be ascertained by direct observation.
The star Zeta Cancri is a well-known triple star, the close pair revolving in a period of
about sixty years. Nearly two revolutions have now been completed since its discovery by [204]
Sir William Herschel in 1781. All three stars probably form a connected system, but the
motion of the third star round the binary pair is very slow and irregular.
Another interesting binary star is Xi Ursæ Majoris. As already stated, this was the first
pair for which an orbit was computed. More than a complete revolution has now been
performed since its discovery by Sir William Herschel in 1780. The period has, therefore,
been well determined, and seems to be about sixty years.
The bright southern star, Alpha Centauri, the nearest of all the fixed stars to the earth, so
far as is known at present, is also a remarkable binary star. It seems to have been first [205]
noticed as a double star by Richaud in 1690.
Assuming my value of the sun’s stellar magnitude (about 27), I find that the sun, if placed
at the distance of Alpha Centauri, would appear of about the same brightness as the star does
to us. As, according to Professor Pickering, the spectrum of Alpha Centauri is of the second
or solar type, it would seem that in mass, brightness, and physical condition the star closely
resembles our sun.
We next come to another very interesting binary star, known to astronomers as 70
Ophiuchi. It is a very fine double star, the magnitudes of the components being about four
and six, and the colors yellow and orange. More than a complete revolution has now been
described by the components since its discovery by Sir William Herschel in 1779. Placed at
the distance indicated by Krüger’s parallax, I find that our sun would be reduced to a star of
about magnitude 3½, which shows that the sun and star are of about equal brightness. The
spectrum is of the solar type, according to Vogel.
A very famous binary star is that known to astronomers as Gamma Virginis. Its history is
a very interesting one. It lies close to the celestial equator, about one degree to the south and
about fifteen degrees to the northwest of the bright star Spica (Alpha of the same
constellation), with which it forms the stem of a Y-shaped figure formed by the brightest
stars of the constellation Virgo, or the Virgin, Gamma being at the junction of the two upper [206]
branches. The brightness of Gamma Virginis is a little greater than an average star of the
third magnitude. Variation of light has, however, been suspected in one or both components.
The Persian astronomer, Al-Sûfi, in his description of the heavens, written in the Tenth
Century, rates it of the third magnitude, and describes it as “the third of the stars of al-auvâ,
which is a mansion of the moon,” the first and second stars of this “mansion” being Beta
and Eta Virginis, the fourth star Delta, and the fifth Epsilon, these five stars forming the two
upper branches of the Y-shaped figure above referred to. Gamma was called Zawiyah-al-
auvâ, “the corner of the barkers!” perhaps from its position in the figure, which formed the
thirteenth Lunar Mansion of the old astrologers. It was also called Porrima and Postvarta in
the old calendars. The fact that Gamma Virginis really consists of two stars very close
together seems to have been discovered by the famous astronomer, Bradley, in 1718. The
rapid decrease in the apparent distance from 1780-1834 indicated that the apparent orbit is
very elongated, and that possibly the two stars might “close up” altogether, and appear as a
single star even in telescopes of considerable power. This actually occurred in the year 1836,
or, at least, the stars were then so close together that the most powerful telescopes of that
day failed to show Gamma Virginis as anything but a single star. Of course, it would not
have been beyond the reach of the giant telescopes of our day. From the year 1836 the pair
began to open out again.
Another interesting binary star is Eta Cassiopeiæ. Periods ranging from 149 to 222½ [207]
years have been found by different computers. The most recent computation makes it about
196 years.
The bright star Gamma Leonis, situated in the well-known “Sickle in Leo,” is also a
binary star, but only a small portion of the orbit has been described since its discovery by Sir
William Herschel in 1782. Dr. Doberck finds a period of 407 years. It is remarkable for its
very high “relative brightness.” This pair forms a fine object for a small telescope.
The star known as 12 Lyncis is a triple star, the components being 5, 6, and 7½
magnitude. The close pair forms a binary system, for which an orbit has been computed by
the present writer, who finds a period of about 486 years. Sir John Herschel predicted in
1823 that the angular motion of the pair would “bring the three stars into a straight line in 57
years.” This prediction was fulfilled in 1887, when measures by Tarrant showed that the
stars were then exactly in a straight line.
The bright star Castor is a famous double star, and has been known since the year 1718,
when it was observed by Bradley and Pond. It was also observed by Maskelyne in 1759, and
frequently by Sir William Herschel from 1799 to 1803. Numerous orbits have been
computed, with periods ranging from 199 years by Mädler and 1,001 years by Doberck. I
find that the mass of the system of Castor is only 1/19th of the sun’s mass, a result which
would imply that the components are masses of glowing gas! Dr. Bélopolsky has found,
with the spectroscope, that the brighter component is a close binary star with a dark [208]
companion, like Algol. The period of revolution is about three days, and the relative orbital
velocity about 20¾ miles a second. Dr. Bélopolsky’s observations show that the system is
receding from the earth at the rate of about 4½ miles per second.
With reference to the colors of the components of binary stars, the following relation
between color and relative brightness has been established:
(1) When the magnitudes of the components are equal, or approaching equality, the colors
are generally the same, or similar.
(2) When the magnitudes of the components differ considerably, there is also a
considerable difference in color.
A new class of binary stars has been discovered within the last few years by means of the
spectroscope. These have been called “spectroscopic binaries,” and the brighter component
of Castor, referred to above, is an example of the class. They are supposed to consist of two
component stars, so close together that the highest powers of the largest telescopes fail to
show them as anything but single stars. Indeed, the velocities indicated by the spectroscope
show that they must be so close that the components must forever remain invisible by the
most powerful telescopes which could ever be constructed by man. In some of these
remarkable objects, the doubling of the spectral lines indicates that the components are both
bright bodies, but in others, as in Algol, the lines are merely shifted from their normal
position, not doubled, thus denoting that one of the components is a dark body. In either [209]
case, the motion in the line of sight can be measured by the spectroscope, and we can,
therefore, calculate the actual dimensions of the system in miles, and thence its mass in
terms of the sun’s mass, although the star’s distance from the earth remains unknown.
Judging, however, from the brightness of the star, and the character of its spectrum, we can
make an estimate of its probable distance from the earth.
The bright star Spica has also been found by the spectroscope to be a close binary star.
Vogel finds a period of four days with a distance between the components of about 6¼
millions of miles, and assuming that the components have equal mass and are moving in a
circular orbit, he finds the mass of the system about 2.6 times the mass of our sun. In
addition to its orbital motion, Vogel finds that Spica is approaching the sun at the rate of
over nine miles per second.
To ordinary observers, the light of the stars seems to be constant. Even to those who are
familiar with the constellations, the stars appear to maintain their relative brilliancy
unchanged. To a great extent this is, of course, true; the great majority of the stars remaining
of the same brightness from day to day, and from year to year. There are, however,
numerous exceptions to this rule. Many of the stars, when carefully watched, are found to
fluctuate in their light, being sometimes brighter and sometimes fainter. These are known as
“variable stars”—one of the most interesting class of objects in the heavens. Some of these
have been known for a great number of years, and their variations having been carefully [210]
watched, the laws governing their light changes have been well determined.
We will first consider the variable stars with long periods of variation, as these generally
show the largest fluctuations of light. Among these, the first star in which variation of light
seems to have been noticed is the extraordinary object, Omicron Ceti, popularly known as
Mira, or the “wonderful” star. It appears to have been first noticed by David Fabricius in the
year 1596. He observed that the star now called Omicron, in the constellation Cetus, was of
the third magnitude on April 13 of that year, and that in the following year it had
disappeared. Bayer saw it again in 1603, when forming his maps of the constellations, and
assigned to it the Greek letter Omicron, but does not seem to have noticed the fact that it
was the same star which had been observed by Fabricius seven years previously. No further
attention seems to have been paid to it until 1638 and 1639, when it was observed at
Francker by Professor Phocylides Holwarda to be of the third magnitude in December,
1638, invisible in the following summer, and again visible in October, 1639. From 1648 to
1662 it was carefully observed by Hevelius, and in subsequent years by several observers.
Its variations are now regularly followed from year to year, and it forms one of the most
interesting objects of its kind in the heavens. Its light varies from about the second
magnitude to the ninth, but its brightness at maximum is variable to a considerable extent.
[211]
Perhaps the long period variable star next in order of interest—at least to observers in the
Northern Hemisphere—is that known as Chi Cygni. It was discovered by Kirch in 1686.
The star varies at maximum from 4 to 6½ magnitude, and at the minimum it sinks to below
the thirteenth magnitude. At some maxima, therefore, it is easily visible to the naked eye,
and at others it is just below the limit of ordinary vision. At the maximum of 1847, it was
visible to the naked eye for a period of 97 days. The average period is about 406 days; but
according to Schönfeld—a well-known authority on the variables—observations indicate a
small lengthening of the period. Chi Cygni is said to be “strikingly variable in color.”
Espin’s observations in different years show it “sometimes quite red, at others only pale
orange-red.” In the spectroscope, its light shows a splendid spectrum of the third type (or
banded spectrum, very characteristic of these long period variables), in which bright lines
were observed by Espin in May, 1889.
R Leonis is another remarkable variable star, which is sometimes visible to the naked eye
at maximum. It lies closely south of the star known as 19 Leonis. It was discovered by Koch
in 1782. At the maximum, its brightness varies from 5.2 to 7 magnitude, and at minimum it
fades to about the tenth magnitude. The mean period is about 313 days. The star is red in all
phases of its light, and forms a fine telescopic object. Close to it are two small stars, which
form, with the variable, an isosceles triangle.
There is a very remarkable variable star in the Southern Hemisphere known as Eta Argûs. [212]
It lies in the midst of the great nebula in Argo, and the history of its fluctuations in light is
very interesting. Observed by Halley in 1677 as a star of the fourth magnitude, it was seen
of the second magnitude by Lacaille in 1751. After this, it must have again faded, for
Burchell found it of only the fourth magnitude from 1811 to 1815. From 1822 to 1826 it was
again of the second magnitude, as observed by Fallows and Brisbane; but on February 1,
1827, it was estimated of the first magnitude by Burchell. It then faded again, for on
February 29, 1828, Burchell found it of the second magnitude. From 1829 to 1833 Johnson
and Taylor rated it of the second magnitude; and it was still of this magnitude, or a little
brighter, when Sir John Herschel commenced his observations at the Cape of Good Hope in
1834. It does not seem to have varied much in brightness from that time until December,
1837, when Herschel was astonished to find its light “nearly tripled.” He says: “It very
decidedly surpassed Procyon, which was about the same altitude, and was far superior to
Aldebaran. It exceeded Alpha Orionis, and the only star (Sirius and Canopus excepted)
which could at all be compared with it was Rigel.”
From this time its light continued to increase. On the 28th December it was far superior to
Rigel, and could only be compared with Alpha Centauri, which it equaled, having the
advantage of altitude, but fell somewhat short of it as the altitudes approached equality. The
maximum of brightness seems to have been obtained about the 2d of January, 1838, on [213]
which night, both stars being high and the sky clear and pure, it was judged to be very
nearly matched, indeed, with Alpha Centauri. In 1843 it again increased in brightness, and in
April of that year it was observed by Maclear to be brighter than Canopus, and nearly equal
to Sirius! It then faded slightly, but seems to have remained nearly as bright as Canopus
until February, 1850, since which time its brilliancy gradually decreased. It was still of the
first magnitude in 1856, according to Abbott, but was rated a little below the second
magnitude by Powell in 1858. Tebbutt found it of the third magnitude in 1860; Abbott a
little below the fourth in 1861. Ellery rated it fifth magnitude in 1863, and Tebbutt sixth
magnitude in 1867. In 1874 it was estimated 6.8 magnitude at Cordoba, and only 7.4 in
November, 1878. Tebbutt’s observations from 1877-86 show that it did not rise above the
seventh magnitude in those years, and in March, 1886, it was rated 7.6 magnitude by Finlay
at the Cape of Good Hope. This seems to have been the minimum of light, for in May, 1888,
Tebbutt found that it “had increased fully half a magnitude” since April, 1887. The star is
very reddish in color.
We will now consider the variables of short period, which are particularly interesting
objects, owing to the comparative rapidity of their light changes. The periods vary in length
from about 17¼ days down to a few hours. Perhaps the most interesting of these short
period variables, at least to the amateur observer, is the star Beta Lyræ, which is easily [214]
visible to the naked eye in all phases of its light. It can be readily identified, as it is the
nearest bright star to the south of the brilliant Vega, and one of two stars of nearly the same
magnitude, the second being Gamma Lyræ. The variability of Beta Lyræ was discovered by
Goodricke in the year 1784. The period is about 12 days, 21 hours, 46 minutes, 58 seconds.
Recent observations with the spectroscope indicate that the star is a very close double or
“spectroscopic binary,” although it does not seem certain that an actual eclipse of one
component by the other takes place, as in the case of Algol. Bright lines were detected in the
star’s spectrum by Secchi so far back as 1866. In 1883 M. Von Gothard noticed that the
appearance of these bright lines varied in appearance, and from an examination of
photographs taken at Harvard Observatory in 1891, Mrs. Fleming found displacements of
bright and dark lines in a double spectrum, the period of which agreed fairly well with that
of the star’s light changes.
Another interesting star of short period is Delta Cephei, which is one of three stars
forming an isosceles triangle a little to the west of Cassiopeia’s Chair, the variable being at
the vertex of the triangle, and the nearest of the three to Cassiopeia. Its variability was also
discovered by Goodricke in 1784. It varies from 3.7 to 4.9 magnitude, with a period of 5
days, 8 hours, 47 minutes, 40 seconds. The amount of the variation is, therefore, the same as
in the case of Algol, the star’s light at maximum being about three times its light at
minimum. The observations also show that Delta Cephei is approaching the earth at the rate [215]
of about 8¾ miles a second. The color of the star is yellow, and it has a distant bluish
companion of about the fifth magnitude, which may possibly have some physical connection
with the brighter star, as both stars have a common proper motion through space.
Another remarkable star of short period is Eta Aquilæ, the variability of which was
discovered by Pigott in 1784. It varies from magnitude 3.5 to 4.7, with a period of 7 days, 4
hours, 14 minutes, but Schönfeld found marked deviations from a uniform period. Its color
is yellow, and its spectrum, like that of Delta Cephei, of the second or solar type.
A remarkable variable star of short period was discovered in 1888 by Mr. Paul in the
southern constellation Antlia. It varies from magnitude 6.7 to 7.3, with the wonderfully short
period of 7 hours, 46 minutes, 48 seconds, all the light changes being gone through no less
than three times in twenty-four hours! It was for some years believed that the variation was
of the Algol type, but recent measures made at the Harvard College Observatory show that it
belongs to the same class as Delta Cephei and Eta Aquilæ.
A telescopic variable with a wonderfully short period was discovered by Chandler in
1894. It lies a little to the west of the star Gamma Pegasi, and has been designated U Pegasi.
It varies from magnitude 8.9 to 9.7, and was first supposed to be of the Algol type with a
period of about two days, but further observations showed that the period was much shorter, [216]
and only 5 hours, 31 minutes, 9 seconds. The remarkable rapidity of its light changes, which
are gone through four times in less than twenty-four hours, make this remarkable star a most
interesting object. Possibly there may be other stars in the heavens with a similar rapidity of
variation which have hitherto escaped detection.
Unlike the variable stars of long period which seemed scattered indifferently over the
surface of the heavens, the great majority of the short period variables are found in a zone
which nearly coincides with the course of the Milky Way. The most notable exceptions to
this rule are W Virginis with the comparatively long period of 17¼ days, and U Pegasi,
above described, which has the shortest known period of all the variable stars. Another
peculiarity is that most of them are situated in what may be called the following hemisphere,
that is between 12 hours and 24 hours of right ascension. The most remarkable exception to
this rule is Zeta Geminorum.
Algol, or Beta Persei, is a famous variable star, and the typical star of the class to which it
belongs. Its name, Algol, is derived from a Persian word, meaning the “demon,” which
suggests that the ancient astronomers may have detected some peculiarity in its behavior.
The real discovery of its variation was, however, made by Montanari in 1667, and his
observations were confirmed by Maraldi in 1692. Its fluctuations of light were also noticed
by Kirch and Palitzsch, but the true character of its variations was first determined by the
English astronomer, Goodricke, in 1782. Its fluctuations of light are very curious and [217]
interesting. Shining with a constant, or nearly constant, brightness for a period of about 59
hours as a star of a little less than the second magnitude, it suddenly begins to diminish in
brightness, and in about 4½ hours it is reduced to a star of about magnitude 3½. In other
words, its light is reduced to about one-third of its normal brightness. If we suppose three
candles placed side by side at such a distance that their combined light is merged into one,
and equal to the usual brightness of Algol, then, if two of these candles are extinguished, the
remaining candle will represent the light of Algol at its minimum brilliancy. The star
remains at its minimum, or faintest, for only about 15 minutes. It then begins to increase,
and in about 5 hours recovers its normal brightness, all the light changes being gone through
in a period of about 10 hours out of nearly 69 hours, which elapse between successive
minima. These curious changes take place with great regularity, and the exact hour at which
a minimum of light may be expected can be predicted with as much certainty as an eclipse
of the sun.
Goodricke, comparing his own observations with one made by Flamsteed in the year
1696, found the period from minimum to minimum to be 2 days, 20 hours, 48 minutes, 59½
seconds, and he came to the conclusion that the diminution in the light of the star is
probably due to a partial eclipse by “a large body revolving round Algol.” This hypothesis
was fully confirmed in the years 1888-89 by Professor Vogel with the spectroscope. As no
close companion to Algol is visible in the largest telescopes, we must conclude that either [218]
the satellite is a dark body, or else so close to the primary that no telescope could show it.
Now, if the diminution in Algol’s light is due to a dark body revolving round it, and
periodically coming between us and the bright star, it follows that both components will be
in motion, and both will revolve round the common centre of gravity of the pair. A little
before a minimum of light takes place, the dark companion should therefore be approaching
the eye, and, consequently, the bright companion will be receding. During the minimum
there will be no apparent motion in the line of sight, as the motion of both bodies will be at
right angles to the visual ray. After the minimum is over, the motion of the two bodies will
be reversed, the bright one approaching the eye, and the dark one receding. Now, this is
exactly what Vogel found. Before the diminution in the light of Algol begins, the
spectroscope showed that the star is receding from the earth and after the minimum that it is
approaching the eye. That the companion is dark and not bright, like the primary, is evident
from the fact that the spectral lines are merely shifted from their normal position and not
doubled, as would be the case were both components bright, as in the case of some of the
“spectroscopic binaries”—for example, Beta Aurigæ. Vogel found that before the minimum
of light, Algol is receding from the earth with the velocity of 24½ miles a second, and after
the minimum it is approaching at the rate of 28½ miles a second. The difference between the
observed velocities indicates that the system is approaching the earth with a velocity of [219]
about 2 miles a second. Knowing, then, the orbital velocity, which is evidently about 26½
miles a second, and assuming the orbit to be circular, it is easy, with the observed period of
revolution, or the period of light variation, to calculate the diameter of the orbit in miles,
although the star’s distance from the earth remains unknown. Further, comparing its period
of revolution and the dimensions of the orbit with that of the earth round the sun, it is easy
to calculate, by Kepler’s third law of motion, the mass of the system in terms of the sun’s
mass, and the probable size of the component bodies. Calculating in this way, Vogel
computes that the diameter of Algol is about 1,061,000 miles, and that of the dark
companion 830,300 miles, with a distance between their centres of 3,230,000 miles, and a
combined mass equal to two-thirds of the sun’s mass, the mass of Algol being four-ninths,
and that of the companion two-ninths, of the mass of the sun. Taking the diameter of the sun
as 866,000 miles, and its density as 1.44 (water being unity), I find that the above
dimensions give a mean density for the components of Algol of about one-third that of
water, so that the components are probably gaseous bodies, as Hall has already concluded.
I n the small hours of the morning of 22d February, 1901, Dr. Anderson of Bonnington,
Edinburgh, saw a bright star shining in the constellation of Perseus, where he knew no
such star was ever seen before. The circumstances connected with this discovery afford
another striking instance of how Nature keeps her secrets for her true amateur, using the
word in its highest sense.
The evening of 21st February was cloudy, and nine out of ten astronomers would have
gone to bed when there seemed little prospect of the night clearing; but Dr. Anderson was
the tenth man. At twenty minutes to three in the morning the clouds rolled away from over
the old gray Scottish capital, and the trained eye of the patient observer saw right in the
heart of Perseus a new star. Never before had its light, blue-white, like an unpolished
diamond, shone down on this strange earth of ours.
Next day the news of the wonderful discovery was flashed to all the great observatories of
the world, and telescopes and spectroscopes, cameras and photometers, were directed
toward the strange phenomenon, and by testing, measuring, examining, sought to wrest its
secrets from it.
Much is still a mystery; but what has been ascertained during the period that the rhythm
of its light-waves beat upon our shores is of great interest and importance as bearing directly
on the life-history of each individual star in the heavens, and of our own sun and planet [229]
among them.
The first and simplest question that arises for settlement is the date when the new star
blazed forth in our terrestrial sky. The curious reader will notice the reservation: in our
terrestrial sky. When the star actually burst forth into resplendent light is another matter, as
we shall discover later on. It was certainly before Dr. Anderson was born, and probably
before another Scotsman—Ferguson by name—combined, like many another sage, counting
and watching sheep with counting and watching stars.
With regard to the date of the appearance in our sky of the new star, Nova Persei, as it is
called in astronomical literature, when Dr. Anderson discovered it at twenty minutes to three
o’clock on the morning of 22d February, it was bright enough to be straightway evident to a
trained astronomer. In these later days of strenuous scientific activities every portion of the
sky is constantly being examined and charted, and no sooner was the discovery of Nova
Persei announced than a searching of records began, in order to ascertain if, at any time, the
star had ever been seen before.
Fig. 19.—Chart Showing Position of Nova Persei
It so chanced that on the evenings of 18th and 19th February two photographs of the very
spot where three days later the new star appeared were taken at Harvard Observatory. On
neither of these photographs is there the slightest evidence of the star’s existence. It was,
therefore, on these dates non-existent so far as our earth was concerned. On the evening of
20th February a well-known English observer, Mr. Stanley Williams, had also taken a [230]
photograph of the same portion of the sky; and again there was no trace of the star. Mr.
Williams’s photograph was taken twenty-eight hours before Dr. Anderson saw it. Still more
strange is the fact that on the evening of 21st February three observers on the Continent
testify that they had the constellation Perseus under observation from seven o’clock to [231]
eleven, and had the new star then been visible they could not have failed to see it. The star,
therefore, blazed out some time between eleven o’clock and three on the night of its
discovery.
Now, what does this mean? It means this: that by some cause a star, quite dark before, or
so faint that it could not be seen even by means of a powerful telescope, in a few hours, or
perhaps in a few minutes, blazed forth as a star of conspicuous brightness. In this brief space
of time a dark and probably chill globe became a seething mass of fire, a million times
hotter than it was before. Fierce, fervent heat lit up the orb with a glow that reached from
rim to rim of the stellar universe. We have here a catastrophe that goes beyond our wildest
conceptions: the conflagration of a world, the ruin of a star. What guarantee have we for an
assumption of this kind? What of certitude is there in our vision of such a Day of Doom for
any part of our universe? Let us consider the salient facts regarding the recent changes in the
appearance and structure of this star. We shall relate only those facts that are beyond
controversy, as far as our present knowledge goes.
Nova Persei did not reach its maximum brightness till the evening of 25th February, when
it was probably the most conspicuous object in the midnight sky. It was then at least six
times brighter than at the time of its discovery. After this date it began to wane slowly. At
intervals there were spurts of brightness lasting for two or three days, as if the fires had not
exhausted themselves. On the whole, however, the light of the star waned, and by the end of [232]
the year its enfeebled light was just bright enough to be evident to the naked eye; twelve
months after its appearance it could only be seen with the aid of a telescope.
Now, one of the most powerful instruments of research in the new astronomy is the
spectroscope. It takes hold of the rays of light that come to us from a star, and makes these
rays reveal the condition of things in the world they come from. One of the spectroscopes
turned on the new star in Perseus was Professor Copeland’s magnificent instrument at
Blackford Hill Observatory, Edinburgh. Professor Copeland described the new star as “a
feebly developed” sun. As the star, however, increased in brightness the spectroscope
chronicled the fact that great physical changes were taking place in its composition and
structure. The star soon ceased to be a feebly developed sun, for development had gone on
apace with the increase of light. Round the solid or semi-molten mass there was rapidly
aggregating an ocean of fiery gases, probably thrown up from the nucleus.
Put simply, Nova Persei, for long ages a cold, dark, solid globe, was in the brief space of
a few days transformed from circumference to core into a luminous, heated gaseous sphere.
By what chance or circumstance this vast change came about may be inquired into later on.
We only note here that this was the story spelled out by those skilled in deciphering the
observations recorded by the spectroscope. In July, 1901, Professor Pickering of Harvard [233]
Observatory announced that the star had become a nebula; that, indeed, its once solid globe
had practically dissolved into thinnest air. Not only had its elements become molten with
fervent heat, but they had become transformed into shimmering wisps of matter more
diaphanous than a gossamer web.
Everything connected with the history of this star is of exceptional interest; but all that
had already been ascertained was completely overshadowed by the astonishing discovery
made in November, 1902, that nebulous prominences were observed darting out from the
star with a velocity of at least 100,000 miles every second of time. These astonishing
changes have been confirmed at the two great American observatories, the Yerkes and the
Lick.
Whence and how had destruction come upon this particular star? At one hour the star is
dark, cold, solid. A few hours later this dark, solid, cold body is a blazing world, its solid
mass blown apparently into countless fragments; from every fragment, big or little, there
pour streams of fiery vapor; for millions of miles round the star there is a whirlpool of fire, a
tempest of flame; and from end to end of this great universe of ours the brightness of the
burning star pulsates. Three explanations have been given.
The one that naturally arises in our mind is that it was struck by another star. Two worlds,
each moving at the rate of twenty miles a second, come into collision, and the result is the
annihilation of both. The force of their impact, changed into heat, drives their elements into
vapor. Such a catastrophe is quite possible in a universe like ours, where stars and worlds, [234]
millions and millions in number, sweep down the great avenues of space with a velocity far
beyond our comprehension.
We take it that when the crack of doom comes to this earth of ours it will be in this
fashion. Some great dark star will strike our sun fair and square, and then in the twinkling of
an eye, before the inhabitants of earth know what has taken place, sun and moon and planet
will be wrapped up and dissolved in an atmosphere of fire.
We can in a certain rough way compute the increase in temperature that would arise from
the collision of two great orbs. Thus, let us suppose that Nova Persei was moving onward
through space with a velocity of ten miles a second—a moderate velocity, be it noted, for a
star—when it collided with the body that wrought its destruction. The impact would be
terrific, and the result of it would be not only the complete disintegration of both stars, but a
sudden rise in temperature of about five hundred thousand degrees, an increase sufficient to
vaporize the hardest adamant.
The second theory which has been suggested as explanatory not only of Nova Persei, but
of all new stars, is a modification of the foregoing. This theory is that the new star in its
flight through space suddenly plunged into a nebula, or into some portion of space denser
than that through which it had already passed. This explanation is not only intelligible but
reasonable. If the new star plunged into a region filled with matter even as rare as air, the
friction would immediately set the star on fire. We see the same phenomenon every night [235]
when a meteor hustles through our atmosphere. The meteoric rocks, with the chill of empty
space in and around them, dash into our upper air. A few seconds are ample for the practical
annihilation of most of them: in that brief space of time they have been subjected to a heat
many times greater than that of a Bessemer furnace.
We can imagine Nova Persei as some monster meteor, a meteor larger than the sun,
plunging into a gaseous mass somewhat like our air. In a few hours its temperature would be
increased a million-fold. This increase would fill the surrounding space with fire, and there
would be an immense and ever-increasing area at fervent heat.
To the mind of the writer this explanation has most to commend it. It is the one that is
most in harmony with the information which has been gathered by hundreds of observers
aided by the finest of modern scientific equipment. But there are other explanations. There
will always be other explanations so long as the world lasts.
One of these explanations is of more interest than the rest, inasmuch as it makes a link of
connection between the recent terrible volcanic eruption in the West Indies and the sudden
appearance of a new star like Nova Persei. It is suggested that Nova Persei is, or rather was,
a world somewhat like our own, only vastly larger—that is, there was an inner core of
molten matter and an outer shell of solid material. One day, according to the explosion
theory, this outer shell burst, and the interior fires rushed hither and thither like a devouring [236]
flood all over the stellar globe. Vast chemical changes went on as the lambent flames turned
everything solid into streams of lava. Great electrical disturbances took place all round the
star. The whole phenomenon of Nova Persei, according to this theory, is just the destruction
of St. Pierre on a sidereal scale.
Such a doom, of course, is possible in any star or planet whose interior is still molten. At
any moment the imprisoned fires might break their barriers and change a cold, fruitful, life-
bearing earth into a furnace; but it is far from probable that any such fate will ever be meted
out to our planet or to any other, and, at any rate, destruction did not come to Nova Persei in
this manner. No explosion could account for an access of heat and light any way comparable
to that which was observed. Neither could any interior disruption be violent enough to hurl
the star into fragments. The gravitational hold of the star would prevent this
dismemberment. Yet during the ages the mind of man has been irresistibly drawn to this
conception of the world’s end, so much so that perhaps, after all, our instinct is right and our
science wrong, and the vision of the Minorite Celano of the
Dies iræ, dies illa
Solvet sæculum in favilla,
is a vision of those things that will be in the later days.
We have already touched on one strange circumstance connected with the appearance of
Nova Persei. Dr. Anderson saw it for the first time at a few minutes to three o’clock on the [237]
morning of 22d February—that is, the news of the strange occurrence reached our planet
then; but when did the event actually take place?
At Greenwich and at some of the other foremost observatories attempts have been made
directly and indirectly to determine the distance of Nova Persei. And yet this distance defies
measurement. The star is so far away that we have no instruments refined enough to deal
with the problem. But we know that the sudden blazing up of Nova Persei was over and
done with before our great-grandfathers were born. It happened more than two hundred
years ago—perhaps two thousand years ago. All this time the news was swiftly traveling
earthward, traveling on and on and on, two hundred thousand miles every second of the
clock, past star and nebula and system, never halting, never faltering—yet it took hundreds
of years to come to us; and beyond us lie countless worlds that will not see the new star for
centuries to come. Hundreds of years hence in their sky will appear suddenly in the
constellation of Perseus a strange star; it will increase in brightness for a few days just as it
did in ours; it will fade away intermittently just as it did in ours. There is no imagination
here; only sober facts.
We may be allowed, in closing our narrative of this wonderful star, to make one excursion
into the region of imagination. As the news of the star passes on through space, are there any
beings beyond ourselves who will take record of its appearance? It has taken centuries to [238]
come to us. Did any other creatures in some far-off world lift their eyes to the stars and
wonder, as we do, what all this meant? Will some mortal, like ourselves, in some remoter
world, in a day yet to come, see the sight, and have the intelligence to say, “Lo! a new star?”
We have room enough here for the most extravagant fancy. Perhaps there is so much room
that we shall lose ourselves if we venture to stray in such directions.
TELESCOPES.—A. Fowler
In this way the focal length of the lens, and, therefore, the length of the telescope tube,
can be kept within reasonable dimensions, while the definition is improved. There is,
however, usually a little outstanding color, due to the imperfect matching of the two lenses,
and if one looks through a large refractor, even of a good quality, a purple fringe will be
noticed round all very bright objects. This only affects a few of the brighter objects, while
millions of others which are dimmer may be seen free from spurious color.
It may be remarked that the curved surfaces of the lenses forming telescopic object-
glasses must not be parts of spheres. If they are, the images will be rendered indistinct by [241]
spherical aberration, and the optician has to design his curves to get rid of this defect at the
same time as chromatic aberration.
A new form of telescopic objective, consisting of three lenses, which has many important
advantages, has been invented by Mr. Dennis Taylor, of the well-known firm of T. Cooke &
Sons, York, England.
Such a lens as this illustrates the perfection which the optician’s art has now attained. Six
surfaces of glass have to be so accurately figured that every ray of light falling upon the
surface of the lens shall pass through the finest pin-hole at a distance of eighteen times the
diameter of the lens.
The Reflector.—In a reflecting telescope, the object-glass of the refractor is replaced by
a concave mirror. In order that such a mirror may reflect all the rays from a star to a single
point, its concave surface must be part of a paraboloid of revolution, that is, a surface
produced by the revolution of a parabola on its axis. If a spherical surface be employed, all
the rays will not be reflected to a single point and the images which it gives will be ill-
defined. Yet it is astonishing to find that the difference between a parabolic and spherical
surface, even in the case of a large mirror, is exceedingly small. Sir John Herschel states that
in the case of a mirror four feet in diameter, and forming an image at a distance of forty feet,
the parabolic only departs from the spherical form at the edges by less than a twenty-one
thousandth part of an inch.
An image being formed by a mirror, it is next to be viewed with an eye-piece just as in [242]
the case of a refracting telescope. Here there is a little difficulty, for if the eye-piece be
applied in the direct line of the mirror, the interposition of the observer’s head will block out
the light. Several ways of overcoming this have been devised, but the plan most generally
followed is that which Newton adopted in the first reflecting telescope which was ever
constructed. With his own hands Newton made a small reflector, 6¼ inches long and having
an aperture of 1⅓ inches, with which he was able to study the phases of Venus and the
phenomena of Jupiter’s satellites. This precious little instrument is now one of the greatest
treasures in the collection of the Royal Society of London. The general design of this
telescope is shown in Fig. 21. The concave mirror is at the bottom of the telescope tube, and
normally it would form an image of a star near the end of the tube. A plane mirror, however,
of small size intercepts the rays and reflects them to the side, where they converge to a
focus. This image is observed and magnified by an eye-piece, as in the refractor. It is true [243]
that in this arrangement the plane mirror, or flat, renders the central part of the principal
mirror ineffective, but the loss of light is very much less than would be the case if the eye-
piece were placed in position to view the image centrally.
In the hands of Sir William Herschel the reflecting telescope was greatly developed. The
great telescope with which he enriched astronomical science had a mirror four feet in
diameter, and its tube was forty feet in length. With the view of utilizing the whole surface
of the mirror and dispensing with a second reflecting surface, the 4-foot mirror was placed at
a small angle to the bottom of the tube, so that its principal focal point was no longer at the
centre, but at the side of the tube.
In practice, however, it is found that the Herschelian form of reflector does not give the
best definition, and it is now very seldom seen.
Among other forms, the “Cassegrain” is perhaps the most important. During the last years
this form has received a great deal of attention, more especially in regard to its special
adaptability for photographic purposes.
In the Cassegrain telescope, the plane mirror of the Newtonian form is replaced by a
small convex mirror which is part of a hyperboloid of revolution, its axis and focal point
being coincident with those of the primary mirror. The rays are in this way reflected back to
the mirror at the bottom of the tube, and in order that the image may be seen, it is necessary
to cut out the middle part of the mirror to admit the eye-piece.
Although the small mirror must theoretically be hyperbolic, tolerable definition is [244]
obtained even if it be spherical or ellipsoidal, and its actual departure from these forms is so
slight as to be beyond detection by measurement, so that the figuring of such mirrors can
only be tested in the telescope. For photographic purposes this telescope has the very
important advantage that a short telescope is equivalent to a very long one of the Newtonian
form, or refracting telescope, so that the image of sun, moon, or planets formed at the focus
is very large in comparison with the size of the telescope. A modification of this form of
telescope, in which the small mirror is out of the path of the rays falling upon the larger one,
and no longer obstructing the central part, has been revived by Dr. Common, and has
become generally known as the “Skew Cassegrain.”
In reflecting telescopes the mirrors were formerly made of speculum metal (an alloy of
copper and tin), and the word speculum is even now commonly employed to signify a
telescopic mirror, although it is usual to make the mirror of glass, with the concave surface
silvered and highly polished.
One is frequently asked for an opinion as to which is the better form of telescope, the
reflector or refractor, and it is a question that one finds some little difficulty in answering.
On one point, however, all are agreed, namely, that the reflector has the advantage in regard
to its achromatism; it is indeed perfectly achromatic, while the so-called “achromatic”
refractor is at best only a compromise. For the rest, one can not do better than quote the
evidence of Dr. Isaac Roberts before the International Astrophotographic Congress: “The [245]
reflector requires the exercise of great care and patience, and a thorough personal interest on
the part of the observer using it. In the hands of such a person it yields excellent results, but
in other hands it might be a bad instrument. The reflector gives results at least equal, if not
superior, to those obtained with the refractor, if the observer be careful of the centring, and
of the polish of the mirror, and keeps the instrument in the highest state of efficiency; but
when intrusted to an ordinary assistant the conditions necessary for its best performance can
not be so well fulfilled as the same could be in the case of the refractor.” One great practical
advantage of the reflector is that there are fewer optical surfaces, so that a large reflector
may be obtained for the price of a much smaller refractor.
Eye-Pieces.—So far we have regarded the eye-piece of a telescope as a simple lens, but it
is evident that the spherical and chromatic aberration of such a lens will interfere with its
performance. For occasional use, however, even a simple lens is very serviceable if the [246]
object observed is brought to the centre of the field of view.
Compound eye-pieces are of various forms, each having certain advantages, the
desiderata being freedom from color and “flatness of field”—that is, stars in different parts
of the field are to be equally well in focus. Those most commonly employed are the
Ramsden and Huyghenian eye-pieces. The former consists of two plano-convex lenses of
equal focal lengths, having their curved faces toward each other, and being placed at a
distance apart equal to two-thirds of the focal length of either lens. Such an eye-piece can be
used as a magnifying-glass, and it is therefore placed outside the focal image formed by the
telescope with which it is used; on this account it is called a positive eye-piece. This kind of
eye-piece is not quite achromatic, but its flat field of view gives it a special value for many
purposes.
In the Huyghenian eye-piece there are again two lenses, made of the same kind of glass.
That which comes nearest to the eye has a focal length of only one-third that of the field
lens, and the distance between the two lenses is half the sum of the focal lengths. This form
of eye-piece can not be used as a magnifying-glass in the ordinary sense, and as the field
lens must be placed on the object-glass or mirror side of the focus, it is called a negative
eye-piece. The Huyghenian eye-piece is more achromatic than the Ramsden, and is more
widely used when it is only required to view the heavenly bodies. In instruments employed
for purposes of measurement, a positive eye-piece is essential in order that the spider [247]
threads may be placed at the focus of the telescope. The images formed by an astronomical
telescope are upside down, and neither of the eye-pieces described reinverts them.
A special form of eye-piece is therefore used when a telescope is employed for terrestrial
sight-seeing. The desired result is obtained by the introduction of additional lenses, but there
is a corresponding reduction of brightness.
For viewing the sun some device is necessary to reduce the quantity of light entering the
eye. To look at the sun directly, even with a small instrument, is very dangerous. The
arrangement usually adopted is a solar diagonal, in which the light is reflected from a piece
of plane glass before entering the eye-piece; the piece of glass is wedge-shaped, so that the
reflection from one surface only is effective; if the glass had parallel sides, the solar image
would be double.
Magnifying Power.—The magnifying power of a telescope depends upon the focal length
of the object-glass, or speculum, and that of the eye-piece. Optically, it is equal to the former
divided by the latter, so that the greater the focal length of an object-glass, or the smaller the
focal length of the eye-piece, the greater will be the magnifying power. In a given telescope,
the object-glass, or speculum, is a constant factor and the magnifying power can only be
varied by changing the eye-piece. The focal length of the Lick telescope, for example, is
about 600 inches; with an eye-piece which is equivalent to a lens of one-inch focus, the
magnifying power would be 600; with a lens of half an inch focus, it would be 1,200, and so [248]
on.
The magnifying power which can be effectively employed, however, depends upon a
great variety of circumstances. First, the clearness and steadiness of the air; then there is the
quality of the object-glass, or speculum, to be considered; and also the brightness of the
object to be observed, for when the object is very dim, its light will be spread out into
invisibility if too high a power be used.
In practice, good refractors perform well with powers ranging up to 80 or 100 for each
inch in the diameter of the object-glass. Thus, on sufficiently bright objects, a six-inch
telescope will work well with a power of about 500, while a 30-inch may be effectively
employed with powers between 2,000 and 3,000.
Illuminating Power.—It has already been pointed out that magnification is not the only
function of a telescope. As a matter of fact, the most powerful telescopes in the world fail to
produce the slightest increase in the apparent size of a star, for even if these objects be
brought to apparently a 3,000th part of their real distances, they are still too far away to have
any visible size. But although a star can not be magnified, it can be rendered more visible by
the telescope, for the reason that the object-glass collects a greater number of rays than the
naked eye. The pupil of the eye may be taken to have a diameter of one-fifth of an inch; a
lens one-inch in diameter will have twenty-five times the area of the pupil, and will
therefore collect twenty-five times the amount of light from a star; a two-inch lens will grasp [249]
one hundred times, and a 36-inch 32,400 times as much light as the pupil alone. Practically
all these rays collected by the object-glass, or speculum, of a telescope can not be brought
into the eye; some are lost through the imperfect transparency of the glass, or the imperfect
reflecting power of the speculum. Still, allowing a considerable percentage for loss, there is
an enormous concentration of light when a large telescope is employed.
The Altazimuth Mounting.—Having got a telescope, we have next to see how it can be
best supported, for unless it be a very small instrument indeed, it will be impossible to hold
it in the hand like a spy-glass. However a telescope be mounted, provision must be made for
turning it to any part of the sky whatsoever. Very frequently one of the axes on which the
instrument turns is vertical, while the other is horizontal. Such a stand for a telescope is
called an altazimuth mounting, for the reason that it permits the instrument to be moved in
altitude and in azimuth.
As a rule, one finds only small telescopes mounted in this manner. The objection to it is
that, as one continues to observe a heavenly body, two independent movements must be
given to the telescope in order to follow the body in its diurnal movement across the
heavens. If we commence observing a star newly risen, for example, the telescope must
trace a star-like path in order to follow it as it ascends into the heavens.
The Equatorial Telescope.—A much more convenient method of setting up a telescope is [250]
to mount it as an equatorial. The essential feature of this instrument is that one of the axes
of movement, instead of being vertical, is placed parallel to the axis of the earth. This is
called the polar axis, and, when the telescope is turned around such an axis, it traces out
curves in the sky which are identical with those described by the stars in their diurnal
motions. If, then, the telescope be directed to a star or other heavenly body, it can be made
to follow the object and keep it in view by a single movement. The axis at right angles to the
polar axis is called the declination axis, and is necessary in order that the telescope may be
moved toward and from the poles so that all the heavenly bodies above the horizon may be
included in its sweep.
One very important advantage of the equatorial is that, as only one motion is required to
keep a star in view, so long as it is above the horizon, the necessary movement may be
furnished by clockwork. A good equatorial is accordingly provided with a driving-clock,
which is regulated so that it would drive the telescope through a whole revolution once a
day. Unlike an ordinary clock, the driving-clock of a telescope is regulated by a governor, in
order that the instrument may have a continuous and not a jerky movement.
The telescope is also provided with clamps and fine adjustments, one each in R. A. and
declination, in order that it may be under the control of the observer. It is evident that the
telescope must be capable of moving independently of the driving-gear, so that it may first [251]
be placed in the desired direction; when this is accomplished, the R. A. clamp is used to put
the telescope in gear with the clock. The declination clamp is then made to fix the telescope
firmly to the declination axis. Fine adjustments in both directions are necessary, because it is
impossible to sight a large instrument with such precision as to bring an object exactly to the
centre of the field of view.
Some of the driving-clocks fitted to equatorials are very elaborate. As clocks regulated by
governors are not such reliable timekeepers as those regulated by pendulums, arrangements
are made by which the accuracy of a pendulum can be electrically communicated to a
governor clock. One of the best forms of electrically controlled clocks is that devised by Sir
Howard Grubb.
Another important feature of an equatorial is that it can be provided with circles which
enable the telescope to be pointed to any desired object of known right ascension and
declination. One of these is the declination circle, attached to the declination axis and read
by a vernier fixed to the sleeve in which the axis turns; this is adjusted so as to read 0° when
the telescope points to any part of the celestial equator, and 90° when it is directed to the
pole. The other circle is attached to the polar axis, and determines the position of the
telescope with regard to the meridian; this is called the hour circle, and is divided into
twenty-four hours. When the telescope is on the meridian, the hour circle reads zero, so that
its reading in any other position gives the hour angle of the telescope. Having given the right [252]
ascension and declination of a heavenly body which it is desired to observe, the telescope is
turned until the declination circle reads the proper angle, and the hour circle indicates the
hour angle which is calculated for the particular moment of pointing the telescope. [The
hour angle is the difference between the right ascension of the object and the sidereal time
of observation.] In this way it is easy to find objects of known position which are invisible
to the naked eye, and one can even pick up the planets and brighter stars in full sunshine.
Conversely, one can determine from the circles the right ascension and declination of any
object under observation, but for various reasons only approximate results can be obtained
in this way. The chief use of the circles on an equatorial is therefore to provide a means of
pointing the telescope.
Telescopes of four inches aperture and upward are usually provided with a smaller
companion called a finder. This has a larger field of view than the main telescope, so that
objects which are of sufficient brightness can readily be picked up and brought to the centre
of the finder, the adjustments being such that the object is then also at the centre of the field
of the large telescope.
There are, of course, many practical details connected with the working of an equatorial
with which space does not permit us to deal. It may be remarked, however, that the
adjustment of the polar axis is very simply performed by first inclining it at an angle
approximately equal to the latitude of the place where it is set up, and setting it as nearly as [253]
possible in the meridian by means of a compass or by observations of the sun at noon. The
final adjustment is then made by a series of observations of stars of known position.
Some of the World’s Great Telescopes.—Thanks to the wide public interest taken in
astronomical matters, a large number of powerful telescopes have been set up in various
parts of the world. To the British Islands belongs the honor of possessing the largest
telescope in the world. This is the giant reflector erected by Lord Rosse, in 1842, at
Parsonstown, the mirror being six feet in diameter, and the focal length sixty feet. Many
very valuable observations were made with this instrument in its early days, but of late years
it seems to have fallen into disuse. One reason may be that the mounting is not of the most
convenient form, and makes the telescope unsuitable for photographic work.
Coming next in point of size to the Rosse telescope is the reflector erected at Ealing by
Dr. A. A. Common. The glass mirror of this telescope is five feet in diameter, five inches
thick, and weighs more than half a ton. Dr. Common aimed specially at constructing the
largest possible telescope which could be equatorially mounted and provided with a driving-
clock, and he was only limited to an aperture of five feet by the impossibility of obtaining a
glass disk of larger size. He has attained such great skill in this work that he was able to
produce a perfect mirror five feet in diameter in three months’ time, although no less than [254]
410,000 strokes of the polishing machine were required.
The telescope is of the Newtonian form, and the mounting is quite unique. The polar axis
consists of an iron cylinder, made up of boiler plate, seven feet eight inches in diameter, and
about fifteen feet long. From the top of the cylinder, near its outer edge, two horns, each six
feet long, project outward, and the tube of the telescope swings on trunnions attached to the
ends of the horns. The main part of the telescope tube is square, built up of steel angle iron,
and carries the mirror at its lower end; the upper part of the tube, which carries the “flat” and
eye-piece, is round, and of tinned steel strengthened by a skeleton framework.
It is evident that such an enormous instrument as this can not be made to travel by
clockwork with the necessary uniformity without some very efficient arrangement for
reducing friction. Dr. Common’s plan—and it is here that his instrument is unlike others—is
to make the hollow polar axis watertight, and to fix it in a tank of water. At the bottom of the
polar axis is a ball and socket joint to keep it in position, and at the top is another bearing,
which can be adjusted so that the polar axis lies truly in the meridian. It was found necessary
to introduce nine tons of iron into the bottom of the hollow polar axis in order to sink it to
the proper angle, and to put sufficient weight on the bearings to give stability to the
instrument. In this way the great mass is brought into the region of manageability, and the
driving-clock, which is driven by a weight of one and a half tons, is able to do its work [255]
efficiently. Such, in general outline, is this wonderful telescope, which, although not so large
as Lord Rosse’s famous instrument, is undoubtedly its superior in light-grasping power and
general utility, and more especially in its adaptability for photographing the heavens.
Among other large reflecting telescopes now in use are the 4-foot reflectors at Melbourne
and Paris, and the 3-foot reflectors at South Kensington and the Lick Observatory,
California.
The largest refracting telescope yet constructed is one of forty inches aperture for the
Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago. It is interesting to note here that Professor
Keeler, in his report as an expert upon the performance of the object-glass, considers that
there is “evidence for the first time that we are approaching the limit of size in the
construction of great objectives.” Unlike a mirror, a lens can be supported only upon its
circumference, and it is the bending by its own weight that proves detrimental to its defining
power. If the lens be made thicker with a view of overcoming this defect, the absorption of
light by the glass increases, so that there is in the end no special gain by increasing the size.
The length of the Yerkes telescope is 62 feet, and is provided with all accessories
pertaining to astrophysical research. The world-renowed Lick Telescope is of thirty-six
inches aperture. The story of the foundation of this monster instrument is not much less
wonderful than the telescope itself. Brought up in poor circumstances, with few [256]
opportunities for intellectual development, James Lick, nevertheless, amassed a fortune in
business, and having few relations, he was anxious to dispose of his wealth in such a way as
to bring him that fame which he had failed to achieve in other directions. Although it is very
probable that he had never looked through a telescope in his life, the idea of a large
telescope had taken a very firm hold upon his mind, and, thanks to the influence of his
advisers, it was definitely announced in 1873 that Mr. Lick’s bid for immortality was to take
this form. Several sites were examined by experts, and finally Mount Hamilton, California,
4,200 feet above sea-level, was selected. An excellent road, twenty-six miles in length, made
at the cost of the county authorities, connects the observatory with the nearest town, San
José, thirteen miles distant.
Owing to various delays, operations were not commenced until 1880, and five years were
consumed in clearing away 72,000 tons of rocks and in erecting the buildings.
Mr. Lick had stipulated for the erection of “a telescope superior to and more powerful
than any telescope yet made,” and Messrs. Alvan Clark & Co. contracted to supply a lens of
thirty-six inches aperture for the sum of $50,000. It turned out, however, that it was much
easier to make such a contract than to fulfil it. To produce large disks of optically perfect
glass, even in the rough, requires the greatest possible skill and patience, and this part of the
work was undertaken by Feil & Co. of Paris. The flint glass disk was safely delivered in [257]
America in 1882, but the crown disk was cracked in packing. The elder Feil having retired
from business, the duty of providing a new block of crown glass devolved upon his sons,
who, after two years spent in vain attempts, ended in bankruptcy, and it was only through
the elder Feil again resuming business that the much-required disk was finally completed in
1885. After the lapse of another year, the rough disks were fashioned, in the workshops of
the Clarks, into the most marvelous of telescopic lenses.
The mounting of the object-glass is worthy of the occasion. The tube is no less than
thirty-seven feet long, and four feet in diameter in the middle part. An iron pier, thirty-eight
feet high, beneath which lie the remains of Mr. Lick, supports the equatorial head, and a
winding staircase enables the observer to reach the setting circles. Inside the hollow pier is
the powerful driving-clock which turns the telescope to follow the heavenly bodies in their
apparent movements. Finders of six, four, and three inches diameter, rods for the
manipulation of the instrument, and all necessary accessories, complete what must long
remain one of the most perfect instruments at the service of astronomical science. The
$200,000 expended upon it have already been amply justified by the work accomplished,
while Mr. Lick’s dream of immortality has become a reality.
The following list indicates some of the large refractors now doing active service:
Aperture Observatory [258]
36 inch [Lick] California.
30 ” Pulkowa, Russia.
30 ” [Bischoffeim] Nice.
28 ” Greenwich.
27 ” Vienna.
26 ” Washington.
25 ” [Newall] Cambridge.
24 ” [Lowell] Mexico.
23 ” Princeton, New Jersey.
It is right to add, however, that opinion is still greatly divided as to whether these
telescopes of large aperture really repay the expense and labor involved in their erection and
use. On the very rare occasion when the “seeing” is practically perfect—which occurs
perhaps only a few hours in a year—it is probable that the superiority of a large telescope is
very marked, but under average conditions there seems to be little advantage over
instruments of moderate size for many classes of observations.
Certain it is that a great deal of valuable work is done with comparatively small
telescopes, ranging from six to fifteen inches aperture, and this in all departments of
astronomical research. Hence, some of the most active observatories do not figure in the
above list; among them may be mentioned the observatories of Harvard College, Potsdam,
Paris, Heidelberg, Cape of Good Hope, Edinburgh, South Kensington, Stonyhurst College,
and the observatory of Dr. Isaac Roberts at Crowborough, England.
Housing of Equatorials.—The building which accommodates an equatorial telescope
must evidently be designed to admit of giving a clear opening to any part of the sky. Usually
this is accomplished by making the roof, or dome, with a circular base, provided with [259]
wheels, which run on rails. It is then only necessary to open a narrow portion of the dome,
extending from top to base, and to turn the dome until this aperture is in the required
direction. One of the most elaborate domes now in existence is that built by M. Eiffel for the
great refractor of the Nice Observatory. The lower part of the building is in the form of a
square, having a side of about eighty-seven feet and a height of about thirty feet. The dome
itself is seventy-four feet in diameter, and the moving parts alone weigh ninety-five tons.
There are two shutters, each a little wider than half the possible opening; these run on
short rails, and are moved simultaneously by means of an endless rope. The whole of the
dome is built up of steel angle iron, covered with very thin sheet steel. In order to facilitate
the manipulation of the dome, its great weight is buoyed up by means of a float attached to
its base and immersed in a circular tank of water of a little greater size than the base of the
dome. If any mishap occurs with this gigantic tank, the dome rests on wheels which run on a
circular rail, so that the work need not be interrupted. The whole arrangement is very easily
turned with the aid of a winch by one man when the dome is floating, but when resting on
the wheels several men are required at the winch.
This brief description will serve to illustrate some of the problems which confront the
possessor of a very large telescope. For smaller instruments, the observatories follow pretty
nearly the same plan, except that it is unnecessary to provide an arrangement for floating the [260]
dome.
The observatory which shelters a reflecting telescope need not differ very greatly from
one which contains a refractor. If the instrument be a Newtonian, it is generally convenient
to sink the polar axis below the level of the floor in order that the observer may not be at too
great a height from the ground, and in that case, the dome, or its equivalent, is all that is
necessary. For his five-foot reflector, Dr. Common designed an observatory which is not of
the ordinary form, but gives the necessary opening partly by means of large shutters and
partly by a revolution of the whole house. It is not every one who is able to lay out $40,000
on such a dome as that erected at Nice by M. Bischoffeim.
The varying position of the eye end of a telescope, when it is turned to different parts of
the sky, makes it necessary to provide comfortable and safe seating accommodation for the
observer, more especially when the telescope is a very large one. In the case of the Yerkes
telescope, the eye-piece is thirty feet higher when observing near the horizon than when
observing near the zenith, and the observer must necessarily follow the telescope. The most
convenient arrangement in such a case is to raise or lower the floor of the observatory as
occasion demands. The floor of the Yerkes Observatory is seventy-five feet in diameter, and
by means of electric motors it can be given a vertical motion of twenty-two feet. A similar
arrangement was provided for the Lick telescope from the designs of Sir Howard Grubb. [261]
With smaller instruments, observing ladders and adjustable chairs of various forms are
employed.
The Equatorial Coudé.—A form of equatorial telescope which has possibly a great future
before it is one introduced at Paris under the name of the equatorial coudé, or elbowed
telescope. Its practical advantage is that the observer remains in a constant and comfortable
position, so that revolving domes and elevating floors, or other arrangements serving similar
purposes, are no longer necessary. The telescope tube is of two parts of nearly equal length,
and what is ordinarily the lower half of the tube forms part of the polar axis, while the other
half is attached to it at right angles. At the point of intersection of the two halves of the tube
is a plane mirror, and there is another mirror in front of the object-glass. If the latter mirror
were removed, such a telescope would only enable the observer to see objects lying along
the celestial equator, but by its means objects in all parts of the heavens can be brought
within range to an observer gazing down the hollow polar axis. The largest instrument is
that at the Paris Observatory, which has an object-glass 23½ inches in diameter for visual
observations, and another of the same size for photographic purposes.
Fixed Telescopes.—There is still another method of using a telescope. The telescope itself
may be fixed, and the light of the heavenly bodies may be reflected into it by means of a
mirror which is made to revolve so as to keep pace with their movements. Foucault devised
an instrument called the siderostat for this purpose, and although it is not largely employed [262]
for telescopic observations, it is very widely utilized for spectroscopic work, where the
spectroscope is of a kind not readily attached to a telescope.
Another instrument used for the same purpose has recently been brought forward under
the name of the cœlostat. This is simply a mirror which is made to turn on a polar axis in its
own plane, and since a reflected ray of light moves through twice the angle that the
reflecting surface turns through, the mirror is made to revolve at the rate of one revolution in
two days. As the name indicates, the whole heavens appear stationary in such an instrument,
whereas in a siderostat only one star at a time appears at rest, while its neighbors slowly
revolve round it.
Photographic Telescopes.—The application of photography to the study of the heavenly
bodies marks one of the greatest advances of the present century. The instruments which are
employed for this purpose range from the ordinary tourist camera to the largest telescope.
Unlike a person sitting for a portrait, the heavenly bodies can not be made to stand still for
the purpose, and as instantaneous photographs can only be obtained in the case of the sun
and moon, it is usually necessary to make the camera follow the stars very exactly during
the time of exposure in order that the images may fall on precisely the same parts of the
photographic plate.
Some guiding arrangement is, therefore, essential, and generally the photographic camera
or telescope is attached to an ordinary equatorial which is driven by clockwork, or very [263]
carefully by hand if the camera be a small one. In the guiding telescope are two spider-
threads at right angles to each other, and it is by constantly keeping the image of a star at the
intersection of these “wires” that the operator ensures the images remaining in a constant
position upon the sensitive plate.
An ordinary portrait camera, in the hands of a skilled observer, yields very beautiful
pictures, but they are naturally on a small scale. The field of view of such an instrument is so
large that a whole constellation may be photographed with a single exposure.
Portrait lenses of six inches aperture in the hands of Dr. Max Wolf and Professor Barnard
have given magnificent delineations of the Milky Way, and of the extremely faint
nebulosities which are to be found in many parts of the heavens.
For many purposes, however, telescopes of greater power are required, and here it may be
remarked that the distance between the images of any two adjacent stars will vary in direct
proportion to the focal length of the telescope. In the same way the size of the image of a
planet, the moon, or a comet, increases as the focal length of the objective is increased.
Refracting telescopes which are employed for photography require object-glasses which
are specially “corrected” for the photographic rays. White light is compounded of light of all
colors, but it is the blue and violet constituents which are effective in producing
photographic action on an ordinary sensitive plate. Now, an object-glass which is intended [264]
for visual purposes is made to focus at the same point as many as possible of the rays which
are most effective to the human eye, that is the green, yellow, and red, and usually there is a
blue or purple halo round the images of the brighter objects, which is, however, too feeble as
a rule to interfere with visual observations. This blue halo will evidently result in defective
definition if the lens be employed for photography. By putting the plate at the point where
the blue rays are most nearly focused, a better image is obtained; but for really good work a
photographic object-glass must be so designed that all the blue and violet rays are brought to
one and the same focus. Such a lens will consequently be a very poor one for visual
observations.
The new “photo telescopic” object-glass now manufactured by Messrs. Cooke appears to
be full of promise. In this lens all the colors of the spectrum are brought to almost exactly
the same focal point, so that it serves equally well for photographic or visual purposes.
This difficulty in regard to achromatism does not exist in the case of the reflecting
telescope, since rays of light of every color are reflected at precisely the same angles. For
this reason reflectors, when properly managed, give the best photographic results. Dr. Isaac
Roberts and Dr. Common are especially identified with the application of the reflecting
telescope for celestial photography. The instrument employed by the former consists of a
20-inch reflector and a 7-inch guiding telescope of the refracting form. The two telescopes [265]
are mounted on the extreme ends of the declination axis of an equatorial.
Dr. Common does not employ a guiding telescope at all. The photographic plate which he
places at the focus of the reflector is smaller than the field of view, so that by means of an
eye-piece fitted with a cross wire at the side of the dark slide, he is able to watch a star near
the edge of the field. Both eye-piece and dark slide are attached to a frame which can be
controlled by two screws at right angles to each other. If the guiding star leaves the cross
wire through errors in driving, or other causes, the eye-piece and dark slide are bodily
moved after it by means of the adjusting screws. This method not only has the advantage of
saving the cost of a guiding telescope, but reduces the effects of vibration consequent upon
the correction of errors by moving the whole telescope.
For photographing the sun a special instrument called a photoheliograph is usually
employed. This differs only from an ordinary photographic telescope in being provided with
a secondary magnifier, by which means the focal image formed by the object-glass is
amplified before falling upon the photographic plate. On a bright, clear day pictures of the
sun eight inches in diameter can be taken with an exposure of about 1/500th of a second, and
such a photograph will frequently record more facts as to the state of the solar surface than a
whole day’s observation. Lenses or mirrors of very long focus are also occasionally
employed in solar photography, and in this way a large image is obtained without the use of [266]
a secondary magnifier.
Photographs of the moon and planets may be taken either with or without a secondary
magnifier, but in either case the exposures are longer than for the sun.
Finally, it may be added that the sensitive plates and processes used in astronomical
photography do not differ from those employed by ordinary photographers.
FOOTNOTES:
[22] The focal length of a lens is the distance from its centre at which an image of a
very distant object, such as the sun, is formed.
METEORS.—Sir Robert S. Ball
O ur present knowledge as to the natural history of the shooting stars has been mainly
acquired during the last hundred years. The first important step in the comprehension
of these bodies was to recognize that the brilliant flash of light was caused by some object
which came from without and plunged into our air. This was known at the end of the
Eighteenth Century, largely by the labors of the philosopher Chladni in 1794.
Could an ordinary shooting star tell us its actual history, the narrative would run
somewhat as follows:
“I was a small bit of material, chiefly, if not entirely, composed of substances which are
formed from the same chemical elements as those you find on the earth. Not improbably I
may have had some iron in my constitution, and also sodium and carbon, to mention only a
few of the most familiar elements. I only weighed an ounce or two, perhaps more, perhaps
less—but you could probably have held me in your closed hand, or put me into your [267]
waistcoat pocket. You would have described me as a sort of small stone, yet I think you
would have added that I was very unlike the ordinary stones with which you were familiar. I
have led a life of the most extraordinary activity; I have never known what it was to stay
still; I have been ever on the move. Through the solitudes of space I have dashed along with
a speed which you can hardly conceive. Compare my ordinary motion with your most rapid
railway trains; my journey will be done ere the best locomotive ever built could have drawn
the train out of the station. Pit me against your rifle bullets, against the shots from your one-
hundred-ton guns; before the missile from the mightiest piece of ordnance ever fired shall
have gone ten yards I have gone 1,000 yards. I do not assert that my speed has been
invariable—sometimes it has been faster, sometimes it has been slower; but I have generally
done my million miles a day at the very least. Such has been my career, not for hours or
days, but for years and for centuries, probably for untold ages. And the grand catastrophe in
which I vanished has been befitting to a life of such transcendent excitement and activity; I
have perished instantly, and in a streak of splendor. In the course of my immemorial
wanderings I have occasionally passed near some of the great bodies in the heavens; I have
also not improbably in former years hurried by that globe on which you live. On those
occasions you never saw me, you never could have seen me, not even if you had used the
mightiest telescope that has ever been directed to the heavens. But too close an approach to [268]
your globe was at last the occasion of my fall. You must remember that you live on the earth
buried beneath a great ocean of air. Viewed from outside space, your earth is seen to be a
great ball, everywhere swathed with this thick coating of air. Beyond the appreciable limits
of the air stretches the open space, and there it is that my prodigious journeys have been
performed. Out there we have a freedom to move of which you who live in a dense
atmosphere have no conception. Whenever you attempt to produce rapid motion on the
earth, the resistance of your air largely detracts from the velocity that would be otherwise
attainable. Your quick trains are impeded by air, your artillery ranges are shortened by it.
Movements like mine would be impossible in air like yours.
“And this air it is which has ultimately compassed my destruction. So long as I merely
passed near your earth, but kept clear of that deadly net which you have spread, in the shape
of your atmosphere, to entrap the shooting stars, all went well with me. I felt the ponderous
mass of the earth, and I swerved a little in compliance with its attraction; but my supreme
velocity preserved me, and I hurried past unscathed. I had many narrow escapes from
capture during the lapse of those countless ages in which I have been wandering through
space. But at last I approached once too often to the earth. On this fatal occasion my course
led me to graze your globe so closely that I could not get by without traversing the higher
parts of the atmosphere. Accordingly, a frightful catastrophe immediately occurred. Not to [269]
you; it did you no harm; indeed, quite the contrary. My dissolution gave you a pleasing and
instructive exhibition. It was then, for the first time, that you were permitted to see me, and
you called me a shooting star or a meteor.
“When from the freedom of open space I darted into the atmosphere, I rubbed past every
particle of air which I touched in my impetuous flight, and in doing so I experienced the
usual consequence of friction—I was warmed by the operation.
“You can readily comprehend the immense quantity of heat that will have been produced
ere friction could deprive me of a speed of twenty miles a second. That heat not merely
warmed me, but I rapidly became red-hot, white-hot, then I melted, even though composed
of materials of a most refractory kind. Still friction had much more to do, and it actually
drove me off into vapor, and I vanished. You, standing on your earth many miles below,
never saw me—never could have seen me—until this supreme moment, when, glowing with
an instantaneous fervor, I for a brief second became visible.
“Nature knows no annihilation, and though I had been driven off into vapor and the trial
by fire had scattered and dispersed me, yet in the lofty heights of the atmosphere those
vapors cooled and condensed. They did not, they never could again reunite and reproduce
my pristine structure. Here and there in wide diffusion I repassed from the vaporous to the
solid form, and in this state I wore the appearance of a streak of minute granules distributed
all along the highway I had followed. These granules gradually subsided through the air to [270]
the earth. On Alpine snows, far removed from the haunts of men and from contamination of
chimneys, minute particles have been gathered, many of which have unquestionably been
derived from the scattered remains of shooting stars. Into the sea similar particles are
forever falling, and they have been subsequently dredged up from profound depths, having
subsided through an ocean of water after sinking through an ocean of air.”
Those splendid shooting stars which are often called fire-balls move in every direction.
They come from the east, and from the west, from the north, and from the south. There is no
hour of the night at which they have not occasionally been seen. Even in daylight it has
happened not once or twice, but on several occasions, that a brilliant meteor has forced itself
upon our astonished notice. They generally first make their appearance at a height which is
between fifty and one hundred miles above the ground. They hurry down their inclined path,
but generally become extinguished while still at least twenty miles aloft. In their more
ambitious flights meteors have been known to span a kingdom. Nor are even greater strides
unrecorded. The length of a continent may be compared with the track of that terrific meteor
of 5th September, 1868, which broke into visibility at an appalling height above the Black
Sea, and had not expended its stupendous energy until it passed over the smiling vineyards
of France.
Great fire-balls are much more numerous than any one would suppose who had not paid [271]
attention to the subject. Nor need this be a matter for surprise if it be remembered that when
a fire-ball does arrive it is only by a favorable combination of circumstances that any
particular individual is privileged to witness the exhibition. As a random example of the
yearly crop of fire-balls, I take from the middle of 1877 to the middle of 1878. A list of the
fire-balls noticed during this period will be found in that store-house of valuable
information, the Reports of the British Association. In the year referred to I see that eighty-
six great fire-balls have been recorded. They have appeared in various localities, both in the
old hemisphere and in the new. The most arduous observer may think himself fortunate if he
has even seen one of them.
As to the brilliant light from some of these great fire-balls, there are numerous statements.
We are not infrequently told that even the beams of the full moon are ineffectual in
comparison with the blaze of the meteor; and we find a high authority asserting that one of
these bodies displayed a flash as “blinding as the sun.” On the 29th July, 1878, a fire-ball
was seen which created so splendid an illumination that “the smallest objects were visible at
Manchester.”
Fortunate, indeed, would the astronomer have been who, guided by some miraculous
prescience, had gone to the ancient city of York on the evening of the 23d of February, 1879,
and on the tower of the glorious minster spent the night in observation of the heavens. It
would have been his privilege to witness a majestic meteor under circumstances of almost [272]
unique magnificence.
It was at seven minutes before three that such few stragglers as the streets of York still
contained saw a pear-shaped ball of fire traveling across the sky. It drenched the ancient city
with a flood of light. The superb front of the minster never before glowed with a more
romantic illumination. The unwonted brilliancy streamed through every aperture in every
window in the city; every wakeful eye was instantly on the alert; every light sleeper started
up suddenly to know what was the matter. Even those whom the blaze of midnight light had
failed to awaken were only permitted to protract their slumbers for another minute and a
half—only until an awful crash, like a mighty peal of thunder, burst over the town, shaking
the doors, the windows, and even the houses themselves. The whole city was thus alarmed.
Every one started at the noise. But that noise was not a clap of thunder. Nor was it produced
by an earthquake. It was merely the explosion of the fire-ball which flung itself against the
atmosphere after its immeasurable voyage through space.
Perhaps the most remarkable instance of the explosion of a meteor is recorded in the case
of the great fire-ball so widely observed in America on the 21st of December, 1876. The
movements of this superb object have been carefully studied by Professor H. A. Newton and
Professor D. Kirkwood. For the prodigious span of a thousand miles this meteor tore over
the American continent with a speed of some ten or fifteen miles a second. It first appeared [273]
over Kansas at a height of seventy-five miles. Thence it glided over the Mississippi, over the
Missouri; it passed to the south of Lake Michigan; it made a short voyage over Lake Erie,
and it can not have been very far from the Falls of Niagara, when by becoming invisible all
further traces of its movements were lost. While passing a point midway between Chicago
and St. Louis a frightful explosion shivered the meteor into a cluster of brilliant balls of fire,
which seemed to chase each other across the sky. This cluster must have been about forty
miles long and five miles wide. The detonation by which the explosion was accompanied
was a specially notable incident of this meteor. It was not only heard with terrific intensity in
the neighborhood, but the volume of sound was borne to great distances.
The glory of a meteor is often so evanescent that we just get a glimpse and it is gone. The
sky resumes its ordinary aspect; the familiar stars are there, and even the very situation of
the brilliant streak has become unrecognizable. But this is not always so; it sometimes
happens that the brief career of the meteor leaves a notable trace behind it, so that for
seconds and for minutes the sky is diversified by an unwonted spectacle. The path of the
meteor leaves a stain of pearly light on the sky to mark the highway pursued by our celestial
visitor.
In its fearful career the meteor is often rent to fragments, reduced to dust, dissolved into
vapor. The glowing atoms of the wreck lie strewn along the path, just as the ghastly
remnants of Napoleon’s mighty army limned out the awful retreat from Moscow. [274]
Among the constellations there is a fine sickle-shaped group, forming a part of Leo, one
of the signs of the Zodiac. That part of the sky defined by Leo is curiously related to the
meteors of the 12th to the 14th of November. Every shooting star truly belonging to that [280]
great shower pursued a track across the heavens, the direction of which, if carried back far
enough, was always found to pierce through the sickle of Leo. Indeed, the paths of all the
meteors formed a set of rays spreading away from that one point in the constellation. An
invariable characteristic of this particular shower is its connection with the constellation of
Leo, hence the appropriateness of the name of Leonids.
It must be borne in mind that we can never see the meteors until the fatal moment when
they dive into our atmosphere. We could, indeed, at any time point our telescope to the spot
in the heavens where we know the great shoal must certainly be located. But the mightiest
telescope in the world does not disclose the shoal to us. In fact, we would never have seen
these Leonids at all, we would never have become conscious that such a shoal of meteors
existed, had it not been for a certain circumstance, which, for want of a better expression, I
must speak of as accidental.
Our globe pursues a certain definite track around the sun. Year after year, with
undeviating regularity, the earth performs the stages of its journey. If it reaches certain
points on the 1st of January and the 12th of October in one year, then it reaches the same
points on the 1st of January and the 12th of October respectively on next year, or any other
year.
The Leonids and the earth have each a certain track. It might of course have happened
that one of these tracks lay quite outside or quite inside the other. In the case of the Leonids, [281]
it has chanced that their orbit does intersect the orbit of the earth, and to this circumstance
we are indebted for the glorious displays every thirty-three years.
There are many other periodic showers of shooting stars besides those notable Leonids.
None of the other showers, however, possess the same importance as the Leonids, nor do
they ever manifest celestial splendor comparable with that of those of the 13th of November.
The Perseids, for example, which appear from the 9th to the 11th of August, are tolerably
constant in their appearance, but have little spectacular interest. There is also another
shower called the Andromedes, which occurs on the 27th of November. It has produced
certain displays, one of the most remarkable of which took place in 1872. The meteors were
excessively numerous on that occasion, but they were so short in their paths, and so
insignificant as to brilliance, that the spectacle, though of great scientific interest, could not
be compared as to splendor with that of the Leonids in 1866.
There are also several other showers which appear with greater or less regularity. Each of
these possesses two distinct characteristics by which its meteors can be identified. One of
these characters is the date on which the shower appears. The other is the constellation or
point on the heavens from which all the meteors appear to radiate. Thus when we speak of
the Andromedes on the 27th of November, we express that the shower on the 27th
November comes from the part of the heavens marked by the constellation of Andromeda.
A striking discovery has been made which points to a curious connection between comets [282]
and shooting stars. It has been found that the track followed by a great shower of meteors is
often identical with the track pursued by a comet. It is wholly beyond the province of mere
chance that an orbit such as that of the Leonids should, both as to its size and its position in
space, be likewise that of a comet, unless the comet and the meteor swarm were objects
related to each other.
The great sun guides our world through its long annual journey. The mighty mass of the
earth yields compliance to the potent sway of the ruler of our system. But the sun does not
merely exercise a control over the vast planets which circulate around him. The supreme
law of gravitation constrains the veriest mote that ever floated in a sunbeam, with the same
unremitting care that it does the mightiest of planets. Thus it is that each little meteor is
guided in its journeys for untold ages. Each of these little objects hurries along, deflected at
every moment, to follow its beautifully curved path by the incessant attraction of the sun. At
last, however, the fatal plunge is taken. The long wanderings of the meteor have come to an
end and it vanishes in a streak of splendor.
COMETS.—Sir John Herschel
T he extraordinary aspect of comets, their rapid and seemingly irregular motions, the
unexpected manner in which they often burst upon us, and the imposing magnitudes
which they occasionally assume, have in all ages rendered them objects of astonishment, not [283]
unmixed with superstitious dread to the uninstructed, and an enigma to those most
conversant with the wonders of creation and the operations of natural causes. Even now, that
we have ceased to regard their movements as irregular, or as governed by other laws than
those which retain the planets in their orbits, their intimate nature, and the offices they
perform in the economy of our system, are as much unknown as ever. No distinct and
satisfactory account has yet been rendered of those immensely voluminous appendages
which they bear about with them, and which are known by the name of their tails (though
improperly, since they often precede them in their motions), any more than of several other
singularities which they present.
The number of comets which have been astronomically observed, or of which notices
have been recorded in history, is very great, amounting to several hundreds, and when we
consider that in the earlier ages of astronomy, and indeed in more recent times, before the
invention of the telescope, only large and conspicuous ones were noticed; and that, since
due attention has been paid to the subject, scarcely a year has passed without the observation
of one or two of these bodies, and that sometimes two and even three have appeared at once;
it will be easily supposed that their actual number must be at least many thousands.
Multitudes, indeed, must escape all observation, by reason of their paths traversing only that
part of the heavens which is above the horizon in the daytime. Comets so circumstanced can [284]
only become visible by the rare coincidence of a total eclipse of the sun—a coincidence
which happened, as related by Seneca, sixty-two years before Christ, when a large comet
was actually observed very near the sun. Several, however, stand on record as having been
bright enough to be seen with the naked eye in the daytime, even at noon and in bright
sunshine. Such were the comets of 1402, 1532 and 1843, and that of 43 b. c. which appeared
during the games celebrated by Augustus in honor of Venus shortly after the death of Cæsar,
and which the flattery of poets declared to be the soul of that hero taking its place among the
divinities.
Comets consist for the most part of a large and more or less splendid but ill-defined
nebulous mass of light called the head, which is usually much brighter toward its centre, and
offers the appearance of a vivid nucleus, like a star or planet. From the head, and in a
direction opposite to that in which the sun is situated from the comet, appear to diverge two
streams of light, which grow broader and more diffused at a distance from the head, and
which most commonly close in and unite at a little distance behind it, but sometimes
continue distinct for a great part of their course; producing an effect like that of the trains
left by some bright meteors, or like the diverging fire of a sky-rocket (only without sparks or
perceptible motion). This is the tail. This magnificent appendage attains occasionally an
immense apparent length. Aristotle relates of the tail of the comet of 371 b. c., that it
occupied a third of the hemisphere, or 60°; that of a. d. 1618 is stated to have been attended [285]
by a train no less than 104° in length. The comet of 1680, the most celebrated of modern
times, and on many accounts the most remarkable of all, with a head not exceeding in
brightness a star of the second magnitude, covered with its tail an extent of more than 70° of
the heavens, or, as some accounts state, 90°; that of the comet of 1769 extended 97°, and
that of the comet of 1843 was estimated at about 65° when longest.
The tail is, however, by no means an invariable appendage of comets. Many of the
brightest have been observed to have short and feeble tails, and a few great comets have
been entirely without them. Those of 1585 and 1763 offered no vestige of a tail; and Cassini
describes the comets of 1665 and 1682 as being as round and as well defined as Jupiter. On
the other hand, instances are not wanting of comets furnished with many tails or streams of
diverging light. That of 1744 had no less than six, spread out like an immense fan, extending
to a distance of nearly 30° in length. The small comet of 1823 had two, making an angle of
about 160°, the brighter turned as usual from the sun, the fainter toward it, or nearly so. The
tails of comets, too, are often somewhat curved, bending, in general, toward the region
which the comet has left, as if moving somewhat more slowly, or as if resisted in their
course.
The smaller comets, such as are visible only in telescopes, or with difficulty by the naked
eye, and which are by far the most numerous, offer very frequently no appearance of a tail,
and appear only as round or somewhat oval vaporous masses, more dense toward the centre, [286]
where, however, they appear to have no distinct nucleus, or anything which seems entitled
to be considered as a solid body. This was shown in a very remarkable manner in the case of
the comet discovered by Miss Mitchell in 1847, which on the 5th of October in that year
passed centrally over a star of the fifth magnitude: so centrally that with a magnifying power
of 100 it was impossible to determine in which direction the extent of the nebulosity was
greatest. The star’s light seemed in no degree enfeebled; yet such a star would be completely
obliterated by a moderate fog, extending only a few yards from the surface of the earth. And
since it is an observed fact that even those larger comets which have presented the
appearance of a nucleus have yet exhibited no phases, though we can not doubt that they
shine by the reflected solar light, it follows that even these can only be regarded as great
masses of thin vapor, susceptible of being penetrated through their whole substance by the
sun-beams, and reflecting them alike from their interior parts and from their surfaces. Nor
will any one regard this explanation as forced, or feel disposed to resort to a phosphorescent
quality in the comet itself, to account for the phenomena in question, when we consider the
enormous magnitude of the space thus illuminated, and the extremely small mass which
there is ground to attribute to these bodies. It will then be evident that the most unsubstantial
clouds which float in the highest regions of our atmosphere, and seem at sunset to be
drenched in light, and to glow throughout their whole depth as if in actual ignition, without [287]
any shadow or dark side, must be looked upon as dense and massive bodies compared with
the filmy and all but spiritual texture of a comet. Accordingly, whenever powerful telescopes
have been turned on these bodies, they have not failed to dispel the illusion which attributes
solidity to that more condensed part of the head which appears to the naked eye as a
nucleus; though it is true that in some a very minute stellar point has been seen, indicating
the existence of something more substantial.
That the luminous part of a comet is something in the nature of a smoke, fog, or cloud,
suspended in a transparent atmosphere, is evident from a fact which has been often noticed,
viz., that the portion of the tail where it comes closest to and surrounds the head is yet
separated from it by an interval less luminous, as if sustained and kept off from contact by a
transparent stratum, as we often see one layer of clouds over another with a considerable
clear space between. These, and most of the other facts observed in the history of comets,
appear to indicate that the structure of a comet, as seen in section in the direction of its
length, must be that of a hollow envelope, of a parabolic form, inclosing near its vertex the [288]
nucleus and head, something as represented in the preceding figure. This would account for
the apparent division of the tail into two principal lateral branches, the envelope being
oblique to the line of sight at its borders, and therefore a greater depth of illuminated matter
being there exposed to the eye. In all probability, however, they admit great varieties of
structure, and among them may very possibly be bodies of widely different physical
constitution, and there is no doubt that one and the same comet at different epochs
undergoes great changes, both in the disposition of its materials and in their physical state.
We come now to speak of the motions of comets. These are apparently most irregular and
capricious. Sometimes they remain in sight only for a few days, at others for many months;
some move with extreme slowness, others with extraordinary velocity; while not
infrequently the two extremes of apparent speed are exhibited by the same comet in
different parts of its course. The comet of 1472 described an arc of the heavens of 40° of a
great circle in a single day. Some pursue a direct, some a retrograde, and others a tortuous
and very irregular course; nor do they confine themselves, like the planets, within any
certain region of the heavens, but traverse indifferently every part. Their variations in
apparent size, during the time they continue visible, are no less remarkable than those of
their velocity; sometimes they make their first appearance as faint and slow-moving objects,
with little or no tail; but by degrees accelerate, enlarge, and throw out from them this
appendage, which increases in length and brightness till (as always happens in such cases) [289]
they approach the sun, and are lost in his beams. After a time they again emerge on the other
side, receding from the sun with a velocity at first rapid, but gradually decaying. It is for the
most part after thus passing the sun that they shine forth in all their splendor, and that their
tails acquire their greatest length and development; thus indicating plainly the action of the
sun’s rays as the exciting cause of that extraordinary emanation. As they continue to recede
from the sun, their motion diminishes and the tail dies away, or is absorbed into the head,
which itself grows continually feebler, and is at length altogether lost sight of, in by far the
greater number of cases never to be seen more.
Without the clew furnished by the theory of gravitation, the enigma of these seemingly
irregular and capricious movements might have remained forever unresolved. But Newton,
having demonstrated the possibility of any conic section whatever being described about the
sun, by a body revolving under the dominion of that law, immediately perceived the
applicability of the general proposition to the case of cometary orbits; and the great comet of
1680, one of the most remarkable on record, both for the immense length of its tail and for
the excessive closeness of its approach to the sun (within one-sixth of the diameter of that
luminary), afforded him an excellent opportunity for the trial of his theory. The success of
the attempt was complete. From that time it became a received truth, that the motions of
comets are regulated by the same general laws as those of the planets. [290]
Fig. 25.—Orbit of Newton’s Comet (1680)
Now calculations lead to the surprising fact, that the comets are by far the most
voluminous bodies in our system. The following are the dimensions of some of those which
have been made the subjects of such inquiry.
The tail of the great comet of 1680, immediately after its perihelion passage, was found
by Newton to have been no less than 20,000,000 of leagues in length, and to have occupied
only two days in its emission from the comet’s body! a decisive proof this of its being darted [291]
forth by some active force, the origin of which, to judge from the direction of the tail, must
be sought in the sun itself. Its greatest length amounted to 41,000,000 leagues, a length
much exceeding the whole interval between the sun and earth. The tail of the comet of 1769
extended 16,000,000 leagues, and that of the great comet of 1811, 36,000,000. The portion
of the head of this last, comprised within the transparent atmospheric envelope which
separated it from the tail, was 180,000 leagues in diameter. It is hardly conceivable that
matter once projected to such enormous distances should ever be collected again by the
feeble attraction of such a body as a comet—a consideration which accounts for the
surmised progressive diminution of the tails of such as have been frequently observed.
The most remarkable of those comets which have been ascertained to move in elliptic
orbits is that of Halley, so called from the celebrated Edmund Halley, who, on calculating its
elements from its perihelion passage in 1682, when it appeared in great splendor, with a tail
30° in length, was led to conclude its identity with the great comets of 1531 and 1607,
whose elements he had also ascertained. The intervals of these successive apparitions being
75 and 76 years, Halley was encouraged to predict its reappearance about the year 1759. So
remarkable a prediction could not fail to attract the attention of all astronomers, and, as the
time approached, it became extremely interesting to know whether the attractions of the
larger planets might not materially interfere with its orbital motion. The computation of their [292]
influence from the Newtonian law of gravity, a most difficult and intricate piece of
calculation, was undertaken and accomplished by Clairaut, who found that the action of
Saturn would retard its return by 100 days, and that of Jupiter by no less than 518, making
in all 618 days, by which the expected return would happen later than on the supposition of
its retaining an unaltered period—and that, in short, the time of the expected perihelion
passage would take place within a month, one way or other, of the middle of April, 1759. It
actually happened on the 12th of March in that year. Its next return was calculated by
several eminent geometers, and fixed successively for the 4th, the 7th, the 11th, and the 26th
of November, 1835; the two latter determinations appearing entitled to the higher degree of
confidence, owing partly to the more complete discussion bestowed on the observations of
1682 and 1759, and partly to the continually improving state of our knowledge of the
methods of estimating the disturbing effect of the several planets. The last of these
predictions, that of M. Lehmann, was published on the 25th of July. On the 5th of August
the comet first became visible in the clear atmosphere of Rome as an exceedingly faint
telescopic nebula, within a degree of its place as predicted by M. Rosenberger for that day.
On or about the 20th of August it became generally visible, and, pursuing very nearly its
calculated path among the stars, passed its perihelion on the 16th of November; after which,
its course carrying it south, it ceased to be visible in Europe, though it continued to be [293]
conspicuously so in the Southern Hemisphere throughout February, March, and April, 1836,
disappearing finally on the 5th of May.
Fig. 26.—Forms of Cometary Orbits
Its first appearance, while yet very remote from the sun, was that of a small round or
somewhat oval nebula, quite destitute of tail, and having a minute point of more
concentrated light eccentrically situated within it. It was not before the 2d of October that
the tail began to be developed, and thenceforward increased pretty rapidly, being already 4° [294]
or 5° long on the 5th. It attained its greatest apparent length (about 20°) on the 15th of
October. From that time, though not yet arrived at its perihelion, it decreased with such
rapidity that already on the 29th it was only 3°, and on November the 5th 2½° in length.
There is every reason to believe that before the perihelion, the tail had altogether
disappeared, as, though it continued to be observed at Pulkowa up to the very day of its
perihelion passage, no mention whatever is made of any tail being then seen.
Reflecting on these phenomena, and carefully considering the evidence afforded by the
numerous and elaborately executed drawings which have been placed on record by
observers, it seems impossible to avoid the following conclusions: 1st. That the matter of the
nucleus of a comet is powerfully excited and dilated into a vaporous state by the action of
the sun’s rays, escaping in streams and jets at those points of its surface which oppose the
least resistance, and in all probability throwing that surface or the nucleus itself into
irregular motions by its reaction in the act of so escaping, and thus altering its direction.
2. That this process chiefly takes place in that portion of the nucleus which is turned
toward the sun; the vapor escaping chiefly in that direction.
3. That when so emitted, it is prevented from proceeding in the direction originally
impressed upon it by some force directed from the sun, drifting it back and carrying it out to
vast distances behind the nucleus, forming the tail or so much of the tail as can be [295]
considered as consisting of material substance.
4th. That this force, whatever its nature, acts unequally on the materials of the comet, the
greater portion remaining unvaporized, and a considerable part of the vapor actually
produced remaining in its neighborhood, forming the head and coma.
5th. That the force thus acting on the materials of the tail can not possibly be identical
with the ordinary gravitation of matter, being centrifugal or repulsive, as respects the sun,
and of an energy very far exceeding the gravitating force toward that luminary. This will be
evident if we consider the enormous velocity with which the matter of the tail is carried
backward, in opposition both to the motion which it had as part of the nucleus and to that
which it acquired in the act of its emission, both which motions have to be destroyed in the
first instance, before any movement in the contrary direction can be impressed.
6th. That unless the matter of the tail thus repelled from the sun be retained by a peculiar
and highly energetic attraction to the nucleus, differing from and exceptional to the ordinary
power of gravitation, it must leave the nucleus altogether; being in effect carried far beyond
the coercive power of so feeble a gravitating force as would correspond to the minute mass
of the nucleus; and it is therefore very conceivable that a comet may lose, at every approach
to the sun, a portion of that peculiar matter, whatever it be, on which the production of its
tail depends, the remainder being of course less excitable by the solar action, and more [296]
impassive to his rays, and therefore, pro tanto, more nearly approximating to the nature of
the planetary bodies.
7th. That, considering the immense distances to which at least some portion of the matter
of the tail is carried from the comet, and the way in which it is dispersed through the system,
it is quite inconceivable that the whole of that matter should be reabsorbed—that therefore it
must lose during its perihelion passage some portion of its matter, and if, as would seem far
from improbable, that matter should be of a nature to be repelled from, not attracted by, the
sun, the remainder will, by consequence, be, pro quantitate inertiæ, more energetically
attracted to the sun than the mean of both. If then the orbit be elliptic, it will perform each
successive revolution in a shorter time than the preceding, until, at length, the whole of the
repulsive matter is got rid of.
Fig. 27.—Halley’s Comet
Besides the comet of Halley, several other of the great comets recorded in history have
been surmised with more or less probability to return periodically, and therefore to move in
elongated ellipses around the sun. Such is the great comet of 1680, whose period is
estimated at 575 years, and which has been considered, with at least a high prima facie
probability, to be identical with a magnificent comet observed at Constantinople and in
Palestine, and referred by contemporary historians, both European and Chinese, to the year
a. d. 1106; with that of a. d. 531, which was seen at noonday close to the sun; with the
comet of 43 b. c., already spoken of as having appeared after the death of Cæsar, and which [297]
was also observed in the daytime; and finally with two other comets, mention of which
occurs in the Sibylline Oracles, and in a passage of Homer, and which are referred, as well
as the obscurity of chronology and the indications themselves will allow, to the years 618
and 1194 b. c. It is to the assumed near approach of this comet to the earth, about the time of [298]
the Deluge, that Whiston ascribed that overwhelming tide-wave to whose agency his wild
fancy ascribed that great catastrophe—a speculation, it is needless to remark, purely
visionary. These coincidences of time are certainly remarkable, especially when it is
considered how very rare are the appearances of comets of this class. Professor Encke,
however, has discussed, with all possible care, the observations recorded of the comet of
1680, taking into consideration the perturbations of the planets (which are of trifling
importance, by reason of the great inclination of its orbit to the ecliptic), and his calculations
show that no elliptic orbit, with such a period as 575 years, is competent to represent them
within any probable or even possible limits of error, the most probable period assigned by
them being 8814 Julian years. Independent of this consideration, there are circumstances
recorded of the comet of a. d. 1106 incompatible with its motion in any orbit identical with
that of the comet of 1680, so that the idea of referring all these phenomena to one and the
same comet, however seducing, must be relinquished.
Another great comet, whose return about the year 1848 had been considered by more than
one eminent authority in this department of astronomy highly probable, is that of 1556, to
the terror of whose aspect some historians have attributed the abdication of the Emperor
Charles V. This comet is supposed to be identical with that of 1264, mentioned by many
historians as a great comet, and observed also in China.
In 1661, 1532, 1402, 1145, 891, and 243 great comets appeared—that of 1402 being
bright enough to be seen at noonday. A period of 129 years would conciliate all these [299]
appearances, and should have brought back the comet in 1789 or 1790 (other circumstances
agreeing). That no such comet was observed about that time is no proof that it did not
return, since, owing to the situation of its orbit, had the perihelion passage taken place in
July it might have escaped observation.
We come now, however, to a class of comets of short period, respecting whose return
there is no doubt, inasmuch as two at least of them have been identified as having performed
successive revolutions round the sun; have had their return predicted already several times;
and have on each occasion scrupulously kept to their appointments. The first of these is the
comet of Encke, so called from Professor Encke of Berlin, who first ascertained its
periodical return. It revolves in an ellipse of great eccentricity (though not comparable to
that of Halley’s), the plane of which is inclined at an angle of about 13° 22′ to the plane of
the ecliptic, and in the short period of 1,211 days, or about 3⅓ years. This remarkable
discovery was made on the occasion of its fourth recorded appearance, in 1819. From the
ellipse then calculated by Encke, its return in 1822 was predicted by him, and observed at
Paramata, in New South Wales, by M. Rümker, being invisible in Europe: since which it has
been repredicted and reobserved in all the principal observatories, both in the Northern and
Southern Hemispheres, as a phenomenon of regular occurrence.
Another comet of short period is that of Biela, so called from M. Biela of Josephstadt, [300]
who first arrived at this interesting conclusion on the occasion of its appearance in 1826. It
is considered to be identical with comets which appeared in 1772, 1805, etc., and describes
its very eccentric ellipse about the sun in 2,410 days, or about 6¾ years; and in a plane
inclined 12° 34′ to the ecliptic. It appeared again, according to the prediction, in 1832 and in
1846.
This comet is small and hardly visible to the naked eye, even when brightest.
Nevertheless, as if to make up for its seeming insignificance by the interest attaching to it in
a physical point of view, it exhibited, at its appearance in 1846, a phenomenon which struck
every astronomer with amazement, as a thing without previous example in the history of our
system. It was actually seen to separate itself into two distinct comets, which, after thus
parting company, continued to journey along amicably through an arc of upward of 70° of
their apparent orbit, keeping all the while within the same field of view of the telescope
pointed toward them. The first indication of something unusual being about to take place
might be, perhaps, referred to the 19th of December, 1845, when the comet appeared to Mr.
Hind pear-shaped, the nebulosity being unduly elongated in a direction inclining northward.
But on the 13th of January, at Washington, in America, and on the 15th and subsequently in
every part of Europe, it was distinctly seen to have become double; a very small and faint
cometic body, having a nucleus of its own, being observed appended to it, at a distance of
about 2′ (in arc) from its centre, and in a direction forming an angle of about 328° with the [301]
meridian, running northward from the principal or original comet. From this time the
separation of the two comets went on progressively, though slowly. On the 30th of January
the apparent distance of the nucleus had increased to 3′, on the 7th of February to 4′, and on
the 13th to 5′, and so on, until on the 5th of March the two comets were separated by an
interval of 9′ 19″, the apparent direction of the line of junction all the while varying but little
with respect to the parallel.
During this separation, very remarkable changes were observed to be going on, both in
the original comet and its companion. Both had nuclei, both had short tails, parallel in
direction and nearly perpendicular to the line of junction; but whereas at its first observation,
on January 13th, the new comet was extremely small and faint in comparison with the old,
the difference both in point of light and apparent magnitude diminished. On the 10th of
February they were nearly equal, although the day before the moonlight had effaced the new
one, leaving the other bright enough to be well observed. On the 14th and 16th, however,
the new comet had gained a decided superiority of light over the old, presenting at the same
time a sharp and star-like nucleus, compared by Lieutenant Maury to a diamond spark. But
this state of things was not to continue. Already, on the 18th, the old comet had regained its
superiority, being nearly twice as bright as its companion, and offering an unusually bright
and star-like nucleus. From this period the new companion began to fade away, but [302]
continued visible up to the 15th of March. On the 24th the comet appeared again single, and
on the 22d of April both had disappeared.
While this singular interchange of light was going forward, indications of some sort of
communication between the comets were exhibited. The new or companion comet, besides
its tail, extending in a direction parallel to that of the other, threw out a faint arc light which
extended as a kind of bridge from the one to the other; and after the restoration of the
original comet to its former pre-eminence, it, on its part, threw forth additional rays, so as to
present the appearance of a comet with three faint tails forming angles of about 120° with
each other, one of which extended toward its companion.
On the 22d of August, 1844, Signor de Vico, director of the observatory of the Collegio
Romano, discovered a comet, the motions of which, a very few observations sufficed to
show, deviated remarkably from a parabolic orbit. It passed its perihelion on the 2d of
September, and continued to be observed until the 7th of December. Elliptic elements of this
comet, agreeing remarkably well with each other, were accordingly calculated by several
astronomers, from which it appears that the period of revolution is about 1,990 days, or 5½
(5.4357) years, which (supposing its orbit undisturbed in the interim) would bring it back to
the perihelion on or about the 13th of January, 1850, on which occasion, however, by reason
of its unfavorable situation with respect to the sun and earth, it could not be observed.
This comet, when brightest, was visible to the naked eye, and had a small tail. It is [303]
especially interesting to astronomers from the circumstance of its having been rendered
exceedingly probable by the researches of M. Leverrier, that it is identical with one which
appeared in 1678, with some of its elements considerably changed by perturbation. This
comet is further remarkable from having been concluded, by Messrs. Laugier and Mauvais,
to be identical with the comet of 1585 observed by Tycho Brahe, and possibly also with
those of 1743, 1766, and 1819.
By far the most remarkable comet, however, which has been seen during the present
century, is that which appeared in the spring of 1843, and whose tail became visible in the
twilight of the 17th of March in England as a great beam of nebulous light, extending from a
point above the western horizon, through the stars of Eridanus and Lepus, under the belt of
Orion. This situation was low and unfavorable; and it was not till the 19th that the head was
seen, and then only as a faint and ill-defined nebula, very rapidly fading on subsequent
nights. In more southern latitudes, however, not only the tail was seen, as a magnificent train
of light extending 50° or 60° in length; but the head and nucleus appeared with
extraordinary splendor, exciting in every country where it was seen the greatest
astonishment and admiration. Indeed, all descriptions agree in representing it as a
stupendous spectacle, such as in superstitious ages would not fail to have carried terror into
every bosom. In tropical latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, the tail appeared on the 3d of [304]
March, and in Van Diemen’s Land so early as the 1st, the comet having passed its perihelion
on the 27th of February.
There is abundant evidence of the comet in question having been seen in full daylight,
and in the sun’s immediate vicinity. It was so seen on the 28th of February, the day after its
perihelion passage, by every person on board the H.E.I.C.S. “Owen Glenndower,” then off
the Cape, as a short dagger-like object close to the sun a little before sunset. On the same
day at 3h 6m p. m., and consequently in full sunshine, the distance of the nucleus from the sun
was actually measured with a sextant by Mr. Clarke of Portland, United States, the distance
centre from centre being then only 3° 50′ 43″.
T he question is often asked, Are the stars inhabited? To this we can confidently answer,
No. The stars themselves are certainly not habitable by any forms of life with which
we are familiar. That the stars are luminous incandescent bodies, similar to the sun, seems
almost self-evident. That they shine by their own inherent light, and not by light reflected
from another body, like the planets of the Solar System, is a fact which scarcely needs
demonstration. There are no bright objects near them from which they could derive their
light, and they are too far from the sun to obtain any illumination from that source. But if [308]
any proofs were necessary, we have the evidence of the spectroscope, which shows
unmistakably that their light emanates from incandescent bodies. Many of the stars show
spectra very similar to that of the sun. The light of others, although differing somewhat in
quality when analyzed by the prism, indicates clearly that they are at a very high
temperature—in many cases, indeed, suggesting that they are actually hotter than the sun. It
may be objected, however, that in the case of binary or revolving double stars, the smaller
component may possibly shine by light reflected from the brighter star. Indeed, this has been
suggested in the case of Sirius and its faint companion. But, if the companion of Sirius
shone merely by reflected light from its primary, it would be much fainter than it is, and,
indeed, would be utterly invisible in our largest telescopes. Further, in some double stars,
spectroscopic observations suggest that the component stars have different spectra. This is,
of course, conclusive evidence against the hypothesis of borrowed light; for were the
smaller star to shine by reflected light from the larger, the spectra of both would be identical,
as in the case of the sun and moon. We may therefore conclude that all the visible stars are
suns, and totally unfit for the habitation of living creatures.
But may not the stars have planets revolving round them, forming solar systems similar to
our own? As they are evidently suns shining by inherent light, may they not form centres of
planetary systems? In the case of those stars having spectra differing from the solar [309]
spectrum, we can not speak with any confidence; but for those which show spectra similar to
that of our sun, and having, therefore, probably a similar chemical constitution, the
existence of planets revolving round them seems from analogy very probable. I refer to
single stars, that is stars which have no telescopic close companion; for the double stars
may, perhaps, form systems differently constituted. In any case these binary systems would
not be strictly comparable with ours, for the sun is certainly a single star.
Whether systems of planets really revolve round the stars referred to, is a question which,
unfortunately, can not be decided by observation. If a planet equal in size to the “giant
planet,” Jupiter, were revolving round the nearest star—Alpha Centauri—at the same
distance from that star that Jupiter is from the sun, it would be utterly invisible in our largest
telescopes. The invisibility of planets circling round the stars is therefore no proof whatever
of their non-existence. Each star of the solar type may possibly be attended by a retinue of
planets which may, perhaps, remain forever invisible in the largest telescopes which man
can construct. We can, therefore, draw our conclusions only from analogy. If other suns
exist resembling our own sun in chemical constitution, which we know to be a fact, is it not
reasonable to suppose that they also form centres of planetary systems similar to the Solar
System?
“Consult with reason, reason will reply,
Each lucid point which glows in yonder sky,
Informs a system in the boundless space,
And fills with glory its appointed place;
With beams unborrowed brighten other skies, [310]
And worlds to the unknown with heat and light supplies.”
The suns, which we call stars, were clearly not created for our benefit. They are of very
little practical use to the earth’s inhabitants. They give us very little light; an additional
small satellite—one considerably smaller than the moon—would have been much more
useful in this respect than the millions of suns revealed by the telescope. They must,
therefore, have been formed for some other purpose.
On Laplace’s Nebular Hypothesis, the condensation of an original nebulous mass
endowed with a motion of rotation would result not only in the formation of a sun, similar to
ours, but also in a system of planets revolving round the central body. If, indeed, the
primitive nebula had no rotation or motions of any kind, the result would be a sun without
planets or satellites; but the motions with which all the stars seem to be animated lead us to
suppose that this would be a case of very rare occurrence. We may therefore conclude, with
a high degree of probability, that the stars—at least those with spectra of the solar type—
form centres of planetary systems somewhat similar to our own.
This being surmised, let us consider the conditions necessary for the existence of life on
these planets. There are various conditions which must be complied with before we can
imagine life, as we know it, to be possible on any planet. Perhaps the most important of
these is the question of temperature. We know that in the universe a great range of
temperature exists, from the cold of interstellar space—estimated at about 460° below the [311]
freezing-point of water—to the intense heat which rages in the solar photosphere. In this
long thermal scale life is, at least on the earth, restricted within rather narrow limits. Below
a certain low temperature life can not exist. The point is, however, far above the temperature
of space. On the other hand, above a certain high temperature—a low one, however,
compared with the intense heat of the solar surface—life is also impossible, at least for
highly organized beings like man and the larger animals. For minute microscopic organisms
the scale may, perhaps, be somewhat extended; but even in its widest limits, the range of
temperature within which life is possible is, so far as we know, certainly a narrow one.
For the support of life and vegetation, light is also necessary, for without it no flowers
would bloom, nor corn grow and ripen to maturity. To obtain this supply of light and heat it
is necessary that a life-bearing planet should revolve at a suitable distance from, and in a
nearly circular orbit round, a central sun. These conditions, it is hardly necessary to say, are
fulfilled in the case of the earth. Were we much nearer to the sun than we are, we should
suffer from excessive heat, and were we much further away, we should probably perish from
the cold. For this reason the existence of life on the other planets of the Solar System seems
very doubtful. Mercury is probably too hot, and the other planets are certainly too cold, so
far as heat from the sun is concerned, unless, indeed, their internal heat is sufficient to raise [312]
the temperature of their surface to a point sufficient for the maintenance of life. Indeed,
there is good reason to suppose that in the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, this
internal heat is still so great that life would be quite impossible on their surface. Venus,
inside the earth’s orbit, and Mars, outside, are the two planets which seem to approach
nearest to the required conditions. We know that both these planets possess atmospheres
somewhat similar to ours, and, in Mars at least, land and water most probably exist on its
surface. Venus is, of course, much hotter than the earth, and Mars much colder, but possibly
the polar regions of Venus and the equatorial regions of Mars may form suitable abodes for
some forms, at least, of animal and vegetable life.
Let us proceed, however, to consider some other conditions necessary for the existence of
life on a planet. A suitable temperature is, of course, indispensable, but this is not all. There
are other conditions which must be complied with. The planet must have a rotation on its
axis, so that every portion shall in turn receive its due share of light and heat. Each point on
its surface must have its day and night, the day for work and the night for rest. The axis of
rotation must not lie in the plane of the planet’s orbit, but must have a suitable inclination,
so that each hemisphere may enjoy its seasons, summer and winter, “seed-time and harvest,”
in due course. Further the velocity of rotation on its axis must not be too rapid. If the earth
rotated in a period of one and a quarter hours, bodies at the equator would have no weight, [313]
and life would be impossible in those regions.
The planet must also possess a mass sufficient to retain bodies on its surface by the force
of gravity. In the case of very small bodies, such as the moons of Mars and some of the
minor planets between Mars and Jupiter, objects thrown into the air would pass away into
space never to return.
The planet should also have a mean density greater than that of water, otherwise the seas
would possess no stability, and destructive waves would quickly destroy all life on its
surface. All these conditions are fulfilled in the case of Mars as well as on the earth. In the
planet Saturn, however, the density is less than that of water, and in Uranus and Neptune
only slightly greater.
The planet must also possess a suitable atmosphere. This is an all-important condition for
the support of animal life—at least for the existence of man and the higher orders of
animals. This atmosphere must consist—so far as we know—of oxygen and nitrogen gases
mechanically mixed in proper proportions, and with a small quantity of carbonic acid gas.
Were the oxygen in smaller quantity than it exists in the earth’s atmosphere, life could not
be supported. On the other hand, were it much in excess of its present amount, a fever would
be produced in the blood which would very soon put an end to animal life. The presence of
other gases in excessive quantities would also render the air unfit for breathing. We see,
therefore, that a comparatively slight change in the composition of a planet’s atmosphere [314]
would—so far as our experience goes—render the planet uninhabitable by any of the higher
forms of life with which we are familiar.
For the support of life on a planet, water is also absolutely necessary. Without this useful
fluid the world would soon become a desert, and life and vegetation would speedily vanish
from its surface.
Geological conditions must also be considered. It is clearly necessary for the welfare of
human beings at least that the surface soil and rocks should contain coal, iron, lime, and
other minerals, substances almost indispensable for the ordinary wants of civilized
existence.
Nine Views of the Hour-Glass Sea on Mars
1, Nov. 26, 1864; 2, June 29, 1873; 3, Oct. 28, 1879; 4, June 2, 1888; 5, June 20, 1890; 6, Aug. 6, 1892;
7, Oct., 1894; 8, Dec. 3, 1896; 9, Dec. 7, 1896
That all or any of the conditions considered would be complied with in the case of a
planet revolving round a star it is, of course, impossible to say. But when we find stars
showing by their spectra that they contain chemical elements identical with those which
exist in the sun and the earth, analogy would lead us to suppose that very possibly a planet
resembling our earth may revolve round each of these distant suns. I say a planet, for
evidently there would be only one distance from the central luminary—a distance depending
on its size—at which the temperature necessary for the support of life would exist, as in the
case of the earth, over the whole of the planet’s surface. For other planets of the stellar
system, life would be, if it existed at all, most probably confined to restricted regions of the
planet’s surface. There would, therefore, be in each system one planet, and only one, [315]
especially suitable for the support of animal life as we know it. This is with reference to
light and heat. If the other conditions were not complied with, then life would probably not
exist even on this one planet. In the case of a star larger than the sun, the planet should be
placed at a greater distance than the earth is from the sun, but in this case the length of the
year and the seasons would be longer than ours.
The star which more nearly resembles the sun in the character of the light which it emits
is the bright star Capella. Arcturus has a somewhat similar spectrum. But these are probably
suns of enormous size, if any reliance can be placed on the measures of their distance from
the earth. Other bright stars with spectra of the solar type are Pollux, Aldebaran, Beta
Andromedæ, Alpha Arietis, Alpha Cassiopeiæ, Alpha Cygni, and Alpha Ursæ Majoris.
Another star is Eta Herculis. The magnitude of this star as measured with the photometer is
about 3½. A parallax found by Bélopolsky and Wagner places it at a distance of 515,660
times the sun’s distance from the earth. If the sun were placed at this distance, I find that it
would be reduced to a star of the third magnitude. This result would imply that Eta Herculis
is a slightly smaller sun than ours; and a planet placed a little nearer to the star than the earth
is to the sun might, perhaps, fulfil the conditions of a life-bearing world.
The number of stars visible in our largest telescopes is usually estimated at 100,000,000.
Of these we may perhaps assume that 10,000,000 have a spectrum of the solar type, and
therefore closely resemble our sun in their chemical constitution. If we suppose that only [316]
one in ten of these is similar in size to the sun, and has a habitable planet revolving round it,
we have a total of 1,000,000 worlds in the visible universe fitted for the support of animal
life.
We may therefore conclude, with a high degree of probability, that among the
“multitudinous” stellar hosts there are probably many stars having life-bearing planets
revolving round them.
THE SUN—WHAT WE LEARN FROM IT.—Richard A. Proctor
T he Sun, the central and ruling body of the planetary system, and the source of light and
heat to our earth and all the members of that system, is a globe about 852,900 miles in
diameter. So far as observation extends, his figure is perfectly spherical, no difference
having been observed between his polar and spherical diameters. It has been well remarked,
indeed, by Sir G. Airy, that if any observer could by ordinary modes of measurement satisfy
himself that a real difference existed between the diameters, that observer would have
proved the inexactness of his own work; for the absence of any measurable compression
comes out as the result of comparisons between thousands of observations of the sun’s limbs
made at Greenwich and other leading observatories. The volume of the sun exceeds the
earth’s 1,252,700 times. His mean density is almost exactly one-fourth of the earth’s, and his
mass exceeds hers about 316,000 times. Gravity at the surface of the sun exceeds terrestrial [317]
gravity about 27.1 times, so that a body dropped from rest near the sun’s surface would fall
through 436 feet in the first second, and have acquired a velocity of 872 feet per second.
Let the reader consider a terrestrial globe three inches in diameter, and search out on that
globe the tiny triangular speck which represents Great Britain. Then let him endeavor to
picture the town in which he lives as represented by the minutest pin-mark that could
possibly be made upon this speck. He will then have formed some conception, though but
an inadequate one, of the enormous dimensions of the earth’s globe, compared with the
scene in which his daily life is cast. Now, on the same scale, the sun would be represented
by a globe about twice the height of an ordinary sitting-room. A room about twenty-six feet
in length, and height, and breadth, would be required to contain the representation of the
sun’s globe on this scale, while the globe representing the earth could be placed in a
moderately large goblet.
Such is the body which sways the motions of the Solar System. The largest of his family,
the giant Jupiter, though of dimensions which dwarf those of the earth or Venus almost to
nothingness, would yet only be represented by a thirty-two inch globe, on the scale which
gives to the sun the enormous volume I have spoken of. Saturn would have a diameter of
about twenty-eight inches, his ring measuring about five feet in its extreme span. Uranus and
Neptune would be little more than a foot in diameter, and all the minor planets would be less [318]
than the three-inch earth. It will thus be seen that the sun is a worthy centre of the great
scheme he sways, even when we merely regard his dimensions.
Fig. 29.—Sun Spot seen in 1870
The sun outweighs fully seven hundred and forty times the combined mass of all the
planets which circle around him, so that, when we regard the energy of his attraction, we
still find him a worthy ruler of the planetary scheme.
Viewed with the naked eye, the sun appears only as a luminous mass of intense and
uniform brightness; but when examined with the telescope, his surface is frequently
observed to be mottled over with a number of dark spots, of irregular and ill-defined forms,
constantly varying in appearance, situation, and magnitude. These spots are occasionally of [319]
immense size, so as to be visible even without the aid of the telescope; and their number is
frequently so great that they occupy a considerable portion of the sun’s surface. Sir W.
Herschel observed one in 1779 the diameter of which exceeded 50,000 miles, more than six
times the diameter of the earth; and Scheiner affirms that he has seen no less than fifty on
the sun’s disk at once. Most of them have a deep black nucleus, surrounded by a fainter
shade, or umbra, of which the inner part, nearest to the nucleus, is brighter than the exterior
portion. The boundary between the nucleus and umbra is in general tolerably well defined;
and beyond the umbra a stripe of light appears more vivid than the rest of the sun. [320]
Fig. 30.—Phase of Spot
The discovery of the sun’s spots has been attributed to Fabricius, Galileo, and Scheiner,
and has been claimed for the English astronomer Harriot. Amid these conflicting pretensions
it is perhaps impossible to arrive at the truth; but the matter is of little importance; the
discovery is one which followed inevitably that of the telescope, and an accidental priority
of observation can hardly be considered as establishing any claim to merit.
The study of solar physics may be said to have commenced with the discovery of the sun
spots, about two hundred and sixty years ago. These spots were presently found to traverse
the solar disk in such a way as to indicate that the sun turns upon an axis once in about
twenty-six days. Nor will this rotation appear slow, when we remember that it implies a
motion of the equatorial parts of the sun’s surface at a rate exceeding some seventy times the
motion of our swiftest express train.
Next came the discovery that the solar spots are not surface stains, but deep cavities in the
solar substance. The changes of appearance presented by the spots as they traverse the solar
disk led Dr. Wilson to form this theory so far back as 1779; but, strangely enough, it is only
in comparatively recent times that the hypothesis has been finally established, since even
within the last ten years a theory was put forward which accounted satisfactorily for most of
the changes of appearance observed in the spots, by supposing them to be due to solar
clouds hanging suspended at a considerable elevation above the true photosphere. [321]
Sir William Herschel, reasoning from terrestrial analogies, was led to look on the spot-
cavities as apertures through a double layer of clouds. He argued that, were the solar
photosphere of any other nature, it would be past comprehension that vast openings should
form in it, to remain open for months before they close up again. Whether we consider the
enormous rapidity with which the spots form and with which their figure changes, or the
length of time that many of them remain visible, we find ourselves alike perplexed, unless
we assume that the solar photosphere resembles a bed of clouds. Through a stratum of
terrestrial clouds openings may be formed by atmospheric disturbances, but while
undisturbed the clouds will retain any form once impressed upon them, for a length of time
corresponding to the weeks and months during which the solar spots endure.
And because the solar spots present two distinct varieties of light, the faint penumbra and
the dark umbra or nucleus, Herschel saw the necessity of assuming that there are two beds
of clouds, the outer self-luminous and constituting the true solar photosphere, the inner
reflecting the light received from the outer layer, and so shielding the real surface of the sun
from the intense light and heat which it would otherwise receive.
But while recent discoveries have confirmed Sir William Herschel’s theory about the solar
cloud-envelopes, they have by no means given countenance to his view that the body of the [322]
sun may possibly be cool. The darkness of the nucleus of a spot is found, on the contrary, to
give proof that in that neighborhood the sun is hotter, because it parts less readily with its
heat. We shall see presently how this is. Meantime let it be noticed, in passing, that a close
scrutiny of large solar spots has revealed the existence of an intensely black spot in the
midst of the umbra. This black spot must be regarded as the true nucleus.
The circumstance that the spots appear only on two bands of the sun’s globe,
corresponding to the sub-tropical zones on our own earth, led the younger Herschel to
conclusions as important as those which his father had formed. He reasoned, like his father,
from terrestrial analogies. On our own earth the sub-tropical zones are the regions where the
great cyclonic storms have their birth, and rage with their chief fury. Here, therefore, we
have the analogue of the solar spots, if only we can show reason for believing that any
causes resembling those which generate the terrestrial cyclone operate upon those regions of
the sun where the solar spots make their appearance.
We know that the cyclone is due to the excess of heat at the earth’s equator. It is true that
this excess of heat is always in operation, whereas cyclones are not perpetually raging in
sub-tropical climates. Ordinarily, therefore, the excess of heat does not cause tornadoes.
Certain aerial currents are generated whose uniform motion suffices, as a rule, to adjust the
conditions which the excess of heat at the equator would otherwise tend to disturb. But [323]
when through any cause the uniform action of the aerial currents is either interfered with or
is insufficient to maintain equilibrium, then cyclonic or whirling motions are generated in
the disturbed atmosphere, and propagated over a wide area of the earth’s surface.
Now we recognize the reason of the excess of heat at the earth’s equator in the fact that
the sun shines more directly upon that part of the earth than on the zones which lie in higher
latitudes. Can we find any reason for suspecting that the sun, which is not heated from
without as the earth is, should exhibit a similar peculiarity? Sir John Herschel considers that
we can. If the sun has an atmosphere extending to a considerable distance from his surface,
then there can be little doubt that, owing to his rotation upon his axis, this atmosphere would
assume the figure of an oblate spheroid, and would be deepest over the solar equator. Here,
then, more of the sun’s heat would be retained than at the poles, where the atmosphere is
shallowest. Thus, that excess of heat at the solar equator which is necessary to complete the
analogy between the sun spots and terrestrial cyclones seems satisfactorily established.
It must be remarked, however, that this reasoning, so far as the excess of heat at the sun’s
equator is concerned, only removes the difficulty a step. If there were indeed an increased
depth of atmosphere over the sun’s equator sufficing to retain the requisite excess of heat,
then the amount of heat we receive from the sun’s equatorial regions ought to be appreciably [324]
less than the amount emitted from the remaining portions of the solar surface. This is not
found to be the case, so that either there is no such excess of absorption, or else the solar
equator gives out more heat, in other words, is essentially hotter, than the rest of the sun. But
this is just the peculiarity of which we want the interpretation.
It may be taken for granted, however, that there is an analogy between the sun spots and
terrestrial cyclonic storms, though as yet we are not very well able to understand its nature.
Then next we come to one of the most interesting discoveries ever made respecting the
sun—the discovery that the spots increase and diminish in frequency in a periodic manner.
We owe this discovery to the laborious and systematic observations made by Herr Schwabe
of Dessau.
Schwabe found, in the course of about ten and a half years, the solar spots pass through a
complete cycle of changes. They become gradually more and more numerous up to a certain
maximum, and then as gradually diminish. At length the sun’s face becomes not only clear
of spots, but a certain well-marked darkening around the border of his disk disappears
altogether for a brief season. At this time the sun presents a perfectly uniform disk. Then
gradually the spots return, become more and more numerous, and so the cycle of changes is
run through again.
The astronomers who have watched the sun from the Kew Observatory have found that
the process of change by which the spots sweep in a sort of “wave of increase” over the [325]
solar disk is marked by several minor variations. As the surface of a great sea wave will be
traversed by small ripples, so the gradual increase and diminution in the number of the solar
spots are characterized by minor gradations of change, which are sufficiently well marked to
be distinctly cognizable.
There seems every reason for believing that the periodic changes thus noticed are due to
the influence of the planets upon the solar photosphere, though in what way that influence is
exerted is not at present perfectly clear. Some have thought that the mere attraction of the
planets tends to produce tides of some sort in the solar envelopes. Then, since the height of a
tide so produced varies as the cube or third power of the distance, it has been thought that a [326]
planet when in perihelion would generate a much larger solar tide than when in aphelion. So
that, as Jupiter has a period nearly equal to the sun-spot period, it has been supposed that the
attractions of this planet are sufficient to account for the great spot period. Venus, Mercury,
the Earth, and Saturn have, in a similar manner, been rendered accountable for the shorter
and less distinctly marked periods.
Without denying that the planets may be, and probably are, the bodies to whose influence
the solar-spot periods are to be ascribed, I yet venture to express very strong doubts whether
the attraction of Jupiter is so much greater in perihelion than in aphelion as to account for
the fact that, whereas at one season the face of the sun shows many spots, at another it is
wholly free from them.[23]
However, we are not at present concerned so much with the explanation of facts as with
the facts themselves. We have to consider rather what the sun is and what he does for the
Solar System than why these things are so.
Let us note, before passing to other circumstances of interest connected with the sun, that
the variable condition of his photosphere must cause him to change in brilliancy as seen
from vast distances. If Herr Schwabe, for instance, instead of observing the sun’s spots from [327]
his watch-tower at Dessau, could have removed himself to a distance so enormous that the
sun’s disk would have been reduced, even in the most powerful telescope, to a mere point of
light, there can be no doubt that the only effect which he would have been able to perceive
would have been a gradual increase and diminution of brightness, having a period of about
ten and a half years.
Our sun, therefore, viewed from the neighborhood of any of the stars, whence
undoubtedly he would simply appear as one among many fixed stars, would be a “variable,”
having a period of ten and a half years. And further, if an observer, viewing the sun from so
enormous a distance, had the means of very accurately measuring its light, he would
undoubtedly discover that, while the chief variation of the sun takes place in a period of ten
and a half years, its light is subjected to minor variations having shorter periods.
The discovery that the periodic changes of the sun’s appearance are associated with the
periodic changes in the character of the earth’s magnetism is the next that we have to
consider.
It had long been noticed that, during the course of a single day, the magnetic needle
exhibits a minute change of direction, taking place in an oscillatory manner. And, when the
character of this vibration came to be carefully examined, it was found to correspond to a
sort of effort on the needle’s part to turn toward the sun. For example, when the sun is on the
magnetic meridian, the needle has its mean position. This happens twice in a day, once when [328]
the sun is above the horizon and once when he is below it. Again, when the sun is midway
between these two positions—which also happens twice in the day—the needle has its mean
position, because the northern and the southern ends make equal efforts (so to speak) to
direct themselves toward the sun. Four times in the day, then, the needle has its mean
position, or is directed toward the magnetic meridian. But, when the sun is not in one of the
four positions considered, that end of the needle which is nearest to him is slightly turned
away from its mean position toward him. The change of position is very minute, and only
the exact modes of observation made use of in the present age would have sufficed to reveal
it. There it is, however, and this minute and seemingly unimportant peculiarity has been
found to be full of meaning.
The minute vibrations of the magnetic needle, thus carefully watched—day after day,
month after month, year after year—were found to exhibit a yet more minute oscillatory
change. They waxed and waned within narrow limits of variation, but yet in a manner there
was no mistaking. The period of this oscillatory change was not to be determined, however,
by the observations of a few years. Between the time when the diurnal vibration was least
until it had reached its greatest extent, and thence returned to its first value, no less than ten
and a half years elapsed, and a much longer time passed before the periodic character of the
change was satisfactorily determined.
The reader will at once see what these observations tend to. The sun spots vary in [329]
frequency within a period of ten and a half years, and the magnetic diurnal vibrations vary
within a period of the same duration. It might seem fanciful to associate the two periodic
series of changes together, and doubtless when the idea first occurred to Lamont, it was not
with any great expectation of finding it confirmed that he examined the evidence bearing on
the point. Judging from known facts, we may see reasons for such an expectation in the
correspondence of the needle’s diurnal vibration with the sun’s apparent motion, and the law
which has been found to associate the annual variations of the magnet’s power with the
sun’s distance. But undoubtedly when the idea occurred to Lamont it was an exceedingly
bold one, and the ridicule with which the first announcement of the supposed law was
received, even in scientific circles, suffices to show how unexpected that relation was which
is now so thoroughly established. For a careful comparison between the two periods has
demonstrated that they agree most perfectly, not merely in length, but maximum for
maximum, and minimum for minimum. When the sun spots are most numerous, then the
daily vibration of the magnet is most extensive, while, when the sun’s face is clear of spots,
the needle vibrates over its smallest diurnal arc.
Then the intensity of the magnetic action has been found to depend upon solar influences.
The vibrations by which the needle indicates the progress of those strange disturbances of
the terrestrial magnetism which are known as magnetic storms have been found not merely [330]
to be most frequent when the sun’s face is most spotted, but to occur simultaneously with
the appearance of signs of disturbance in the solar photosphere. For instance, during the
autumn of 1859, the eminent solar observer, Carrington, noticed the apparition of a bright
spot upon the sun’s surface. The light of this spot was so intense that he imagined the dark
glass which protected his eye had been broken. By a fortunate coincidence, another
observer, Mr. Hodgson, happened to be watching the sun at the same instant, and witnessed
the same remarkable appearance. Now it was found that the self-registering magnetic
instruments of the Kew Observatory had been sharply disturbed at the instant when the
bright spot was seen. And afterward it was learned that the phenomena which indicate the
progress of a magnetic storm had been observed in many places. Telegraphic
communication was interrupted, and in some cases, telegraphic offices were set on fire;
auroras appeared both in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere during the night which
followed; and the whole frame of the earth seemed to thrill responsively to the disturbance
which had affected the great central luminary of the Solar System.
Fig. 32.—Copernican System: Facsimile of the Drawing in the Volume by Copernicus
Published in 1543
The reader will now see why I have discussed relations which hitherto he may perhaps
have thought very little connected with my subject. He sees that there is a bond of sympathy
between our earth and the sun; that no disturbance can affect the solar photosphere without
affecting our earth to a greater or less degree. But if our earth, then also the other planets. [331]
Mercury and Venus, so much nearer the sun than we are, surely respond even more swiftly
and more distinctly to the solar magnetic influences. But beyond our earth, and beyond the
orbit of moonless Mars, the magnetic impulses speed with the velocity of light. The vast
globe of Jupiter is thrilled from pole to pole as the magnetic wave rolls in upon it; then
Saturn feels the shock, and then the vast distances beyond which lie Uranus and Neptune are [332]
swept by the ever-lessening yet ever-widening disturbance wave. Who shall say what outer
planets it then seeks? or who, looking back upon the course over which it has traveled, shall
say that planets alone have felt its effects? Meteoric and cometic systems have been visited
by the great magnetic wave, and upon the dispersed members of the one and the subtle
structure of the other effects even more important may have been produced than those
striking phenomena which characterize the progress of the terrestrial or planetary magnetic
storms.
When we remember that what is true of a relatively great solar disturbance, such as the
one witnessed by Messrs. Carrington and Hodgson, is true also (however different in
degree) of the magnetic influences which the sun is at every instant exerting, we see that a
new and most important bond of union exists between the members of the solar family. The
sun not only sways them by the vast attraction of his gravity, not only illumines them, not
only warms them, but he pours forth on all his subtle yet powerful magnetic influences. A
new analogy between the members of the Solar System is thus introduced to reinforce those
other analogies which have been held so strikingly to indicate that the ends for which our
earth has been created are not different from those which the Creator had in view when He
planned the other members of the Solar System.
The real end and aim of the telescope, as applied by the astronomer to the examination of
the celestial objects, is to gather together the light which streams from each luminous point [333]
throughout space. We may regard the space which surrounds us on every side as an ocean
without bounds or limits, an ocean across which there are ever sweeping waves of light,
either emitted directly from the various bodies subsisting throughout space, or else reflected
from their surfaces. Other forms of waves also speed across those limitless depths in all
directions, but the light-waves are those which at present concern us. Our earth is as a
minute island placed within the ocean of space, and to the shores of this tiny isle the light-
waves bear their message from the orbs which lie like other isles amid the fathomless depths
around us. With the telescope the astronomer gathers together portions of light-waves which
else would have traveled in diverging directions. By thus intensifying their action, he
enables the eye to become cognizant of their true nature. Precisely as the narrow channels
around our shores cause the tidal wave, which sweeps across the open ocean in almost
insensible undulations, to rise and fall through a wide range of variation, so the telescope
renders sensible the existence of light-waves which would escape the notice of the unaided
eye.
The telescope, then, is essentially a light-gatherer.
The spectroscope is used for another purpose. It might be called the light-sifter. It is
applied by the astronomer to analyze the light which comes to him from beyond the ocean
of space, and so to enable him to learn the character of the orbs from which that light
proceeds.
The principle of the instrument is simple, though the appliances by which its full powers [334]
can alone be deduced are somewhat complicated.
A ray of sunlight falling on a prism of glass or crystal does not emerge unchanged in
character. Different portions of the ray are differently bent, so that when they emerge from
the prism they no longer travel side by side as before. The violet part of the light is bent
most, the red least; the various colors from violet through blue, green, and yellow, to red
being bent gradually less and less.
The prism then sorts, or sifts, the light-waves.
But we want the means of sifting the light-waves more thoroughly. The reader must bear
with me while I describe, as exactly as possible in the brief space available to me, the way in
which the first rough work of the prism has been modified into the delicate and significant
work of the spectroscope. It is well worth while to form clear views on this point, because
so many of the wonders of modern science are associated with spectroscopic analysis.
If, through a small round hole in a shutter, light is admitted into a darkened room, and a
prism be placed with its refracting angle downward and horizontal, a vertical spectrum,
having its violet end uppermost, will be formed on a screen suitably placed to receive it.
But now let us consider what this spectrum really is. If we take the light-waves
corresponding to any particular color, we know, from optical considerations, that these
waves emerge from the prism in a pencil exactly resembling in shape the pencil of white
light which falls on the prism. They therefore form a small circular or oval image on their [335]
own proper part of the spectrum. Hence the spectrum is in reality formed of a multitude of
overlapping images, varying in color from violet to red. It thus appears as a rainbow-tinted
streak, presenting every gradation of color between the utmost limits of visibility at the
violet and red extremities.
If we had a square aperture to admit the light, we should get a similar result. If the
aperture were oblong, there would still be overlapping images; but if the length of the
oblong were horizontal, then, since each image would also be a horizontally placed oblong,
the overlapping would be less than when the images were square. Suppose we diminish the
overlapping as much as possible? in other words, suppose we make the oblong slit as
narrow as possible? Then, unless there were in reality an infinite number of images
distributed all along the spectrum from top to bottom, the images might be so narrowed as
not to overlap; in which case, of course, there would be horizontal dark spaces or gaps in
our spectrum. Or, again, if we failed in finding gaps of this sort by simply narrowing the
aperture, we might lengthen the spectrum by increasing the refracting angle of the prism, or
by using several prisms, and so on.
The first great discovery in solar physics, by means of the analysis of the prism (though
the discovery had little meaning at the time), consisted in the recognition of the fact that, by
means of such devices as the above, dark gaps or cross-lines can be seen in the solar
spectrum. In other words, light-waves of the various gradations corresponding to all the tints [336]
of the spectrum from violet to red do not travel to us from the great central luminary of our
system. Remembering that the effect we call color is due to the length of the light-waves,
the effect of red corresponding to light-waves of the greatest length, while the effect of
violet corresponds to the shortest light-waves, we see that in effect the sun sends forth to the
worlds which circle around him light-waves of many different lengths, but not of all. Of so
complex and interesting a nature is ordinary daylight.
But spectroscopists sought to interpret these dark lines in the solar spectrum, and it was in
carrying out this inquiry—which even to themselves seemed almost hopeless, and to many
would appear an utter waste of time—that they lighted upon the noblest method of research
yet revealed to man.
They examined the spectra of the light from incandescent substances (white-hot metals
and the like), and found that in these spectra there are no dark lines.
They examined the spectra of the light from the stars, and found that these spectra are
crossed by dark lines resembling those in the solar spectrum, but differently arranged.
They tried the spectra of glowing vapors, and they obtained a perplexing result. Instead of
a number of dark lines across a rainbow-tinted streak, they found bright lines of various
colors. Some gases would give a few such lines, others many, some only one or two.
Then they tried the spectrum of the electric spark, and they found here also a series of [337]
bright lines, but not always the same series. The spectrum varied according to the substances
between which the spark was taken and the medium through which it passed.
Lastly, they found that the light from an incandescent solid or liquid, when shining
through various vapors, no longer gives a spectrum without dark lines, but that the dark
lines which then appear vary in position, according to the nature of the vapor through which
the light has passed.
Here were a number of strange facts, seemingly too discordant and too perplexing to
admit of being interpreted. Yet one discovery only was wanting to bring them all into
unison.
In 1859, Kirchhoff, while engaged in observing the solar spectrum, lighted on the
discovery that a certain double dark line, which had already been found to correspond
exactly in position with the double bright line forming the spectrum of the glowing vapor of
sodium, was intensified when the light of the sun was allowed to pass through that vapor.
This at once suggested the idea that the presence of this dark line (or, rather, pair of dark
lines) in the spectrum of the sun is due to the existence of the vapor of sodium in the solar
atmosphere, and that this vapor has the power of absorbing the same order of light-waves as
it emits. It would of course follow from this that the other dark lines in the solar spectrum
are due to the presence of other absorbent vapors in its atmosphere, and that the identity of
these would admit of being established in the same way, supposing this general law to hold, [338]
that a vapor emits the same light-waves that it is capable of absorbing.
Kirchhoff was soon able to confirm his views by a variety of experiments. The general
principles to which his researches led—in other words, the principles which form the basis
of spectrum analysis—are as follows:
1. An incandescent solid or liquid gives a continuous spectrum.
2. A glowing vapor gives a spectrum of white lines, each vapor having its own set of
bright lines, so that, from the appearance of a bright-line spectrum, one can tell the nature of
the vapor or vapors whose light forms the spectrum.
3. An incandescent solid or liquid shining through absorbent vapors gives a rainbow-
tinted spectrum crossed by dark lines, these dark lines having the same position as the bright
lines belonging to the spectra of the vapors; so that, from the arrangement of the dark lines
in such a spectrum, one can tell the nature of the vapor or vapors which surround the source
of light.[24]
The application of the new method of research to the study of the solar spectrum quickly [339]
led to a number of most interesting discoveries. It was found that, besides sodium, the sun’s
atmosphere contains the vapors of iron, calcium, magnesium, chromium, and other metals.
The dark lines corresponding to these elements appear unmistakably in the solar spectrum.
There are other metals, such as copper and zinc, which seem to exist in the sun, though
some of the corresponding dark lines have not yet been recognized. As yet it has not been
proved that gold, silver, mercury, tin, lead, arsenic, antimony, or aluminium exist in the sun
—though we can by no means conclude, nor indeed is it at all probable, that they are absent
from his substance. The dark lines belonging to hydrogen are very well marked indeed in
solar spectrum, and, as we shall see presently, the study of these lines has afforded most
interesting information respecting the physical constitution of the sun.
Now we notice at once how importantly these researches into the sun’s structure bear
upon the subject of this treatise. It would be indeed interesting to consider the actual [340]
condition of the central orb of the planetary scheme, to picture in imagination the metallic
oceans which exist upon his surface, the continual evaporation from those oceans, the
formation of metallic clouds, and the downpour of metallic showers upon the surface of the
sun. But apart from such considerations, and viewing Kirchhoff’s discoveries simply in their
relation to the subject of other worlds, we have enough to occupy our attention.
If it could have been shown that, in all probability, the substance of the sun consists of
materials wholly different from those which exist in this earth, the conclusion obviously to
be drawn from such a discovery would be that the other planets also are differently
constituted. We could not find any just reason for believing that in Jupiter or Mars there
exist the elements with which we are acquainted, when we found that even the central orb of
the planetary system exhibits no such feature of resemblance to the earth. But now that we
know, quite certainly, that the familiar elements, iron, sodium, and calcium, exist in the
sun’s substance, while we are led to believe, with almost perfect assurance, that all the
elements we are acquainted with also exist there, we see at once that, in all probability, the
other planets are constituted in the same way. There may of course be special differences: in
one planet the proportionate distribution of the elements may differ, and even differ very
markedly, from that which prevails in some other planet. But the general conclusion [341]
remains, that the planets are formed of the elements which have so long been known as
terrestrial; for we can not recognize any reason for believing that our earth alone, of all the
orbs which circle around the sun, resembles that great central orb in general constitution.
Now, we have in this general law a means of passing beyond the bounds of the Solar
System, and forming no indistinct conceptions as to the existence and character of worlds
circling around other suns. For these orbs, like our sun, contain in their substance many of
the so-called terrestrial elements, while it may not unsafely be asserted that all, or nearly all,
those elements, and few or no elements unknown to us, exist in the substance of every single
star that shines upon us from the celestial concave. Hence we conclude that round those suns
also there circle orbs constituted like themselves, and therefore containing the elements with
which we are familiar. And the mind is immediately led to speculate on the uses which those
elements are intended to subserve. If iron, for example, is present in some noble orb circling
around Sirius, we speculate not unreasonably respecting the existence on that orb—either
now or in the past, or at some future time—of beings capable of applying that metal to the
useful purposes which man makes it subserve. The imagination suggests immediately the
existence of arts and sciences, trades and manufactures, on that distant world. We know how
intimately the use of iron has been associated with the progress of human civilization, and
though we must ever remain in ignorance of the actual condition of intelligent beings in [342]
other worlds, we are yet led, by the mere presence of an element which is so closely related
to the wants of man, to believe, with a new confidence, that for such beings those worlds
must in truth have been fashioned.
I would fain dwell longer on the thoughts suggested by the researches of Kirchhoff.
Gladly too would I enter at length on an account of those interesting discoveries which have
been made in connection with the total eclipses of the sun. One point, however, remains
which is too intimately connected with my subject to be passed over.
I refer to the sun’s corona.
It has been proved that the solar prominences consist of glowing vapors, hydrogen being
their chief constituent. It has been found also, by comparing Mr. Lockyer’s observations of
the prominence-spectra with Dr. Frankland’s elaborate researches into the peculiarities
presented by the spectrum of hydrogen at different pressures, that even in the very
neighborhood of the solar photosphere these vapors probably exist at a pressure so moderate
as to indicate that the limits of the sun’s vaporous envelope can not lie very far (relatively)
from the outer solar cloud-layer.
Now, the solar corona has been seen, during total eclipses of the sun, to extend to a
distance at least equal to the sun’s diameter from the eclipsed orb. So that, assuming the
corona to be a solar atmosphere, it would have a depth of about eight hundred and fifty
thousand miles, and being also drawn toward the sun by his enormous attractive energy [343]
(exceeding more than twenty-seven times that of the earth), it could not fail to exert a
pressure on his surface exceeding many thousand-fold that of our air upon the earth. In fact,
such an atmosphere, let its outermost layers be as rare as we can conceive, would yet have
its lower layers absolutely liquefied, if not solidified, by the enormous pressure to which
they would be subjected. We can not, then, believe this corona to be a solar atmosphere.
Fig. 33.—Tychonic System
Yet it is quite impossible to dissociate the corona, either wholly or in part, from the sun. I
am aware that physicists of eminence have attempted to do this, and not only so, but to
make of the zodiacal light a terrestrial phenomenon. But they have overlooked
considerations which oppose themselves irresistibly to such a conclusion.
In the first place, the mere fact that, during a total eclipse, the moon looks black, in the
very heart of the corona, affords, when properly understood, the most conclusive evidence [344]
that the light of the corona comes from behind the moon. If the glare of our atmosphere
could by any possibility account for the corona (which is not the case), then that glare
should appear over the moon’s disk also. That this is so is proved by the fact that, when the
glare really does cover the moon, as while the sun is but slightly eclipsed, the moon is not
projected as a black disk on the background of the sky, though, where her outline crosses the
sun, it appears black, by contrast with the intensity of his light.[25] The point seems, however,
too obvious to need discussion.
And, secondly, as Mr. Baxendell has pointed out, during totality the part of the earth’s
atmosphere between the eye and the corona is not illuminated by the sun. Over a wide space
all round the sun we are looking through an atmosphere which is completely dark. In fact, if
the earth’s atmosphere alone were in question, we ought to see a dark or negative corona
around the sun, the illuminated atmosphere only beginning to be faintly visible at a
considerable angular distance from the sun. This argument, rightly understood, is altogether
decisive of the question.[26]
But the spectroscope has given certain very perplexing evidence respecting the light of [345]
the corona, and it remains that we should endeavor to see how that evidence bears on the
interesting problem which the corona presents to our consideration.
During the total eclipse of 1868 the American observers found that the spectrum of the
corona is continuous, but crossed by certain bright lines. If we accept the absence of dark
lines as established by the evidence (which is doubtful), this result seems at first sight very
difficult to explain. Referring to the principles of spectroscopic analysis stated on pp. 338-
339, it will be seen that we should be led to infer that the corona consists of incandescent
matter surrounded by certain glowing gases. It is difficult to suppose that this is the real
explanation of the phenomenon.
Mr. Lockyer suggests that, if the corona shone by reflecting the solar light, the continuous [346]
spectrum might be accounted for by supposing the light from the glowing vapors around the
sun to supply the part wanting where the solar dark lines are, and that some of these vapors
shining yet more brightly would exhibit their bright lines upon the continuous background
of the spectrum. This view, as applied by Mr. Lockyer to the theory that the corona is a
terrestrial phenomenon, is untenable, for the reasons already adduced. But, independently of
those reasons, there are others which render such a solution of the difficulty unavailable.
Now, remembering that we have two established facts for our guidance—(1) the fact that
the corona can not be a solar atmosphere, and (2) the fact that it must be a solar appendage
—I think a way may be found toward a satisfactory explanation.
Let it be premised that the bright lines of the coronal spectrum correspond in position to
those seen in the spectrum of the aurora, and that the same lines are seen in the spectrum of
the Zodiacal Light, and in that of the phosphorescent light occasionally seen over the
heavens at night.
Since we have every reason to believe that the light of the aurora is due to electrical
discharges taking place in the upper regions of the air, we are invited to the belief that the
coronal light may be due to similar discharges taking place between the particles (of
whatever nature) constituting the corona.
Now, though the appearance of an aurora is due to some special terrestrial action
(however excited), yet the material substances between which the discharges take place [347]
must be assumed to be at all times present in the upper regions of air. In all probability, they
are the particles of those meteors which the earth is continually encountering. And since we
know that meteor-systems must be aggregated in far greater numbers near the sun than near
the earth, we may regard the coronal light as due to electrical discharges excited by the sun’s
action, and taking place between the members of such systems. Besides this light, however,
there must necessarily be a large proportion of light reflected from these meteoric bodies. In
this way the peculiar character of the coronal spectrum may be readily accounted for. We
know, from the auroral spectrum, that the principal bright lines due to the electrical
discharges would be precisely where we see bright lines in the coronal spectrum. But,
besides these, there would be fainter bright lines corresponding to the various elements
which exist in the meteoric masses. These elements, we know, are the same as those in the
substance of the sun. Thus the bright lines would correspond in position with the dark lines
of the solar spectrum. Hence, as light reflected by the meteors would give the ordinary solar
spectrum, there would result from the combination a continuous spectrum, on which the
bright lines first mentioned would be seen, as during the American eclipse.
What the polariscope has told us respecting the corona is in accordance with this view.
In the same way the quality of the Zodiacal Light admits of being perfectly accounted for, [348]
without resorting to the hypothesis that this phenomenon is a terrestrial one.
The explanation thus put forward has at least the advantage of being founded on well-
established relations. We know that the auroral light is associated with the earth’s
magnetism, and that meteoric bodies are continually falling upon the earth’s atmosphere. We
know, also, that the sun exerts magnetic influences a thousand-fold more intense than those
of the earth, and that in his neighborhood there must be many million times more meteoric
systems.
But we have other and independent reasons, which must not be overlooked, for
considering the corona to be of some such nature as I have suggested. Leverrier has shown
that there probably exists in the neighborhood of the sun a family of bodies whose united
mass suffices appreciably to affect the motions of the planet Mercury. It would not be safe to
neglect considerations thus vouched for.
Mr. Baxendell also has shown that certain periodic variations in the earth’s magnetism
point to the existence of such a family of bodies; and he has been able to assign to them a
position according well with that determined by Leverrier.
Now, whatever opinion we form as to the exact character of the system of bodies pointed
to by the researches of Leverrier and Baxendell—whether we suppose that system to form a
zone around the sun, or that (as I believe) the system is merely due to the aggregation of
meteoric perihelia in the sun’s neighborhood—we may be quite certain of this, that during a [349]
total solar eclipse the system could not fail to become visible. Hence there is a double
objection to the view put forward by Mr. Lockyer and others. In the first place, it fails to
account for the appearance presented by the corona; in the second place, it fails to render an
account of the implied non-appearance of the system which, according to the researches of
Leverrier and Baxendell, circles around the sun.
We know that the sun is the sole source whence light and heat are plentifully supplied to
the worlds which circle around him. The question immediately suggests itself—Whence
does the sun derive those amazing stores of force from whence he is continually supplying [350]
his dependent worlds? We know that, were the sun a mass of burning matter, he would be
consumed in a few thousand years. We know that, were he simply a heated body, radiating
light and heat continually into space, he would in like manner have exhausted all his
energies in a few thousand years—a mere day in the history of his system. Whence, then,
comes the enormous supply of force which he has afforded for millions on millions of years,
and which also our reason tells us he will continue to afford while the worlds which circle
around him have need of it—in other words, for countless ages to come?
Now, there are two ways in which the solar energies might be maintained. The mere
contraction of the solar substance, Helmholtz tells us, would suffice to supply such
enormous quantities of heat that, if the heat actually given out by the sun were due to this
cause alone, there would not, in many thousands of years, be any perceptible diminution of
the sun’s diameter. But, secondly, the continual downfall of meteors upon the sun would
cause an emission of heat in quantities vast enough for the wants of all the worlds circling
round him; while his increase of mass from this cause would not be rendered perceptible in
thousands of years, either by any change in his apparent size or by changes in the motions of
his family of worlds.
It seems far from unlikely that both these processes are in operation at the same time.
Certainly the latter is, for we know, from the motions of the meteoric bodies which reach the [351]
earth, that myriads of these bodies must continually fall upon the sun. And if the corona and
Zodiacal Light really be due to the existence of flights of meteoric systems circling around
the sun, or to the existence in his neighborhood of the perihelia of many meteoric systems,
then there must be a supply of light and heat from this source very nearly if not quite
sufficient to account for the whole solar emission.
It is well worthy of notice, too, that the association between meteors and comets has an
important bearing on this question. We know that the most remarkable characteristic of
comets is the enormous diffusion of their substance. Now, in this diffusion there resides an
enormous fund of force. The contraction of a large comet to dimensions corresponding to a
very moderate mean density would be accompanied by the emission of a vast supply of heat.
And the question is worth inquiring into, whether we can indeed assume that the meteors
which reach our atmosphere are solid bodies, and not rather of cometic diffusion; since it is
difficult otherwise to account for the light and heat which they emit. Friction through the
rarer upper strata of our atmosphere will certainly not account for these phenomena; nor, I
think, will the compression of the atmosphere in front of the meteors; on the other hand, the
sudden contraction of a diffused vapor would be accompanied by precisely such results.
But, be this as it may, it is certain that a large portion of the substance of every comet is in a
singularly diffused state. And since the meteoric systems circling in countless millions [352]
round the sun are, in all probability, associated in the most intimate manner with comets, we
may recognize in this diffusion, as well as in the mere downfall of meteors, the source of an
enormous supply of light and heat.
And lastly, turning from our sun to the other suns which shine in uncounted myriads
throughout space, we see the same processes at work upon them all. Each star-sun has its
coronal and its zodiacal disks, formed by meteoric and cometic systems; for otherwise each
would quickly cease to be a sun. Each star-sun emits, no doubt, the same magnetic
influences which give to the Zodiacal Light and to the solar corona their peculiar
characteristics. And thus the worlds which circle round those orbs may resemble our own in
all those relations which we refer to terrestrial magnetism, as well as in the circumstance
that on them also there must be, as on our own earth, a continual downfall of minute
meteors. In those worlds, perchance, the magnetic compass directs the traveler over desert
wastes or trackless oceans; in their skies, the aurora displays its brilliant streamers; while,
amid the constellations which deck their heavens, meteors sweep suddenly into view, and
comets extend their vast length athwart the celestial vault, a terror to millions, but a subject
of study and research to the thoughtful.
[353]
FOOTNOTES:
[23] Professor Kirkwood has published a most interesting series of inquiries, going far
to prove that the real secret or the planetary influences lies in the fact that the
sun’s surface is not uniform, and that on a certain solar longitude the planetary
influences are more effective than elsewhere.
[24] To these may be added the following law:
4. Light reflected from any opaque body gives the same spectrum as it would
have given before reflection.
5. But if the opaque body be surrounded by vapors, the dark lines corresponding
to these vapors make their appearance in the spectrum with a distinctness
proportioned to the extent to which the light has penetrated those vapors before
being reflected to us.
6. If the reflecting body be itself luminous, the spectrum belonging to it is
superadded to the spectrum belonging to the reflected light.
7. Glowing vapors surrounding an incandescent source of light may cause bright
lines or dark lines to appear in the spectrum, according as they are more or less
heated; or, they may emit just so much light as to make up for what they absorb,
in which case there will remain no trace of their presence.
8. The electric spark presents a bright-line spectrum, compounded of the spectra
belonging to the vapors of those substances between which, and of those through
which, the discharge takes place. According to the nature of these vapors and of
the discharge itself, the relative intensity of the component parts of the spectrum
will be variable.
Lastly, the appearance of the spectrum belonging to any element will vary
according to the circumstances of pressure and temperature under which the
element may emit light.
[25] It is also shown most conclusively, by a photograph of the eclipse of August,
1868, taken an instant before the totality. Here we see the glare trenching upon
the moon’s disk (elsewhere black), as it should theoretically. So soon as totality
commenced, the glare had reached the moon’s limb, whence it must immediately
have passed quickly away.
[26] In fact, if we take the mode of reasoning by which Mr. Lockyer has endeavored to
get over certain physical difficulties presently to be mentioned, we shall be able
to point definitely to the place where his argument fails. He says, conceive a tiny
moon placed so as to appear coincident with the centre of the sun’s disk. There
will be atmospheric glare as well as direct sunlight. Now, conceive this small
moon to expand until it all but covers the sun. Still there will be glare and a
certain small proportion of direct sunlight. So far his reasoning is most just. But
when he allows his expanding moon to cover the sun, and to extend beyond the
solar disk as in total eclipse, the atmospheric glare can no longer be assumed to
exist all round the expanding moon: at the moment when the moon just hides the
sun, the glare begins to leave the moon, a gradually expanding black ring being
formed round that body. It is only necessary to consider where the glare comes
from to see that this must be so.
I have taken no account of diffraction here, because it has been abundantly
proved that no corona of appreciable width could be formed around the moon
during total eclipse by the diffraction of the rays of light as they pass near the
moon’s limb.
MERCURY.—William F. Denning
M ercury is the nearest known planet to the sun. It is true that a body, provisionally
named Vulcan, has been presumed to exist in the space inferior to the orbit of
Mercury; but absolute proof is lacking, and every year the idea is losing strength in the
absence of any confirmation of a reliable kind. Not one of the regular and best observers of
the sun has recently detected any such body during its transits (which would be likely to
occur pretty frequently), and there is other evidence of a negative character; so that the ghost
of Vulcan may be said to have been laid, and we may regard it as proven that no major
planet revolves in the interval of 36,000,000 miles separating Mercury from the sun.
Copernicus, amid the fogs of the Vistula, looked for Mercury in vain, and complained in
his last hours that he had never seen it. Tycho Brahe, in the Island of Hueen, appears to have
been far more successful. The planet is extremely fugitive in his appearances, but is not
nearly so difficult to find as many suppose. Whenever the horizon is very clear, and the
planet well placed, a small sparkling object, looking more like a scintillating star than a
planetary body, will be detected at a low altitude and may be followed to the horizon.
Mercury revolves round the sun in 87 days, 23 hours, 15 minutes, and 44 seconds in an
eccentric orbit, so that his distance from that luminary varies from 43,350,000 to 28,570,000 [354]
miles. When in superior conjunction the apparent diameter of the planet is 4″.5; at inferior
conjunction it is 12″.9, and at elongation 7″. His real diameter is 3,000 miles.
Being situated so near to the sun, it is obvious that to an observer on the earth he must
always remain in the same general region of the firmament as that body. His orbital motion
enables him to successively assume positions to the east and west of the sun, and these are
known as his elongations, which vary in distance from 18° to 28°. He becomes visible at
these periods either in the morning or evening twilight, and under the best circumstances
may remain above the horizon two hours in the absence of the sun. The best times to
observe the planet are at his E. elongations during the first half of the year, or at his W.
elongations in the last half; for his position at such times being N. of the sun’s place, he
remains a long while in view.
Occasionally he presents quite a conspicuous aspect on the horizon, as in February, 1868,
when I thought his lustre vied with that of Jupiter, and in November, 1882, when he shone
brighter than Sirius. The planet is generally most conspicuous a few mornings after his W.
elongations and a few evenings before his E. elongations.
In the course of his orbital round, Mercury exhibits all the phases of the moon. Near his
elongations the disk is about half illuminated, and similar in form to that of our satellite
when in the first or third quarter. But the phase is not to be distinctly made out unless
circumstances are propitious. Galileo’s telescope failed to reveal it, and Hevelius, many [355]
years afterward, found it difficult. This is explained by the small diameter of the planet and
the rarity with which his disk appears sharply defined. The phase is sometimes noted to be
less than theory indicates; for the planet has been seen crescented when he should have
presented the form of a semicircle. Several observers have also remarked that his surface
displays a rosy tint, and that the terminator is more deeply shaded and indefinite than that of
Venus.
The atmosphere of Mercury is probably far less dense than that of Venus. The latter being
furthest from the sun might be expected to shine relatively more faintly than the former, but
the reverse is the case. Mercury has a dingy aspect in comparison with the bright white
lustre of Venus. On May 12, 1890, when the two planets were visible as evening stars, and
separated from each other by a distance of only 2°, I examined them in a 10-inch reflector,
power 145. The disk of Venus looked like newly polished silver, while that of Mercury
appeared of a dull leaden hue. A similar observation was made by Mr. Nasmyth on
September 28, 1878. The explanation appears to be that the atmosphere of Mercury is of
great rarity, and incapable of reflection in the same high degree as the dense atmosphere of
Venus.
As a naked-eye object, Mercury must necessarily be looked for when near the horizon;
but there is no such need in regard to telescopic observation, which ought to be only
attempted when the planet surmounts the dense lower vapors and is placed at a sufficient [356]
elevation to give the instrument a fair chance of producing a steady image. The presence of
sunshine need not seriously impair the definition, or make the disk too faint for detail.
I have occasionally seen Mercury, about two or three hours after his rising, with outlines
of extreme sharpness and quite comparable with the excellent views obtained of Venus at
the time of sunrise or sunset. Those who possess equatorials should pick up the planet in the
afternoon and follow him until after sunset, when the horizontal vapors will interfere. Others
who work with ordinary altazimuth stands will find it best to examine the planet at his
western elongations during the last half of the year, when he may be found soon after rising
by the naked eye or with an opera-glass, and retained in the telescope for several hours after
sunrise if necessary.
Mercury was displayed under several advantages in the morning twilight of November,
1882, and I made a series of observations with a 10-inch reflector, power 212. Several dark
markings were perceived, and a conspicuous white spot. The general appearance of the disk
was similar to that of Mars, and I forwarded a summary of my results to Professor
Schiaparelli of Milan, who favored me with the following interesting reply:
“I have myself been occupied with this planet during the past year (1882). You are right in
saying that Mercury is much easier to observe than Venus, and that his aspect resembles
Mars more than any other of the planets of the Solar System. It has some spots which [357]
become partially obscured and sometimes completely so; it has also some brilliant white
spots in a variable position.”
Professor Schiaparelli used an 8½-inch refractor in this work, and was able under some
favorable conditions to apply a power of 400. The outcome of his researches, encouraged
since 1882 by the addition of an 18-inch refractor to the appliances of his observatory, was
announced in the curious fact that the rotation of Mercury is performed in the same time that
the planet revolves round the sun! If this conclusion is just, Mercury constantly presents one
and the same hemisphere to the sun, and the behavior of the moon relatively to the earth has
found an analogy.
Spots or markings of any kind have rarely been distinguished on Mercury. On June 11,
1867, Prince recorded a bright spot, with faint lines diverging from it northeast and south.
The spot was a little south of the centre. Birmingham on March 13, 1870, glimpsed a large
white spot near the planet’s east limb, and Vögel, at Bothkamp, observed spots on April 14
and 22, 1871. These instances are quoted by Webb, and they, in combination with the
markings seen by Schiaparelli at Milan and by the author at Bristol in 1882, sufficiently
attest that this object deserves more attentive study.
One of the most interesting phenomena, albeit a somewhat rare event, in connection with
Mercury, is that of a transit across the sun. The planet then appears as a black circular spot.
Observers have noticed one or two very small luminous points on the black disk, and an [358]
annulus has been visible round it. These features are probably optical effects.
THE PLANET VENUS.—Camille Flammarion
R evolving round the sun in 224 days, Venus has its motion combined with ours in such a
manner that it passes its inferior conjunction, between the sun and us, every 584 days;
but the plane in which it revolves is inclined 3° 23′ to that in which the earth itself moves.
When Venus attains its greatest elongations from the sun it shines in the west in the evening,
then in the morning in the east, with a splendid brightness which eclipses that of all the
stars. It is, without comparison, the most magnificent star of our sky. Its light is so vivid that
it casts a shadow. Sometimes, even, it pierces the azure of the sky, in spite of the presence of
the sun above the horizon, and shines in full daylight.
The maximum visibility of Venus is produced by its greatest phase, by its greatest
elongation from the sun, and by the clearness of our atmosphere.
The brilliant Venus was certainly the first planet noticed by the ancients, as much on
account of its brightness as its rapid motion. Hardly is the sun set than it sparkles in the
twilight; from evening to evening it removes further from the west and increases in
brightness; during several months it reigns sovereign of the skies, then plunges into the solar
fires and disappears. It was pre-eminently the star of the evening, the shepherd’s star, the
star of sweet confidences. It was the first of celestial beauties, and the names conferred upon [359]
it correspond to the direct impression which it produced on contemplative minds. Homer
called it “Callistos,” the Beautiful; Cicero named it Vesper, the evening star, and Lucifer, the
morning star, a name likewise given in the Bible and the ancient mythologies to the chief of
the celestial army.
The most ancient astronomical observation we have of Venus is a Babylonian record of
the year 685 b. c. It is written on a brick and preserved in the British Museum.
The best hours for examining Venus in a telescope are those of daylight. In the night the
irradiation produced by the brilliant light of this beautiful planet prevents us from
distinguishing clearly the outlines of its phases.
When Venus occupies the region of its orbit behind the sun, with reference to us—which
is called the point of superior conjunction—it is at its greatest distance, and is reduced to a
disk of 9½ seconds in diameter. It comes imperceptibly toward us, and when it passes its
quadrature, at its mean distance, it presents the aspect of a half-moon. It soon attains its
most brilliant light, at the epoch when it shines at a distance of 39° from the sun, and shows
the third phase 69 days before its inferior conjunction. Its apparent diameter is then 40
seconds, and the width of its illuminated part is scarcely 10 seconds. In this position we see
the fourth of the disk illuminated; but this quarter emits more light than the more complete
phases. Finally, when it reaches the region of its orbit nearest to the earth, it shows us [360]
nothing more than an excessively thin crescent, since it is then between the sun and us, and
presents to us, so to say, its dark hemisphere. This is the position where its apparent size is
greatest, and it then measures 62 seconds in diameter. After passing its inferior conjunction
the phases are reproduced, in inverse order, as a morning star.
Venus is constantly visible in full daylight in astronomical instruments, even at the
moment of its superior conjunction. It is then round and quite small. At the epochs of its
inferior conjunction it presents itself under the form of a very thin crescent.
We sometimes notice that the interior of the crescent of Venus, the remainder of the disk,
is less black than the background of the sky. This has been called the ashy light (lumière
cendrée) of Venus, although it has no satellite to produce it. It seems to me that this
visibility, rather subjective than objective, arises from clouds on the planet, which whiten its
disk and vaguely reflect the stellar light scattered through space. The eye instinctively
continues the outline of the crescent, and imagines, rather than sees, the rest.
The revolution of Venus round the sun is performed in an orbit almost exactly circular,
and without perceptible eccentricity (0.0068), in a period of 224 days, 16 hours, 49 minutes,
8 seconds.
The days of Venus, also, are a little more rapid than ours, but not much. Since the year
1666 attentive observation of the planet led Cassini to conclude that it turns on itself in 23
hours, 15 minutes. This observation is extremely difficult, on account of the brightness of [361]
the planet and the faintness of the irregularities visible on its disk.
The year of Venus, composed of 224 terrestrial days, consequently contains 231 of its
own, since the day is a little shorter there than here.
These same observations show that the axis of rotation of this planet is much more
inclined than ours, and that this inclination is 55 degrees. It follows that the seasons,
although each lasting but 56 terrestrial days, or 58 Venusian days, are much more intense on
this world than on ours. They pass, without transition, from summer to winter.
The inclination of the world of Venus being more than twice as great as ours, we have
only to take a terrestrial globe and incline it by the same quantity to understand the climates
and seasons which will result. We may easily see that the torrid zone extends, in this case,
up to the frigid zone, and even beyond it; and, reciprocally, the frigid zone extends to the
torrid zone, and even encroaches on it; so that no place remains for a temperate zone. There
is not, then, on Venus any temperate climate, but all latitudes are both tropical and arctic.
It follows, then, from all these circumstances, that the seasons and climates are much
more violent and more varied than ours. This neighboring world shows nearly the same
dimensions as ours. Thus this planet is truly the twin sister of ours.
The resemblance will be still more complete if we add that this world is certainly
surrounded by an atmosphere.
When we examine with the spectroscope the light reflected by this planet we first find the [362]
lines of the solar spectrum (and this is natural, since the planets have no light of their own,
and merely reflect that of the sun); but we notice besides several absorption lines similar to
those which the terrestrial atmosphere gives, and particularly those of clouds and water
vapor.
We may also add that attentive observation of the indentations visible on the crescent of
Venus has shown that the surface of this planet is quite as uneven as that of the earth, and
even more so; that there are there Andes, Cordilleras, Alps, and Pyrenees, and that the most
elevated summits attain a height of 44,000 metres (27 miles). It has even been ascertained
that the Northern Hemisphere is more mountainous than the Southern.
Even the study of the geography of Venus has already been commenced. But it is
extremely difficult to draw, and the hours of sufficiently pure atmosphere and possible
observation are very rare. This difficulty will be easily understood if we reflect that it is
exactly when Venus arrives at its nearest to us that it is least visible, since, its illuminated
hemisphere being always turned toward the sun, it is its dark hemisphere which is presented
to us. The nearer it approaches us, the narrower the crescent becomes. Add to this its vivid
light and its clouds, and you may imagine what difficulty astronomers have in dealing with
it.
Twelve Views of Jupiter
Taken at Intervals within Six Consecutive Weeks
However, by observing it in the daytime to avoid the glare, and not waiting till the
crescent becomes too thin, by choosing the quadratures, and making use of moments of [363]
great atmospherical purity, observers succeed, from time to time, in perceiving grayish
spots, which may indicate the place of its seas.
Of what nature are the inhabitants of Venus? Do they resemble us in physical form? Are
they endowed with an intelligence analogous to ours? Do they pass their life in pleasure, as
Bernardin de St. Pierre said, or, rather, are they so tormented by the inclemency of their
seasons that they have no delicate perception, and are incapable of any scientific or artistic
attention? These are interesting questions, to which we have no reply. All that we can say is,
that organized life on Venus must be little different from terrestrial life, and that this world is
one of those which resembles ours most. The imaginary travelers to these worlds of the sky
have always carried with them their terrestrial ideas. The only scientific conclusion which
we can draw from astronomical observation is that this world differs little from ours in
volume, in weight, in density, and in the duration of its days and nights; that it differs a little
more in the rapidity of its years, the intensity of its climates and seasons, the extent of its
atmosphere, and its greater proximity to the sun. It should, then, be inhabited by vegetable,
animal, and human races but little different from those which people our planet. As to
imagining it desert or sterile, this is a hypothesis which could not arise in the brain of any
naturalist. The action of the divine sun must be there, as in Mercury, still more fertile than
his terrestrial work, already so wonderful. We may add that Venus and Mercury, having been [364]
formed after the earth, are relatively younger than our planet.
The inhabitants of Venus see us shining in their sky like a magnificent star of the first
magnitude, soaring in the zodiac, and showing motions similar to those which the planet
Mars presents to us; but instead of showing a reddish brightness, the earth shines in the sky
as a bluish light. It is from Venus that we are most luminous. The inhabitants of Venus with
the naked eye see our moon shining beside the earth and revolving round it in twenty-seven
days. They form a magnificent couple. Our planet seen from there measures 65″, and the
moon nearly 18″; the moon seen from Venus shows the same diameter as the earth seen
from the sun. Mercury is brilliant, and comes immediately after the earth in brightness.
Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn are also visible as from here, but a little less luminous. The
constellations of the whole sky show exactly the same aspect as seen from the earth.
THE EARTH AS A PLANET.—Élisée Reclus
T he earth on which we dwell is one of the lowest in rank among the heavenly bodies. If
an astronomer in some other planet were exploring the immensity of space, our earth,
owing to its small size, might readily elude his intelligent view. A mere satellite of the sun,
the volume of which is 1,255,000 times greater, the earth is but a point as compared with the [365]
immense tract of ether traversed by the planets in their courses round their central globe.
The sun itself is only a spark, which seems lost amid the eighteen millions of stars which
Herschel’s telescope discerned in the Milky Way; the latter, an immense agglomeration of
suns and planets, which looks to us like a broad streak of light round the whole universe, is
in reality nothing but a nebula. Beyond our own sky, other skies stretch far away into
infinity, and others beyond these, so that light notwithstanding its prodigious rapidity, takes
eternities to cross them. How small the earth seems in this fathomless abyss of stars!
In the form of its orbit, in its movements round the sun and on its own axis, in the
succession of days and seasons, and in all the phenomena governed by the great law of
attraction, the earth becomes the representative of all the other planets; in studying it, we
study all the heavenly bodies.
Our planet is a spheroid; that is, a sphere flattened at the two poles and enlarged at the
equator, so that all the circles passing through the extremity of the polar axis form ellipses.
The presumed depression of each pole is about thirteen miles, nearly a three-hundredth part
of the radius of the earth; but it is not altogether certain that the two poles are equally
flattened. Perhaps a contrast exists between the two hemispheres, not only in the features of
their continents and the distribution of seas, but also in their geometrical shape. Be this as it
may, it appears to be proved that the curvature is not exactly the same at all points of the
earth at an equal distance from the poles; the meridians appear without exception to be [366]
irregular ellipses.
The dimensions of the earth, as we have already seen, are almost as nothing compared
with the larger celestial bodies, and especially with the extent of space which can be
explored by the telescope. If light, the speed of which has been adopted in astronomy as a
term of comparison, could be diffused in a curved line, it would travel seven times round the
globe in a second of time; this standard of measurement, therefore, the only one suited to the
stellary field, is completely inapplicable to the surface of our globe.
The isolated globule in the immensity of space which we call the earth is not motionless,
as the ancients necessarily supposed, looking upon it, as they did, as the immovable base of
the firmament of heaven. Hurried on in the vortex of universal vitality, our globe is ever
actuated by ceaseless motion, describing in ether a series of elliptic spirals so complicated
that astronomers have not yet been able to calculate their various curves. Besides rotating on
its own axis, the earth describes an ellipse round the sun, and, under the influence of this
body, is drawn along from one heaven to another toward distant constellations. It also
oscillates and rocks on its axis, and deviates more or less from its path, to salute, as it were,
every heavenly body which meets it. It is probable that it never passes a second time
through the same regions of the air; yet, if it has again to traverse the spiral line of ellipses it
has already described, it would be after a cycle of so many thousands of millions of years, [367]
that the earth itself, completely transformed, would be no longer the same planet.
The motion of the earth, the immediate effects of which are the most obvious to the notice
of men, is the daily rotation which takes place round an ideal axis passing through the two
poles. The globe turns from right to left, or from west to east—that is, in a contrary direction
to the apparent motion of the sun and stars, which seem to rise in the east and to set in the
west. As the earth’s axis terminates at each pole, there is least surface-motion at those
points, and the motion is the more rapid in any part of the surface of the globe the further it
is from the central axis. At St. Petersburg, in 60° latitude, the speed of rotation is about nine
miles a minute; in Paris, it exceeds eleven and a half miles during the same brief time; on
the equatorial line, which may be looked upon as the ring of an immense wheel, the speed of
the earth is twice as great as it is at 60° of latitude—that is, about eighteen miles a minute,
or 528 yards a second—a rapidity equal to the flight of a 26-pound cannon-ball impelled by
thirteen pounds of powder. By means of this rotatory motion, the earth presents toward the
sun each of its faces alternately, and each also in turn toward the comparatively darker
regions of space; the succession of day and night is thus constituted. In addition to this, the
rotation of the earth is an important fact which must always be taken into account in
determining the direction of fluids in motion on the surface of the globe, such as streams and
rivers, also marine and atmospheric currents.
The annual revolution which the earth performs round the sun follows the line of an [368]
ellipse, one of the foci of which is occupied by the central star; the eccentricity of the ellipse
is nearly equal to 17/1000th of the great axis. The distance between the sun and the earth
always varies according to the particular point of its orbit which the latter is traveling over.
At its aphelion, that is, at its greatest remoteness, this distance is about 93¾ millions of
miles; at the period of its perihelion, when the two heavenly bodies are nearest to each
other, it is approximately 90,259,000 miles. The mean distance, as estimated by astronomers
since the corrections of Encke, Hansen, Foucault, and Hind, is 91,839,000 miles. This extent
of space is traversed by the solar rays in 8 minutes, 16 seconds; sound would take fifteen
years in passing through the same distance.
As Kepler has laid down in his celebrated laws, our planet moves with an increased
rapidity as it approaches nearer to the sun and travels more slowly in proportion to its
distance from that luminary; but its mean speed may be estimated at nearly nineteen miles a
second, or sixty times the rapidity of a ball from the cannon’s mouth. This speed, which
makes one dizzy to think of, is to be added, as regards each point in the surface of the earth,
to the rotatory motion which impels it round the polar axis.
After having turned round 366 times on its axis, our planet has terminated its orbicular
course, and is in the same position relatively to the sun as at its starting-point; it has then
accomplished its year.
This daily rotation of the earth round its axis produces the succession of days and nights, [369]
and, in the same way, its annual revolution round the sun causes the alternations of the
seasons. If the axis of the earth, that is the ideal line which passes through its two poles,
were perpendicular to the plane of its annual orbit, it is evident that the portion of the globe
lighted by the sun would invariably extend from one pole to the other, and that in both
hemispheres the days and nights would always consist of twelve hours each. But this is not
the case. The earth performs its revolutionary movements in an inclined position; its ideal
polar axis is sloped about 23° 28′ from a perpendicular to its plane, and this position is so
far maintained that as regards the comparatively rapid succession of days and seasons it may
be looked upon as invariable. This obliquity of axis causes continued changes in the phase
presented to the sun. The portion of the earth illumined by the rays of the sun varies every
day; for, although the planetary axis may appear to maintain its extremity in a fixed position
as regards some point in infinite space, in respect to the sun it presents a constantly varying
degree of inclination, in consequence of the continual motion of the earth. Twice during the
course of the year it so happens that the solar rays fall perpendicularly upon the equator of
the earth; at every other period in the annual revolution, sometimes the Northern and
sometimes the Southern Hemisphere receives the greatest amount of light.
The astronomical year commences on the 20th of March, at the exact moment when the
sun illumines the equator in a vertical direction, and the line of separation between light and [370]
shade passes through the two poles. The period of darkness is then equal to that of light, and
admits of exactly twelve hours at all points of the earth. Hence the name of “equinox”
(equality of nights). But after this day, which in the Northern Hemisphere serves as the
starting-point of spring, the earth continues its translatory movement. In consequence of the
inclination of its axis, the Northern Hemisphere, being turned toward the sun, receives a
greater quantity of light, while the southern half of the globe is less vividly lighted. The
vertical rays of the sun now fall more and more to the north of the equator, and the circle of
light, far from arresting its progress at the poles, where the day of six months’ duration is
commencing to dawn, extends far beyond it over the regions of the north. On the 21st of
June, the day of the first solstice, the axis of the earth being deeply inclined toward the sun,
this luminary shines on the zenith of the tropic of Cancer at 23½° north of the equator, and
its light illumines the whole of the arctic zone, that is, the portion of the earth’s surface
extending to 23½° round the North Pole. Then spring ceases and summer begins as regards
the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, on the contrary, autumn is giving
place to winter. Above the equator long days are prevailing, interrupted by short nights;
while in the south it is the nights which last the longest. In the arctic zone the sun performs
its apparent course of diurnal rotation entirely above the horizon. The six months’ day,
which spring inaugurated at the North Pole, attains its high noon on the first day of summer. [371]
At the same moment midnight arrives in the darkness which is oppressing its antipodes.
Immediately after the 21st of June all the phenomena which took place during the
preceding season are directly reversed. The sun appears to retrograde toward the southern
horizon; its vertical rays cease to fall on the line of the northern tropic, and constantly
approach the equator. The zone of light in the northern pole and of shade in the southern
equally diminish, and the days shorten in the Northern Hemisphere in the same proportion
as they lengthen in the Southern; an equilibrium is gradually being re-established between
the two halves of the earth. On the 22d of September the position of the sun is again exactly
above the equator, and its light just reaches both poles. The equinox, or the absolute equality
of day and night in every part of the globe, occurs for the second time in the year; but this
moment of equilibrium is, so to speak, but a mathematical point between the two seasons.
The axis of the earth which, during the six months past, turned the North Pole toward the
sun, now presents to him the South Pole; the vertical rays of the central luminary fall to the
south of the earth’s equator, and the Southern Hemisphere, in its turn, is the best endowed of
the two halves of the globe in the amount of light it receives and in the length of its days. In
the Southern Hemisphere spring is commencing; in the Northern, autumn. Three months
afterward, on the 21st of December, the sun comes directly over the southern tropic, or the
tropic of Capricorn, 23½° south of the equator, and the whole of the antarctic zone is [372]
presented to the solar rays. Summer has begun in the Southern Hemisphere, and at the same
time winter commences in that of the north. Then, as the globe moves on, these two seasons
follow each other in their course, until at length the earth attains a position similar to that
from which it started; the March equinox, the first day of spring in Europe, and the first day
of autumn in Australia, commences anew the astronomical year.
The elliptical form of the earth’s orbit and the unequal pace of the globe in the various
points of its course cause some considerable variations in the duration of the seasons. In
fact, from the 20th of March to the 22d of September, that is, during the spring and summer
of the Northern Hemisphere, the earth takes 186 days to travel over the first and largest half
of its orbit, while during the winter period, from the 22d of September to the 20th of March,
only 179 days are required to accomplish the second half of its journey. The summer period
of the Northern Hemisphere actually exceeds by seven or eight days, or about 187 hours, the
corresponding period in the southern half of the globe; added to this, in consequence of the
longer space of time during which the Arctic Pole remains inclined toward the sun in the
regions north of the equator, the hours of daylight exceed the hours of night, while in the
south the hours of darkness predominate. This is, however, to some extent compensated for;
as, although in the southern regions of the earth the summer lasts a shorter time, our planet
is then closer to the sun; it is at its perihelion, and consequently receives a larger proportion [373]
of heat. There is, however, no doubt about the fact—as it is proved by a direct observation,
both of the winds and currents, and also of their various temperatures—that, taking an equal
distance from the equator, the southern regions are colder than those of the north.
If an equality of seasons between the two halves of the world does not at present exist, it
will not fail to be established after a long series of centuries by means of a slow terrestrial
movement, which has been known by the name of the precession of the equinoxes. Just as a
top (if we may be allowed to avail ourselves of so old an illustration) turns round on the
ground and bends over successively in every direction, thus describing with its axis an ideal
cone, so the earth revolves in space, and slowly sways the line of its poles. This line, which
is always sloped at an angle of 66° 32′ to the plane of the terrestrial orbit, turns round with a
slight lateral motion, so as always to point to a new region of the sky; if it were prolonged
indefinitely it would describe a circle amid the distant stars. As the axis of the earth is
constantly changing its direction in this way, the plane of the equator must vary exactly to
the same extent in its position as regards the sun. In fact, every year the exact moment of the
March equinox anticipates by about twenty minutes the time at which the corresponding
equinox fell in the year preceding. Each revolution of the earth round the sun brings a fresh
advance of twenty minutes in the determination of the equinox; and as, during the long [374]
course of ages, the axis of the earth does not intermit in this swaying motion, the time must
come, after a period of 12,900 years, that the conditions of the seasons will be altogether
changed. The hemisphere which hitherto received the larger proportion of heat will receive
the lesser share, and that half of the globe which has endured the larger number of wintry
days will now, in its turn, enjoy the more lengthened period of summer. Then, after a second
period of 12,900 years, during which the relation between the seasons of the two
hemispheres is being gradually modified, the axis of the earth completes its round of
swaying, which has lasted for 258 centuries, and the position of the globe in respect to the
sun being nearly the same as at its starting-point, a second cycle of seasons will then
commence.
We might call this period the earth’s great year, if, at the end of it, the earth were in an
identical position to that which it occupied at the commencement; but this is not the case.
The attraction of the moon, and the disturbances caused by the vicinity of certain planets,
are incessantly modifying the curve described in the starry fields of space by the earth’s axis,
and complicate it with a multitude of spirals, the various periods of which do not coincide
with the great period of the swaying of the axis. The successive undulations form a
continuous system of interwoven spirals. “It is a manifestation of the infinite.”
But even this is not all. In addition to all the motions of the globe which we have already
pointed out—its diurnal rotation, its annual revolution round the sun, the rhythmical [375]
swaying of its axis, proved by the precession of the equinoxes, the nutation or more rapid
swaying which is caused by the attraction of the moon—we must now notice the enormous
translatory movement which is dragging it through endless tracks of space in the train of the
sun. Not many years ago, this motion was entirely unknown to astronomers, and yet it is
going on with inconceivable rapidity—a rapidity more than double that of the course of the
planet round its central luminary. In one second of time the earth moves about forty-four
miles toward the point of the heavens where we find the constellation of Hercules. During
one year only she travels 1,382 millions of miles in this direction. Our own little earth itself
is carried on from space to space, and never closes the cycle of its revolutions. Ever since
the time when its particles were first grouped together, it has been describing in space the
infinite spiral of its ellipses, and thus will it go on turning and oscillating in ether until the
moment when it will exist no longer as an independent planet. For the earth, too, must have
an end; like every other body in the universe, it comes into existence, and lives only to die
when its turn comes. Already its annual motion of rotation is diminishing in speed; certainly
this slackening of pace is not very observable, since no astronomer from Hipparchus to
Laplace has yet exactly defined it. But, unless some cosmical force acting in a contrary
direction compensates for the loss of speed caused by the friction of the tides against the bed
and the shores of the ocean, the impetus of our planet will every century diminish. After [376]
various catastrophes which it is impossible to foresee, the earth will eventually completely
change its course of action, and lose its independent existence, either uniting itself with
other planetary bodies or breaking up into fragments; or it will perhaps terminate its course
by falling like a mere aerolite upon the surface of the sun.
THE MOON.—Thomas Gwyn Elger
W e know, both by tradition and published records, that from the earliest times the faint
gray and light spots which diversify the face of our satellite excited the wonder and
stimulated the curiosity of mankind, giving rise to superstitions more or less crude and
erroneous as to their actual nature and significance. It is true that Anaxagoras, five centuries
before our era, and probably other philosophers preceding him—certainly Plutarch at a
much later date—taught that these delicate markings and differences of tint, obvious to
every one with normal vision, point to the existence of hills and valleys on her surface; the
latter maintaining that the irregularities of outline presented by the “terminator,” or line of
demarcation between the illumined and unillumined portion of her spherical superficies, are
due to mountains and their shadows; but more than fifteen centuries elapsed before the truth
of this sagacious conjecture was unquestionably demonstrated. Selenography, as a branch of
observational astronomy, dates from the spring of 1609, when Galileo directed his “optic [377]
tube” to the moon, and in the following year, in the Sidereus Nuncius, or the “Intelligencer
of the Stars,” gave to an astonished and incredulous world an account of the unsuspected
marvels it revealed.
The bright and dusky areas, so obvious to the unaided sight, were found by Galileo to be
due to a very manifest difference in the character of the lunar surface, a large portion of the
Northern Hemisphere, and no inconsiderable part of the southeastern quadrant, being seen to
consist of large gray monotonous tracts, often bordered by lofty mountains, while the
remainder of the superficies was much more conspicuously brilliant, and, moreover,
included by far the greater number of those curious ring-mountains and other extraordinary
features whose remarkable aspect and peculiar arrangement first attracted his attention.
Before the close of the century when selenography first became possible, Hevel of
Dantzig, Scheiner, Langrenus (cosmographer to the King of Spain), Riccioli, the Jesuit
astronomer of Bologna, and Dominic Cassini, the celebrated French astronomer, greatly
extended the knowledge of the moon’s surface, and published drawings of various phases
and charts, which, though very rude and incomplete, were a clear advance upon what
Galileo, with his inferior optical means, had been able to accomplish. Langrenus, and after
him Hevel, gave distinctive names to the various formations, mainly derived from terrestrial
physical features, for which Riccioli subsequently substituted those of philosophers, [378]
mathematicians, and other celebrities; and Cassini determined by actual measurement the
relative position of many of the principal objects on the disk, thus laying the foundation of
an accurate system of lunar topography; while the labors of T. Mayer and Schröter in the
Eighteenth Century, and of Lohrmann, Mädler, Neison (Nevill), Schmidt, and other
observers in the Nineteenth, have been mainly devoted to the study of the minuter detail of
the moon and its physical characteristics.
As was manifest to the earliest telescopic observers, its visible surface is clearly divisible
into strongly contrasted areas, differing both in color and structural character. Somewhat
less than half of what we see of it consists of comparatively level dark tracts, some of them
many thousands of square miles in extent, the monotony of whose dusky superficies is often
unrelieved for great distances by any prominent object; while the remainder, everywhere
manifestly brighter, is not only more rugged and uneven, but is covered to a much greater
extent with numbers of quasi-circular formations differing widely in size, classed as walled-
plains, ring-plains, craters, craterlets, crater-cones, etc. (the latter bearing a great outward
resemblance to some terrestrial volcanoes), and mountain ranges of vast proportions,
isolated hills and other features.
Though nothing resembling sheets of water, either of small or large extent, has ever been
detected on the surface of the moon, the superficial resemblance, in small telescopes, of the
large gray tracts to the appearance which we may suppose our terrestrial lakes and oceans [379]
would present to an observer on the moon, naturally induced the early selenographers to
term them Maria, or “seas”—a convenient name, which is still maintained, without,
however, implying that these areas, as we now see them, are, or ever were, covered with
water.
There are twenty-three of these dusky areas which have received distinctive names;
seventeen of them are wholly, or in great part, confined to the northern and to the
southeastern quarter of the Southern Hemisphere—the southwestern quadrant being to a
great extent devoid of them. By far the largest is the vast Oceanus Procellarum, extending
from a high northern latitude to beyond latitude 10° in the southeastern quadrant, and,
according to Schmidt, with its bays and inflections, occupying an area of nearly two million
square miles, or more than that of all the remaining Maria put together. Next in order of size
come the Mare Nubium, or about one-fifth the superficies, covering a large portion of the
southeastern quadrant, and extending considerably north of the equator, and the Mare
Imbrium, wholly confined to the northeastern quadrant, and including an area of about
340,000 square miles. These are by far the largest lunar “seas”. The Mare Fœcunditatis, in
the Western Hemisphere, the greater part of it lying in the southwestern quadrant, is scarcely
half so big as the Mare Imbrium; while the Maria Serenitatis and Tranquilitatis, about equal
in area (the former situated wholly north of the equator and the latter only partially
extending south of it), are still smaller. The arctic Mare Frigoris, some 100,000 square miles [380]
in extent, is the only remaining large sea; the rest, such as the Mare Vaporum, the Sinus
Medii, the Mare Crisium, the Mare Humorum, and the Mare Humboldtianum, are of
comparatively small dimensions, the Mare Crisium not greatly exceeding 70,000 square
miles, the Mare Humorum (about the size of England) 50,000 square miles, while the Mare
Humboldtianum, according to Schmidt, includes only about 42,000 square miles, an area
which is approached by some formations not classed with the Maria.
Among the Maria which exhibit the most remarkable arrangement of ridges is the Mare
Humorum, in the southeastern quadrant. Here, if it be observed under a rising sun, a number
of these objects will be seen extending from the region north of the ring-mountain Vitello in
long undulating lines, roughly concentric with the western border of the “sea,” and
gradually diminishing in altitude as they spread out, with many ramifications, to a distance
of 200 miles or more toward the north. At this stage of illumination they are strikingly
beautiful in a good telescope, reminding one of the ripple-marks left by the tide on a soft,
sandy beach. Like most other objects of their class, they are very evanescent, gradually
disappearing as the sun rises higher in the lunar firmament, and ultimately leaving nothing
to indicate their presence beyond here and there a ghostly streak or vein of a somewhat
lighter hue than that of the neighboring surface.
The Maria, like almost every other part of the visible surface, abound in craters of a
minute type, which are scattered here and there without any apparent law or ascertained [381]
principle of arrangement.
Walled-plains, approximating more or less to the circular form, though frequently
deviating considerably from it, are among the largest inclosures on the moon. They vary
from upward of 150 to 160 miles or under in diameter, and are often encircled by a complex
rampart of considerable breadth, rising in some instances to a height of 12,000 feet or more
above the inclosed plain. This rampart is rarely continuous, but is generally interrupted by
gaps, crossed by transverse valleys and passes and broken by more recent craters and
depressions. As a rule, the area within the circumvallation (usually termed “the floor”) is
only slightly, if at all, lower than the region outside: it is very generally of a dusky hue,
similar to that of the gray plains of Maria, and, like them, is usually variegated by the
presence of hills, ridges, and craters, and is sometimes traversed by delicate furrows, termed
clefts or rills.
Ptolemæus, in the third quadrant and not far removed from the centre of the disk, may be
taken as a typical example of the class. Here we have a vast plain, 115 miles from side to
side, encircled by a massive but much broken wall, which at one peak towers more than
9,000 feet above a level floor, which includes details of a very remarkable character. The
adjoining Alphonsus is another, but somewhat smaller object of the same type, as are also
Albategnius and Arzachel; and Plato, in a high northern latitude, with its noble, many-
peaked rampart and its variable steel-gray interior, Grimaldi, near the eastern limb (perhaps [382]
the darkest area on the moon), Schickard, nearly as big on the southeastern limb, and Bailly,
larger than either (still further south in the same quadrant), although they approach some of
the smaller “seas” in size, are placed in the same category. The conspicuous central
mountain, so frequently associated with other types of ringed inclosures, is by no means
invariably found within the walled-plains; though, as in the case of Petavius, Langrenus,
Gassendi, and several other noteworthy examples, it is very prominently displayed. The
progress of sunrise on all these objects affords a magnificent spectacle. Very often when the
rays infringe on their apparently level floor at an angle of from 1° to 2°, it is seen to be
coarse, rough grained, and covered with minute elevations, although an hour or so afterward
it appears as smooth as glass.
The more massive and extended mountain ranges of the moon are found in the Northern
Hemisphere, and (what is significant) in that portion of it which exhibits few indications of
other superficial disturbances. The most prominently developed systems, the Alps, the
Caucasus, and the Apennines, forming a mighty western rampart to the Mare Imbrium and
giving it all the appearance of a vast walled-plain, present few points of resemblance to any
terrestrial chain. The former include many hundred peaks, among which Mont Blanc rises to
a height of 12,000 feet, and a second, some distance west of Plato, to nearly as great an
altitude; while others ranging from 5,000 to 8,000 feet are common. They extend in a
southwest direction from Plato to the Caucasus, terminating somewhat abruptly, a little west [383]
of the central meridian in about N. lat. 42°. One of the most interesting features associated
with this range is the so-called great Alpine valley, which cuts through it west of Plato.
The Caucasus consist of a massive wedge-shaped mountain land, projecting southward,
and partially dividing the Mare Imbrium from the Mare Serenitatis, both of which they
flank. Though without peaks so lofty as those pertaining to the Alps, there is one,
immediately east of the ring-plain Calippus, which, towering to 19,000 feet, surpasses any
of which the latter system can boast. The Apennines, however, are by far the most
magnificent range on the visible surface, including as they do some 3,000 peaks, and
extending in an almost continuous curve of more than 400 miles in length from Mount
Hadley, on the north, to the fine ring-plain Eratosthenes, which forms a fitting termination,
on the south. The great headland Mount Hadley rises more than 15,000 feet, while a
neighboring promontory on the southeast of it is fully 14,000 feet, and another, close by, is
still higher above the Mare. Mount Huyghens, again in N. lat. 20°, and the square-shaped
mass Mount Wolf, near the southern end of the chain, include peaks standing 18,000 and
12,000 feet respectively above the plain to which their flanks descend with a steep declivity.
The counterscarp of the Apennines, in places 160 miles in width from east to west, runs
down to the Mare Vaporum, with a comparatively gentle inclination. It is everywhere
traversed by winding valleys of a very intricate type, all trending toward the southwest, and [384]
includes some very bright craters and mountain-rings.
Whether variations in the visibility of lunar details, when observed under apparently
similar conditions, actually occur from time to time from some unknown cause, is one of
those vexed questions which will only be determined when the moon is systematically
studied by experienced observers using the finest instruments at exceptionally good stations;
but no one who examines existing records of rills by Gruithuisen, Lohrmann, Mädler,
Schmidt, and other observers, can well avoid the conclusion that the anomalies brought to
light therein point strongly to the probability of the existence of some agency which
occasionally modifies their appearance or entirely conceals them from view. In short, the
more direct telescopic observations accumulate, and the more the study of minute detail is
extended, the stronger becomes the conviction that, in spite of the absence of an appreciable
atmosphere, there may be something resembling low-lying exhalations from some parts of
the surface which from time to time are sufficiently dense to obscure, or even obliterate, the
region beneath them.
Sir John Herschel maintained that “the actual illumination of the lunar surface is not
much superior to that of weathered sandstone rock in full sunshine. I have,” he says,
“frequently compared the moon setting behind the gray perpendicular façade of the Table
Mountain, illumined by the sun just risen in the opposite quarter of the horizon when it has
been scarcely distinguishable in brightness from the rock in contact with it. The sun and [385]
moon being at nearly equal altitudes, and the atmosphere perfectly free from cloud or vapor,
its effect is alike on both luminaries.” Zöllner’s elaborate researches on this question are
closely in accord with the above observational result. Though he considers that the brightest
parts of the surface are as white as the whitest objects with which we are acquainted, yet,
taking the reflected light as a whole, he finds that the moon is more nearly black than white.
The most brilliant object on the surface is the central peak of the ring-plain Aristarchus, the
darkest the floor of Grimaldi, or perhaps a portion of that of the neighboring Riccioli.
Between these extremes there is every gradation of tone. Proctor, discussing this question on
the basis of Zöllner’s experiments respecting the light reflected by various substances,
concludes that the dark area just mentioned must be notably darker than the dark gray
syenite which figures in his tables, while the floor of Aristarchus is as white as newly fallen
snow.
MARS.—Agnes M. Clerke
T he furthest terrestrial planet from the sun is Mars, the “star of strength.” No other
heavenly body, except the moon, is so well placed for observation from our position
in space.
The diameter of Mars is 4,200 miles; its surface is equal to two-sevenths, its volume to
one-seventh those of the earth. But, in consequence of its inferior mean density, nine such
spheres would go to make up the mass of our world. The superficial force of gravity on [386]
Mars, compared with its terrestrial value, is as thirty-eight to a hundred. A man could leap
there a wall eight feet four inches in height with no more effort than it would cost him here
to spring over a two-foot fence.
The planet’s rotation is performed in 24 hours, 37 minutes, on an axis deviating from the
vertical by 24° 50′. Hence its seasons resemble our own, except in being nearly twice as
long, for the Martian year is of 687 days.
The disk of Mars is diversified with three shades of color—reddish, or dull orange, dark
grayish-green, and pure white. The last shows mainly in two diametrically opposite patches.
Each pole is surrounded by a brilliant cap, suggesting the deposition of ice or snow over the
chilly spaces corresponding to our arctic and antarctic regions. Nor is this all. Each of the
polar hoods shrinks to a mere remnant as the local summer advances, but regains its original
size when wintry influences are again in the ascendant. Here, and nowhere else in the
planetary system, we meet evidence of seasonal change; and seasonal change is associated
with vital possibilities. Again, a globe upon which snow visibly melts must contain water;
hence the green markings can not but image to our minds seas and inlets subdividing
continents, the blond complexion of which may be caused by some native peculiarity of the
soil. It is in no way connected with vegetation, since it neither fades nor flushes with the
advent of spring; and an atmospheric origin is excluded by the circumstance that it becomes [387]
effaced by a whitish haze near the limb, just where the densest atmospheric strata are
traversed by the line of sight.
The spots on Mars are by no means so sharply defined as lunar craters and maria; yet they
are fundamentally permanent. Some can be recognized from drawings made over two
hundred years ago; and these antique records have served modern astronomers to determine
with minute accuracy the rotation-period of the planet. Continents are somewhat vaguely
outlined. Great tracts of them are of an uncertain and variable hue, as if subject to
inundations. This peculiarity, thoroughly certified during the favorable opposition of 1892,
makes a strong distinction between Mars and the Earth. Terrestrial oceans keep within the
limits assigned to them. On the neighboring planet—as M. Faye observed in 1892—“water
seems to march about at its ease,” flooding from time to time regions as wide as France. The
imperfect separation of the two elements recalls the conditions prevailing during the
terrestrial carboniferous era.
The main part of the land of Mars is situated in the Northern Hemisphere. It covers two-
thirds of the entire globular surface. Rather than land, indeed, it should be called a network
of land and water. The great continental block—so its orange tint declares it to be—is cut up
in all possible directions by an intricate system of what appear to be waterways, running in
perfectly straight lines—that is, along great circles of the globe—for distances varying from
350 to upward of 4,000 miles. They are frequently seen in duplicate, strictly parallel [388]
companions developing thirty to three hundred miles apart from the original formations.
This mysterious phenomenon is evanescent, or rather periodical.
The canals invariably connect two bodies of water; hence they need no locks or hydraulic
machinery; their course is on a dead level. The broadest of them are comparable with the
Adriatic; those at the limit of visibility, stretching like the finest spider-threads across the
disk, have a width of eighteen miles. “The canals,” Schiaparelli says, “may intersect among
themselves at all possible angles, but by preference they converge toward the small spots to
which we have given the name of lakes. For example, seven are seen to converge in Lacus
Phœnicis, eight in Trivium Charontis, six in Lunæ Lacus, and six in Ismenius Lacus.”
These “lakes” evidently form an integral part of the canal system. They resemble huge
railway junctions; and the largest of them—the “Eye of Mars” (Schiaparelli’s Lacus Solis)
—seems, in Mr. Lowell’s phrase, like the hub of a five-spoked wheel. Mr. W. H. Pickering
in 1892, and Mr. Percival Lowell in 1894, were amazed at their extraordinary abundance.
“Scattered over the orange-ochre groundwork of the continental regions of the planet,”
the latter wrote, “are any number of dark, round spots. How many there may be it is not
possible to state, as the better the seeing, the more of them there seem to be. In spite,
however, of their great number, there is no instance of one occurring unconnected with a
canal. What is more, there is apparently none which does not lie at the junction of several [389]
canals. Reversely, all the junctions appear to be provided with spots.”
Most of these foci are about 120 miles in diameter, and appear most precisely circular
when most clearly seen. “Plotted upon a globe,” Mr. Lowell continues, “they and their
connecting canals make a most curious network over all the orange-ochre equatorial parts of
the planet, a mass of lines and knots, the one marking being as omnipresent as the other.
Indeed, the spots are as peculiar and distinctive a feature of Mars as the canals themselves.”
Like the canals, too, they emerge periodically, and in the same but a retarded succession.
They “are, therefore, in the first place, seasonal phenomena, and, in the second place,
phenomena that depend for their existence upon the prior existence of the canals.”
Mr. Lowell terms them “oases,” and does not shrink from the full implication of the term.
The most important result of the numerous observations of Mars, made during the
oppositions of 1892 and 1894, was the recognition of a regular course of change dependent
upon the succession of its seasons. Schiaparelli had long anticipated this result; he is
commonly in advance of his time. These changes, moreover, when closely watched, are
really self-explanatory. The alternate melting of the northern and southern snow-caps
initiates and to some extent determines them. As summer advances in either hemisphere, the
wasting of the corresponding white calotte can be followed in every minute particular. “The
snowy regions are then seen to be successively notched at their edges; black holes and huge
fissures are formed in their interiors; great isolated fragments many miles in extent stand out [390]
from the principal mass, dissolve, and disappear a little later. In short, the same divisions
and movements of these icy fields present themselves to us at a glance that occur during the
summer of our own arctic regions.”
Indeed, glaciation on Mars is much less durable than on the earth. In 1894 the southern
snow-cap vanished to the last speck 59 days after the solstice and the remnant usually left
looks scarcely enough to make a comfortable cap for Ben Nevis. An immense quantity of
water is thus set free. The polar seas overflow; gigantic inundations reinforced, doubtless,
from other sources, spread to the tropics; Syrtis regions of marsh or bog deepen in hue, and
become distinctly aqueous; canals dawn on the sight, and grow into undeniable realities. We
seem driven to believe that they discharge the function of flood-emissaries.
Mr. Lowell does not hesitate to pronounce them of artificial formation, and, on that large
assumption, the purpose of their connection with his “oases” becomes transparently clear.
They bring to these Tadmors in the wilderness the water supply by which they are made to
“blossom as the rose.” The junction-spots, we are told, do not enlarge when the vernal
freshet reaches them; they only darken through the sudden development of vegetation.
These circular “districts, artificially fertilized by the canal system,” are strewn broadcast
over vast desert areas, the orange-ochreous sections of Mars, covering the greater part of its
surface, but deep buried in the millennial dust of disintegrated red sandstone strata. [391]
“Here, then,” Mr. Lowell remarks, “we have an end and reason for the existence of
canals, and the most natural conceivable—namely, that the canals are constructed for the
express purpose of fertilizing the oases. When we consider the amazing system of the canal
lines, we are carried to this conclusion as forthright as is the water itself; what we see being
not the canal itself, indeed, but the vegetation along its banks.”
The proportion of water to land is much smaller on Mars than on the earth. Only two-
sevenths of the disk are covered by the dusky areas, and of late the aqueous nature of some,
if not all, of these has been seriously called in question. Professor Pickering was convinced
by his observations, in 1892 and 1894, “that the permanent water area upon Mars, if it exist
at all, is extremely limited in its dimensions.” He estimated it at about half the size of the
Mediterranean. Professor Schaeberle is similarly incredulous. If the dark markings are seas,
he asks, how explain the irregular gradations of shade in them? How, above all, explain their
apparent intersection by well-marked canals? Professor Barnard, observing with the Lick
thirty-six inch in 1894, discerned on the Martian surface an astonishing wealth of detail, “so
intricate, small, and abundant, that it baffled all attempts to properly delineate it.” It was
embarrassing to find these minute features belonging more characteristically to the “seas”
than to the “continents.” Under the best conditions, the dark regions lost all trace of [392]
uniformity. Their appearance resembled that of a mountainous country, broken by cañon,
rift, and ridge, seen from a great elevation. These effects were especially marked in the
“ocean” area of the Hour-Glass Sea.
Evidently the relations of solid and liquid in that remote orb are abnormal; they can not be
completely explained by terrestrial analogies. Yet a series of well-attested phenomena are
intelligible only on the supposition that Mars is, in some real sense, a terraqueous globe.
Where snows melt there must be water; and the origin of the Rhone from a great glacier is
scarcely more evident to our senses than the dissolution of Martian ice-caps into pools and
streams.
The testimony of the spectroscope is to the same effect. Dr. Huggins found, in 1867, the
spectrum of Mars impressed with the distinct traces of aqueous absorption, and the fact,
although called in question by Professor Campbell of Lick, in 1894, has been reaffirmed
both at Tulse Hill and at Potsdam. That clouds form and mists rise in the thin Martian air,
admits of doubt. During the latter half of October, 1894, an area much larger than Europe
remained densely obscured. Whether or no actual rain was at that time falling over the
Maraldi Sea and the adjacent continent it would be useless to conjecture. We only know that
with the low barometric pressure at the surface of Mars, the boiling point of water must be
proportionately depressed (Flammarion puts it at 115° Fahrenheit), which implies that it
evaporates rapidly, and can be transported easily.
If the Martian atmosphere be of the same proportionate mass as that of our earth, it can [393]
possess no more than one-seventh its superficial density. That is to say, it is more than twice
as tenuous as the air at the summits of the Himalayas. The corresponding height of a
terrestrial barometer would be four and a half inches. Owing, however, to the reduced
strength of gravity on Mars, this slender envelope is exceedingly extensive. In the pure sky
scarcely veiled by it, the sun, diminished to less than half his size at our horizons, probably
exhibits his coronal streamers and prominences as a regular part of his noontide glory;
atmospheric circulation proceeds so tranquilly as not to trouble the repose of a land “in
which it seemeth always afternoon”; no cyclones traverse its surface, only mild trade-winds
flow toward the equator, to supply for the volumes of air gently lifted by the power of the
sun, to carry reinforcements of water-vapor north and south. Aerial movements are, in fact,
by a very strong presumption, of the terrestrial type, but executed with greatly abated vigor.
Brilliant projections above the terminator of Mars were first distinctly perceived at the
Lick Observatory in 1890. They have been reobserved at Nice, Arequipa, and Flagstaff (Mr.
Lowell’s observatory), coming into view, as a rule, when circumstances concur to favor their
visibility. They strictly resemble lunar peaks and craters, catching the first rays of the sun,
while the ground about them is still immersed in darkness; and Professor Campbell connects
them with “mountain chains lying across the terminator of the planet,” and in some cases [394]
possibly snow-covered. He calculates their height at about ten thousand feet. Their presence
was unlooked for, since a flat expanse is a condition sine quâ non for the minute intersection
of land by water, which seems to prevail on Mars.
Although the sun is less than half as powerful on Mars as it is here, the Martian climate,
to outward appearance, compares favorably with our own. Polar glaciation is less extensive
and more evanescent, and little snow falls outside the arctic and antarctic regions. Yet the
theoretical mean temperature is minus 4° C., or 61° of Fahrenheit below freezing. This
means a tremendous ice-grip. The coldest spot on the earth’s surface is considerably warmer
than this cruel average. Fortunately, it exists only on paper. Some compensatory store of
warmth must then be possessed by Mars, and it can scarcely be provided by its attenuated
air. Possibly, internal heat may still be effective, and we see exemplified in Mars the
geological period when vines and magnolias flourished in Greenland, and date-palms
ripened their fruit on the coast of Hampshire.
The climate of Mars, according to Schiaparelli, “must resemble that of a clear day upon a
high mountain. By day a very strong solar radiation hardly at all mitigated by mist or vapor;
by night a copious radiation from the soil toward celestial space, and hence a very marked
refrigeration; consequently, a climate of extremes, and great changes of temperature from
day to night, and from one season to another. And as on the earth, at altitudes of from [395]
17,000 to 20,000 feet, the vapor of the atmosphere is condensed only into the solid form,
producing those whitish masses of suspended crystals which we call cirrus-clouds, so in the
atmosphere of Mars it would be rarely possible to find collections of cloud capable of
producing rain of any consequence. The variation of temperature from one season to another
would be notably increased by their long duration, and thus we can understand the great
freezing and melting of the snow, renewed in turn at the poles at each complete revolution
of the planet round the sun.”
The German astronomer Mädler searched in 1830 for a Martian satellite, and although his
telescope was of less than four inches aperture, he satisfied himself that none with a
diameter of as much as twenty-three miles could be in existence. As it happened, he was
right. The pair of moons detected by Professor Asaph Hall with the Washington twenty-six
refractor, August 11 and 17, 1877, are unquestionably below that limit of size. Neither of
them can well be more than ten miles across. Their names, “Deimos” and “Phobos,” are
taken from the Iliad, where Fear and Panic are introduced as attendants upon the God of
War. Deimos revolves in 30 hours and 18 minutes at a distance of 14,600 miles from the
centre of Mars. And since the planet rotates in 24 hours, 37 minutes, the diurnal motion of
the sphere from east to west is so nearly neutralized by the orbital circulation of the satellite
from west to east that nearly 132 hours elapse between its rising and its setting. During the
interval, it changes four times from new to full, and vice versâ.
Phobos is more effective in illumination, both because it is larger and because it is less [396]
distant. At the Martian equator, its brightness is equal to 1/60th that of our moon, but beyond
69° of latitude it is permanently shut out from view by the curvature of the globe.
THE PLANETOIDS.—Camille Flammarion
O n the first day of the last century (January 1, 1801), Piazzi, an astronomer devoted to
the sky, was observing at Palermo the small stars of the constellation Taurus, and
noting their exact positions, when he remarked one which he had never seen before. The
following evening (January 2) he directed his telescope again toward the same region of the
sky, and remarked that the star was no longer at the point where he had seen it the day
before, and that it had retrograded by 4′. It continued to retrograde up to the 12th, stopped,
and then moved in the direct way—that is to say, from west to east. What was this moving
star? The idea that it might be a planet did not immediately occur to the mind of the
observer, and he took it for a comet, as William Herschel had done in 1781, when he
discovered Uranus.
However, the skilful Sicilian observer was a member of an association which had for its
special object the search for an unknown planet between Mars and Jupiter. From the earliest
times of modern astronomy Kepler had described the disproportion, the void which exists
between the orbit of Mars and that of Jupiter. If we omit, in fact, the orbit of the small [397]
planets or asteroids, we notice that the four planets, Mercury, Venus, the earth, and Mars, are
in some measure crowded quite close to the sun, while Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune
extend far into immensity. The law of Titius indicates a number, the number 28, as not being
represented by any planet. It was in 1772 that this savant published this relation in a German
translation which he had made of the Contemplation de la Nature of Charles Bonnet. Bode,
Director of the Berlin Observatory, was so astonished at the coincidence that he announced
this arithmetical relation as being a real law of nature, and spoke of it in such a way that it is
generally known only by his name. He even organized an association of twenty-four
astronomers to explore each hour of the Zodiac and search for the unknown. This systematic
exploration had not yet produced any result when, by the merest chance, Piazzi saw his
moving star, and at first believed it to be a comet. But on receipt of the news, Bode was
convinced that this was the looked-for planet.
The new planet was found to be at the distance 2.77, and to revolve within a few days of
the predicted period. Piazzi gave to the new body the name of Ceres, the protecting divinity
of Sicily in the “good old times” of mythology.
The gap being thus filled up at the distance 28 by the discovery of Ceres, no one thought
that other planets might exist there; and if Piazzi had supposed so, he might have at once
discovered a dozen of the small bodies which revolve in this region. An astronomer of [398]
Bremen, Olbers, observed this planet on the evening of March 28, 1802, when he perceived
in the constellation of the Virgin a star of the seventh magnitude which was not marked on
Bode’s chart, which he used. The following day he found it had changed its place, and
recognized by this fact that it was a second planet. But it was much more difficult to give
citizenship to it than to its elder sister, because, the gap being filled up, it was not required,
and it was more inconvenient than agreeable. They looked upon it, then, as a comet until its
motion proved that it revolved in the same region as Ceres at the distance 2.77, and in 1,685
days (the period of Ceres is 1,681 days). They gave it the name of Pallas.
The unexpected discoveries of Ceres and Pallas led astronomers to revise the catalogues
of stars and celestial charts. Harding was of the number of the zealous revisers. He was soon
rewarded for his trouble. On September 1, 1804, at ten o’clock in the evening, he saw in the
constellation of Pisces a star of the eighth magnitude which was not noted in the Histoire
Céleste of Lalande. On September 4, he found it had perceptibly changed its place: it was a
new planet. It received the name of Juno. Its distance from the sun is expressed by the
number 2.67, and its revolution is performed in 1,592 days.
After these three discoveries, Olbers, noticing that the orbits of these planets crossed each
other in the constellation of the Virgin, advanced the hypothesis that they might be nothing
else but fragments of a large shattered planet. Mechanics show that, in this case, the [399]
fragments would again pass every year—that is to say, at each of their revolutions—through
the spot where the catastrophe took place. Olbers then set himself to explore the
constellation Virgo carefully, and found on March 29, 1807, a fourth small planet, to which
he gave the name of Vesta. Its distance is but 2.36, and its revolution only 1.326 days. This
is the brightest of the small planets, and it is sometimes seen with the naked eye (when we
know where it is), like a star of the sixth magnitude.
It seems surprising that after these brilliant beginnings thirty-eight years should then have
passed without the discovery of a single planet, for it was only in 1845 that the fifth, Astræa,
was discovered by Hencke (who should not be confused with the astronomer Encke), a
simple amateur astronomer, postmaster at Berlin, who amused himself by constructing
charts of the stars. The principal reason for this must be attributed to the want of good star-
charts, for to find these little moving points the first thing necessary is to have a very precise
chart of the region of the Zodiac which we observe, in order to see whether one of the stars
observed is in motion. The earliest good Zodiacal charts are those which the Academy of
Berlin commenced to publish in 1830, taking as a basis the zones of Bessel continued by
Argelander. Those of the Paris Observatory, which are more perfect, were only begun in
1854.
These small planets are all telescopic, invisible to the naked eye, with the exception of
Vesta, and sometimes Ceres, which good sight can occasionally succeed in distinguishing; [400]
they are of the seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh magnitudes, and even still smaller,
and it was for this reason also that so long an interval of time elapsed between the fourth and
fifth discoveries. It is probable that all the small planets of any importance are now known,
but that a great number—several hundreds, perhaps—still remain to be discovered of which
the average brightness does not exceed that of stars of the twelfth magnitude, and of which
the diameter is but a few miles. The diameter of the largest, Vesta, may be estimated at 400
kilometres (248 miles).
Hencke found successively the 5th and the 6th in 1845 and 1847; Hind, the English
astronomer, the 7th and 8th in 1847; Graham, an English observer, the 9th in 1848;
Gasparis, an Italian astronomer, the 10th and 11th in 1849 and 1850, and afterward seven
others. Hind has further discovered eight others; Goldschmidt, a German painter (a
naturalized Frenchman), discovered fourteen between 1852 and 1861.[27] They are now
discovered by swarms; Paliser alone has found sixty-eight since 1874.
The names given to these small bodies commenced with the mythological army of [401]
divinities of the earth and ancient heaven; but even before the list had been exhausted
certain scientific, or even national or political, circumstances caused the preference to be
given to more modern names. It was thus that the 11th, discovered at Naples, received the
name of Parthenope; the 12th, discovered in England, that of Victoria; the 20th, that of
Massilia; the 21st, that of Lutetia; the 25th, that of Phocæa, before even Urania had been
restored to the skies; the 45th was named in honor of the Empress of the French; the 54th, in
honor of the illustrious Alexander von Humboldt; etc. The 87th, 107th, 141st, 154th, and
169th have been named in honor of a young astronomer who has devoted his best years to
the culture of astronomy.
A rather curious fact is that they have put Wisdom (Sapientia) in the sky only at the
275th, discovered in 1888; Bellona has been placed there since the 28th (1854).
Of all this number of planets, the nearest to the sun is No. 149, Medusa, of which the
distance is 2.17—that is to say, about twice as far from the sun as the earth; and the most
distant is No. 279, Thule, of which the distance is 4.26, about 4¼ times our distance.
A large number of these small bodies are remarkable for their great eccentricity and for [402]
their high inclination to the ecliptic, an inclination so great that some of them leave the
Zodiac; thus, Pallas (2) goes 34 degrees from the ecliptic; Euphrosyne (31) and Anna (265)
and Istria (183), to 26 degrees. They are sometimes northern circumpolar stars, always
above the horizon, sometimes southern stars, not arising above the horizon of Paris. All
these orbits are so interlaced with each other that, if they were material hoops, we could by
means of one or two taken by chance raise all the others.
Are they globes? Yes, doubtless, for the most part. But several among the smaller ones
may be polyhedral, and may have proceeded from subsequent explosions; the variations of
brightness which have been sometimes observed seem to imply surfaces irregularly broken.
Are they worlds? Why not? Is not a drop of water shown in the microscope peopled with
a multitude of various beings? Does not a stone in a meadow hide a world of swarming
insects? Is not the leaf of a plant a world for the species which inhabit and prey upon it?
Doubtless among the multitude of small planets there are those which must remain desert
and sterile because the conditions of life (of any kind) are not found united. But we can not
doubt that on the majority the ever-active forces of nature have produced, as in our world,
creations appropriate to these minute planets. Let us repeat, moreover, that for nature there
is neither great nor little. And there is no necessity to flatter ourselves with a supreme
disdain for these little worlds, for in reality the inhabitants of Jupiter would have more right [403]
to despise us than we have to despise Vesta, Ceres, Pallas, or Juno: the disparity is greater
between Jupiter and the earth than between the earth and these planets.
FOOTNOTES:
[27] Goldschmidt passionately loved astronomy, and I have found among his papers,
which his family left me, numerous observations and remarks which show how
he loved the study of the sky. His greatest ambition had been, at first, to possess a
small telescope, in order to make some observations, and the best day of his life
was that on which he found one in the possession of a dealer in old stores. He
hastened to direct it to the sky from his modest studio, situated in one of the most
frequented streets of Paris (Rue de l’Ancienne-Comédie), above the Café
Procope, formerly used as a rendezvous by the stars of literature. There, from his
window, he discovered, in 1852, the 21st small planet, which received from
Arago the name of Lutetia; then, in 1854, the 32d (Pomona); then, in 1855, the
36th (Atlanta); and afterward eleven others, all from his window. Having often
removed in search of a pure atmosphere, he finally retired to Fontainebleau,
where the forest offered him on all sides admirable subjects for painting; and here
he died in 1866.
JUPITER.—Agnes M. Clerke
J upiter is by far the most important member of the solar family. The aggregate mass of all
the other planets is only two-fifths of his, which 316 earths would be needed to
counterbalance. His size is on a still more colossal scale than his weight, since in volume he
exceeds our globe 1,380 times. His polar and equatorial diameters measure respectively
84,570 and 90,190 miles, giving a mean diameter of 88,250 miles, and a polar compression
of 1/16th. The corresponding equatorial protuberance rises to 2,000 miles, so that the
elliptical figure of the planet strikes an observer at the first glance. This at once indicates
rapid axial movement; and Jupiter’s rotation is accordingly performed in nine hours and
fifty-five minutes, with an uncertainty of a couple of minutes.
The numbers just given imply that this great planet is of somewhat slight consistence, and
its mean density is, in fact, a little less than that of the sun. The sun is heavier than an equal
bulk of water in the proportion of 1.4 to 1, Jupiter in the proportion of 1.33 to 1. The earth is
thus more than four times specifically heavier than the latter globe. Three Jupiters would
keep in equipoise four equal globes of water, while the earth would turn the scale against [404]
five and a half aqueous models of itself. This low density, an unfailing characteristic of all
the giant planets, is charged with meaning. It at once gives us to understand that, in crossing
the zone of asteroids, we enter upon a different planetary region from that left behind. The
bodies revolving there are on an immensely larger scale of magnitude than those on the
hither side; they are of solar, rather than terrestrial, density; they rotate much more rapidly,
and are in consequence of a more elliptical shape; they display, and most likely possess, no
solid surface; they are attended by retinues of satellites.
Jupiter circulates round the sun in 11.86 years, in an orbit deviating by less than one and a
half degrees from the plane of the ecliptic, but of thrice the eccentricity of the ellipse traced
out by the earth. With a mean distance from the sun of 483 millions of miles, it accordingly
approaches within 462 at perihelion, and withdraws to 504 millions of miles at aphelion.
Seasons it has none worth mentioning; nor could they be of much effect even if they were
better marked.
Under propitious circumstances Jupiter comes within 369 million miles of the earth.
These occur when he is in opposition nearly at the epoch of his perihelion passage. His
maximum opposition distance, on the other hand, is 411 million miles. He is then at
aphelion. Thus, at the most favorable opposition, he is 42 million miles nearer to us than at
the least favorable. The effect on his brightness is evident to the eye. When his midnight
culmination takes place in October, he in fact sends us one and a half times more light than [405]
when the event comes round to April. We need only recall the unusual splendor of his
appearance in September and October, 1892, when his lustre was double that of Sirius. His
opposition period, as we may call it, is 399 days.
The intrinsic brilliancy of his surfaces is surprising, especially when we consider that it is
somewhat deeply tinged with color.
The minimum diameter of the visible disk considerably exceeds the maximum of that of
Mars. Even with a low power it thus makes a beautiful and interesting telescopic object. Its
distinctive aspect is that of a belted planet, the belts varying greatly in number and
arrangement. As many as thirty have, on occasions, been counted, delicately ruling the disk
from pole to pole. They are always parallel to the equator, but are otherwise highly
changeable, and can not be too closely studied as an index to the planet’s physical
constitution. Two in particular are remarkable. They are called the north and south
equatorial belts, and inclose a lustrous equatorial zone. The poles are shaded by dusky
hoods.
This general scheme of markings, however, when viewed with one of the great telescopes
of the world, is so overlaid with minor particulars as sometimes to be scarcely recognizable.
One can not see the wood for the trees. Lovely color-effects, too, come out under the best
circumstances of definition and aerial transparency. The tropical belts may be summarily
described as red; but they are of complex structure, and their subordinate features and
formations are marked out, under the sway of alternating and tumultuous activities, by strips [406]
and patches of vermilion, pink, purple, drab, and brown. The intermediate space is divided
into two bands by a line, or narrow ribbon, pretty nearly coinciding with the equator, and
rosy or vivid scarlet in hue. The polar caps are sometimes of a delicate wine-color,
sometimes pale gray.
Professor Keeler made an elaborate study of the planet with the Lick 36-inch in 1889, and
executed a series of valuable drawings. With a power of 320, the disk, he tells us, “was a
most beautiful object, covered with a wealth of detail which could not possibly be
accurately represented in a drawing.” Most of the surface was then “mottled with flocculent
and irregular cloud-masses. The edges of the equatorial zone were brilliantly white, and
were formed of rounded, cloud-like masses, which, at certain places, extended into the red
belt as long streamers. These formed the most remarkable and curious feature of the
equatorial regions. They are the cause of the double or triple aspect which the red belts
present in small telescopes.”
Near their starting-points the streamers were white and sharply defined, but became
gradually diffused over the ruddy surface of the belts. When at all elongated, they invariably
flowed backward against the rotational drift, and were inferred to be cloud-like masses
expelled from the equatorial region, and progressively left behind by its advance. This
hypothesis was confirmed by the motion of some bright points, or knots, on the streamers.
“The portions of the equatorial zone surrounding the roots of well-marked streamers were [407]
somewhat brighter,” Professor Keeler continues, “than at other places, and it is a curious
circumstance that they were almost invariably suffused with a pale olive-green color, which
seemed to be associated with great disturbance, and was rarely seen elsewhere.”
Now, if the material of the streamers had been simply a superficial overflow, it should
have carried with it into higher latitudes an excess of linear rotational speed, and should
hence have pushed its way onward as it proceeded north and south. But, instead, it fell
behind; its velocity was less, not greater, than that of the belts with which it eventually
became incorporated. What are we to gather from this fact? Evidently that the currents
issuing north and south were of eruptive origin. Their motion, in miles per second, was
slow, because they belonged to profound strata of the planet’s interior. Their backward drift
measured the depth from which they had been flung upward.
The spots, red, white, and black, constantly visible on the Jovian surface, excite the
highest curiosity. They are of all kinds and qualities, and their histories and adventures are
as diverse as they are in themselves. Some are quite evanescent; others last for years. At
times they come in undistinguished crowds, like flocks of sheep, then a solitary spot will
acquire notoriety on its own account. White spots appear in both ways; black spots more
often in communities; and it is remarkable that the former frequent distinctively, though not
exclusively, the Southern, the latter the Northern Hemisphere. Red spots, too, develop pretty [408]
freely; but the attention due to them has been mainly observed by one striking specimen.
The Great Red Spot has been present with us for at least nineteen years; and it is a moot
point whether its beginnings were not watched by Cassini more than two centuries ago. Its
modern conspicuousness, however, dates from 1878. Then of a full brick-red hue, and
strongly marked contour, it measured 30,000 by nearly 7,000 miles, and might easily have
inclosed three such bodies as the earth. It has since faded several times to the verge of
extinction, and partially recovered; but there has never been a time when it ceased to
dominate the planet’s surface-configuration. More than once it has been replaced by a bare
elliptical outline, as if through an effusion of white matter into a mold previously filled with
red matter; and just such a sketch was observed by Gledhill in 1870. The red spot is
attached, on the polar side, to the southern equatorial belt. It might almost be described as
jammed down upon it; for a huge gulf, bounded at one end by a jutting promontory, appears
as if scooped out of the chocolate-colored material of the belt to make room for it. Absolute
contact, nevertheless, seems impossible. The spot is surrounded by a shining aureola, which
seemingly defends it against encroachments, and acts as a chevaux-de-frise to preserve its
integrity. The formation thus constituted behaves like an irremovable obstacle in a strong
current. The belt-stuff encounters its resistance, and rears itself up into a promontory or [409]
“shoulder,” testifying to the solid presence of the spot, even though it be temporarily
submerged. The great red spot, the white aureola, and the brownish shoulder are
indissolubly connected.
The spot is then no mere cloudy condensation. Yet it has no real fixity. Its period of
rotation is inconstant. In 1870-80, it was of 9 hours, 55 minutes, 34 seconds; in 1885-86, it
was longer by 7 seconds. The object had retrograded at a rate corresponding to one complete
circuit of Jupiter in six years, or of the earth in seven months. It is not then fast moored, but
floats at the mercy of the currents and breezes predominant in the strange region it
navigates. A quiescent condition is implied by the approximate constancy of its rotation-
period during the last ten years. With the paling of its color, its “proper motion” slackens or
ceases. This must mean that, at its maxima of agitation, it is the scene of uprushes from
great depths, which, bringing with them a slower linear velocity, occasion the observed
laggings. It is not self-luminous, and shows no symptom of being depressed below the
general level of the Jovian surface.
Jupiter has no certain and single period of rotation. Nearly all the spots that from time to
time come into view on its disk are in relative motion, and thus give only individual results.
The great red spot has the slowest drift of all (with the rarest exceptions), while the black
cohorts of the Northern Hemisphere outmarch all competitors. Mr. Stanley Williams, as the
upshot of long study, has delimitated nine atmospheric surfaces with definite periods. They [410]
are well marked, and evidently have some degree of permanence, yet the velocities severally
belonging to them are distributed with extreme irregularity. Thus, two narrow, adjacent
zones differ in movement by 400 miles an hour. This state of things must obviously be
maintained by some constantly acting force, since friction, if unchecked, would very quickly
abolish such enormous discrepancies. The rotational zones are unsymmetrically placed;
there is no correspondence between those north and south of the Jovian equator; and,
although the equatorial drift is quicker than that of either tropic, it is outdone in 20° to 24°
north latitude.
Jupiter’s equatorial rotation, as indicated by observations of spots, is accomplished in 9
hours 50 minutes; but Bélopolsky and Deslandres’s spectrographic determinations gave
rates of approach and recession falling somewhat short of the corresponding velocity.
Three Views of Saturn
Showing Varying Aspects of the Ring taken at Different Intervals: 1, Feb. 2, 1862; 2, Nov. 3, 1858; 3,
March 23, 1856
However this be, the rotation of the great planet, albeit ill-regulated (if the expression be
permissible), is distinctly of the solar type. It is itself a “semi-sun,” showing no trace of a
solid surface, but a continual succession of cloud-like masses belched forth from within.
Jupiter’s low mean density, considered apart from every other circumstance, suffices to
demonstrate the primitive nature of his state. In a sun-like body, the circulation is bodily and
vertical. That the processes going on in Jupiter are of this kind is beyond question.
Exchanges of hot and colder substances are effected, not by surface-flows, but by up and [411]
down rushes. The parallelism of his belts to his equator makes this visible to the eye. An
occasional oblique streak betokens a current in latitude, but it is exceptional, and might be
called out of character.
Jupiter’s true atmosphere encompasses the disturbed shell of vapors observed
telescopically. Its general absorptive action upon light is betrayed by the darkening of the
planet’s limb—another point of resemblance to the sun; while its special, or selective,
absorption can only be detected with the spectroscope.
The actinic power of Jupiter’s light is very remarkable. It surpasses that of moonlight nine
times, and that of Mars twenty-four times. Dr. Lohse further ascertained that the Southern
Hemisphere is twice as chemically effective as the Northern. This superiority is doubtless
connected with the greater physical agitation of the same region. A series of photographs of
Jupiter, taken in 1891 with the great Lick refractor, were the first of any value for purposes
of investigation.
Jupiter’s satellites were the first trophies of telescopic observation. They are, indeed,
bright enough for naked-eye perception, could they be removed from the disk which
obscures them with its excessive splendor; and the first and third have actually been seen, in
despite of the glare, by a few persons with phenomenally good eyesight. The mythological
titles of the Galilean group—Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Calypso (proceeding from within
outward)—have been superseded by prosaic numbers.
The Jovian family presents an animated and attractive spectacle. The smallest of its [412]
original members (No. II) is almost exactly the size of our moon; the largest (No. III), with
its diameter of 3,550 miles, considerably exceeds the modest proportions of Mercury.
Satellite I revolves in 42½ hours at the same average distance from Jupiter’s surface that our
moon does from that of the earth. No. II has a period of 3 days 13 hours, and its distance
from Jupiter’s centre is 415,000 miles. Both these orbits are sensibly circular; and Nos. III
and IV travel in ellipses of very small eccentricity, the one at a mean distance of 664,000,
the other at 1,167,000 miles, in periods respectively of 7 days 4 hours, and 16 days 16½
hours. All four revolve strictly in the plane of Jupiter’s equator.
They constitute a system bound together by peculiar dynamical relations, in consequence
of which they can never be all either eclipsed or seen aligned at one side of their primary at
the same time. They can all, however, be simultaneously hidden behind it, or in its shadow;
although this moonless condition is looked out for as a telescopic rarity.
The transits of the satellites across the Jovian disk present many curious appearances, due
to complicated and changeable effects of light and shade both upon the planetary
background and upon the little circular objects self-compared with it. These, in the ordinary
course, show bright while near the dusky limb, then vanish during the central passage, and
re-emerge again bright at the opposite side. But instead of duly vanishing, they now and
then darken even to the point of becoming indistinguishable from their own shadows, by [413]
which they are preceded or followed. This difference of behavior can not be attributed
wholly to varieties of lustre in the sections of the disk transited; otherwise it could be
predicted. But this has never been attempted; “black transits” come when least expected.
The third and fourth satellites are those chiefly subject to these phases; the second has never
been known to exhibit them; and they but slightly affect the first. Indeed, all the satellites,
except, perhaps, No. II, are striped or spotted; and this leads to seeming deformations in
their shape, as well as fluctuations in their brightness, the markings being evidently of
atmospheric origin, and hence changeable. Their distinct and accurate perception has been
made possible by the excellence of the Lick 36-inch refractor.
Jupiter’s moons seem to resemble him in constitution. The first three possess the same
high reflective power. No. II is as bright as the planet’s brightest parts, so that its albedo can
not fall short of 0.70. And even No. IV (formerly designated “Calypso” in reference to its
frequent obscurations) exactly matches, during its darkest phases, the blue-gray polar hoods
of its primary. On an average, too, the satellites seem to be of about the same mean density
as Jupiter, No. I being considerably the lightest for its bulk; and their spectra, according to
Vogel’s observations in 1873, are composed of solar rays modified in precisely the same
way as those reflected by the planet.
The discovery, September 9, 1892, of Jupiter’s “fifth satellite” was one of the keenest
astronomical surprises on record. Professor Barnard seized the opportunity, lent by the [414]
specially favorable opposition of 1892, to rummage the system for novelties. Keeping the
telescopic field dark by means of a metallic bar placed so as to occult the gorgeous planetary
round, he sought, night after night, for what might appear. At length, on September 9, he
caught the glimmer he wanted, and made sure, September 10, that it truly intimated the
presence of a new satellite.
This small body revolves in a period of 11 hours, 57 minutes, 23 seconds at a mean
distance of 112,160 miles from Jupiter’s centre, or 67,000 from his bulged equatorial
surface. Hence, it should by right be called “No. I” instead of “No. V.” The major axis of the
ellipse in which it circulates advances so rapidly, owing to the disturbance caused by
Jupiter’s spheroidal figure, as to complete a revolution in five months. The implied
eccentricity of its orbit, as M. Tisserand has shown, very slightly exceeds that of the orbit of
Venus, yet it has been made obvious by Barnard’s observations of the differences between
its east and west elongations. Its orbital velocity of 16½ miles a second far surpasses that of
any other satellite in the solar system. Close vicinity to a mass so vast as Jupiter’s demands
counterbalancing swiftness. Its period of revolution being, however, longer by one hour than
Jupiter’s period of rotation, it so far conducts itself normally as to rise in the east and set in
the west. On the other hand, since its progress over the sphere is measured by the difference
between the two periods, it spends five Jovian days in journeying from one horizon to the
other, running, in the meantime, four times through all its phases. Yet it never appears full. [415]
Jupiter’s voluminous shadow cuts off sunlight from it during nearly one-fifth of each circuit.
SATURN.—Agnes M. Clerke
N early twice as far from the sun as Jupiter revolves a planet, the spacious orbit of which
was, until 1781, supposed to mark the uttermost boundary of the Solar System. The
mean radius of that orbit is 886 millions of miles; but in consequence of its eccentricity, the
sun is displaced from its middle point to the extent of 50 million miles, and Saturn is
accordingly 100 million miles nearer to him at perihelion than at aphelion. The immense
round assigned to the “saturnine” planet is traversed in 29½ years, at the tardy pace of six
miles a second. His seasons are thus twenty-nine times more protracted than ours, and are
nominally more accentuated, since his axis of rotation deviates from the vertical by 27°. But
solar heat, however distributed, plays an insignificant part in his internal economy. In the
first place, its amount is only 1/91st its amount on the earth; in the second, Saturn, like Jupiter
—even more than Jupiter—is thermally self-supporting. The bulk of his globe
comparatively to its mass suffices in itself to make this certain. The mean diameter of Saturn
is 71,000 miles, or nine times (very nearly) that of the earth; if of equal density, its mass
should then be nine cubed, or 729 times the same unit. The actual proportion, however, is
95; hence the planet has a mean density of only 95/729th, or between 1/7th and 1/8th the [416]
terrestrial, and being thus composed of matter as light as cork, would float in water.
Professor G. H. Darwin has, moreover, demonstrated, from the movements of its largest
satellite, that its density gains markedly with descent into the interior, so that its surface-
materials must be lighter than any known solid or liquid.
When at its nearest to the earth, Saturn is as large as a sixpence held up at a distance of
210 yards. But instead of being round like a sixpence, it is strongly compressed—more
compressed even than Jupiter. The spectra of the two planets are almost identical. Both are
impressed with traces of aqueous absorption, and include the “red star line.”
Saturn resembles to the eye a large, dull star; its rays are entirely devoid of the sparkling
quality which distinguishes those of Jupiter. But it shows telescopically an analogous
surface-structure. Its most conspicuous markings are tropical dark belts of a grayish or
greenish hue; the equatorial region is light yellow, diversified by vague white spots; while
the poles carry extensive pale blue canopies. The apparent tranquillity of the disk may be
attributed in part to the vast distance from which it is viewed; yet not wholly.
From measures executed by Barnard in 1895, it appears that the equatorial diameter of
Saturn is 76,470, its polar diameter 69,770 miles, giving a mean diameter of 74,240, and a
compression of about 1/12th. Gravity, at its surface, is only 1/5th more powerful than on the
earth.
Thus, Saturn not only belongs to the same celestial species as Jupiter, but is a closely [417]
related individual of that species. There is no probability that either is to any extent solid.
Both exhibit the same type of markings; both betray internal tumults by eruptions of spots
which, by their varying movements, supply a measure for the profundity of their origin;
both possess identically constituted atmospheres, and are darkened marginally by
atmospheric absorption.
Saturn is, however, distinguished by the possession of a unique set of appendages.
Nothing like them is to be seen elsewhere in the heavens; and when well opened they form,
with the globe they inclose, and the retinue of satellites in waiting outside, a strange and
wonderful telescopic object. The rings, since they lie in the plane of Saturn’s equator, are
inclined 27° to the Saturnian orbit, and 28° to the ecliptic. The earth is, however,
comparatively to Saturn, so near the sun, that their variations in aspect, as viewed from it,
may in a rough way be considered the same as if seen from the sun. They correspond
exactly with the Saturnian seasons. At the Saturnian equinoxes, the rings are illuminated
edgewise, and disappear, totally or approximately; at the Saturnian solstices, sunlight strikes
them nearly at the full angle of 27°, first from below, then from above. At these epochs, we
perceive the appendage expanded into an ellipse about half as wide as it is long. Two
concentric rings (generally called A and B) are then very plainly distinguishable, the inner
being the brighter. The black fissure which separates them is called “Cassini’s division,” [418]
because that eminent observer was, in 1675, the first to perceive it. A chasm known as
“Encke’s division,” in the outer ring (A), is a thinning-out rather than an empty space; and
temporary gaps frequently appear in A, while B is entirely exempt from them. There are
then two definite and permanent bright rings, and no more; but with them is associated the
dusky formation discovered by W. C. Bond, November 15, 1850, and described by Lassell
as “something like a crape veil covering a part of the sky within the inner ring.” It is semi-
transparent, the limb of Saturn showing distinctly through it.
The exterior diameter of the ring-system is 172,800, while its breadth is 42,300 miles.
The rings A and C are each 11,000 miles wide; while B measures 18,000, Cassini’s division
2,270, and the clear interval between C and the planetary surface somewhat less than 6,000
miles. Each ring, C included, is brightest at its outer edge; but there is no gap between the
shining and the dusky structures, B shading by insensible gradations up to C, yet
maintaining distinctness from it. The earliest exact determinations of the former were made
by Bradley in 1719, since when they have been affected by no appreciable change. The
theoretically inevitable subversion of the system is progressing with extreme slowness.
The thickness of the rings is quite inconsiderable. They are flat sheets, without (so to
speak) a third dimension. For this reason, they disappear utterly in most telescopes, when
their plane passes through the earth, as it does twice in each Saturnian year. Only under [419]
exceptional conditions, a narrow, knotted, often nebulous, streak survives as an index to
their whereabouts. On October 26, 1891, Professor Barnard, armed with the Lick refractor,
found it impossible to see them projected upon the sky, notwithstanding that their shadow
lay heavily on the planet. It was not until three days later that “slender threads of light”
came into view. The corresponding thickness of the formation was estimated at less than
fifty miles. The phenomenon of ring disappearance will not recur until July 29, 1907.
The constitution of this marvelous structure is no longer doubtful. It represents what
might be called the fixed form of a revolving multitude of diminutive bodies. This was
demonstrated by Clerk Maxwell in the Adams Prize Essay of 1857. His conclusion proved
irreversible. The pulverulent composition of Saturn’s rings is one of the acquired truths of
science. An incalculable number of tiny satellites revolving independently in distinct orbits,
in the precise periods prescribed by their several distances from the planet, are aggregated
into the unmatched appendages of Galileo’s tergeminus planeta. The local differences in
their brightness depend upon the distribution of the component satelloids. Where they are
closely packed, as in the outer margins of rings A and B, sunlight is copiously reflected;
where the interspaces are wide, the blackness of the sky is barely veiled by the scanty rays
thrown back from the thinly scattered cosmic dust. The appearance of the crape ring as a
dark stripe on the planet results—as M. Seeliger has pointed out—not from the transits of [420]
the objects themselves, but from the flitting of their shadows in continual procession across
the disk.
The albedo of these particles is so high as to render it improbable that they are of an
earthy or rocky nature, such as the meteorites which penetrate our atmosphere. The rings
they form are, on the whole, more lustrous than Saturn’s globe; but this superiority is held to
be due to the absence of atmospheric absorption. Their spectrum is that of unmodified
sunlight.
An eclipse of Japetus, the eighth Saturnian moon, by the globe and rings, November 1,
1889, was highly instructive as to the nature of the dusky appendage. The satellite was never
lost sight of during its passage behind it; but became more and more deeply obscured as it
traveled outward; then, at the moment of ingress into the shadow of ring B, suddenly
disappeared. Certainty was thus acquired that the particles forming the crape ring are most
sparsely strewn at its inner edge—which is, nevertheless, perfectly definite—and gradually
reach a maximum of density at its outer edge. Yet, while there is not the smallest clear
interval, a sharp line of demarcation separates it from the contiguous bright ring. Professor
Barnard was the only observer of these curious appearances. The distribution of the ring-
constituents, like that of the asteroids, was governed by the law of commensurable periods,
Saturn’s moons replacing Jupiter as the perturbing and regulating power.
The “satellite-theory” of Saturn’s rings has received confirmation from apparently the [421]
least promising quarters. Professor Seeliger of Munich showed, from photometric
experiments in 1888, that their constant lustre under angles of illumination ranging from 0°
to 30° was proof positive of their composition out of discrete small bodies. And Professor
Keeler of Alleghany, by a beautiful and refined application of the spectroscopic method,
arrived at the same result in April, 1895. “Under the two different hypotheses,” he remarked,
“that the ring is a rigid body, and that it is a swarm of satellites, the relative motion of its
parts would be essentially different.” The former would necessarily involve increasing
velocity outward, the latter, increase of velocity inward, just for the same reason that
Mercury moves more swiftly than the earth, and the earth than Saturn; while the sections of
a solid body, which could have but one period of rotation, should move faster, in miles per
second, the further they were from the centre of attraction. The line of sight test is then
theoretically available; but it was an arduous task to render it practically so. The difficulties
were, however, one by one overcome; and a successful photograph of the spectra of Saturn
and its rings gave the required information in unmistakable shape. From measurements of
the inclinations of five dusky rays contained in it with reference to a standard horizontal
line, rates of movement were derived of 12½ miles per second for the inner edge of ring B,
and of 10 miles for the outer edge of ring A. The agreement with theory was, as nearly as [422]
possible, exact; the components of the rings were experimentally demonstrated to be
moving, each independently of every other, under the dominion of Kepler’s laws.
For the globe of Saturn, Professor Keeler obtained, by the same exquisite method, a
rotational period of 10 hours, 14 minutes, 24 seconds, in precise accordance with that
indicated by the white spot of 1876, which thus seems to have had no proper motion, but to
have floated on the ochreous equatorial surface as tranquilly as a water-lily upon a stagnant
pool. The result, so far as it goes, hints that Saturn may be really, as well as apparently, less
ebullient than Jupiter.
Seers into the future of the heavenly bodies consider that the rings of Saturn, like the gills
of a tadpole, are symptomatic of an early stage of development; and will be disposed of
before he arrives at maturity. They can not be regarded otherwise than as abnormal
excrescences. No other planet retains matter circulating round it in such close relative
vicinity. It was proved by Roche of Montpellier that no secondary body of importance can
exist within less than 2.44 mean radii of its primary; inside of that limit it would be rent
asunder by tidal strain. But the entire ring-system lies within the assigned boundary; hence,
being where it is, it can only exist as it is—in flights of discrete particles. Will it, however,
always remain where it is?
“Clerk Maxwell,” wrote Mr. Cowper Ranyard, “used to describe the matter of the rings as
a shower of brickbats, among which there would inevitably be continual collisions. The [423]
theoretical results of such impacts would be a spreading of the ring both inward and
outward. The outward spreading will in time carry the meteorites beyond Roche’s limit,
where, in all probability, they will, as Professor Darwin suggests, slowly aggregate, and a
minute satellite will be formed. The inward spreading will in time carry the meteorites at the
inner edge of the ring into the atmosphere of the planet, where they will become
incandescent, and disappear as meteorites do in our atmosphere.”
Yet it may be that collisions are infrequent in this conglomeration of “brickbats.” There is
the strongest presumption that they all circulate in the same direction, in orbits nearly
circular, and scarcely deviating from the plane of the Saturnian equator. Those pursuing
markedly eccentric tracks must long ago have been eliminated. Thus, encounters can only
occur through gravitational disturbances by Saturn’s moons, and they must be of a mild
character, depending upon very small differences of velocity. The first sign of a “spreading
outward” should be the formation of an exterior “crape ring,” of which no faintest trace has
yet been perceived.
Saturn’s rings are entirely invisible from its polar regions, but occasion prolonged and
complex eclipse-effects in its temperate and equatorial zones. They have been fully treated
of from the geometrical point of view by Mr. Proctor in Saturn and its System.
Of this planet’s eight satellites,[28] the largest, Titan (No. VI), was discovered first (by [424]
Huygens in 1655), and the smallest, Hyperion (No. VII), last (by Lassell and Bond in 1848).
The five others were detected by J. D. Cassini and William Herschel. Titan, alone of the
entire group, equals our moon in size. It measures, according to Professor Barnard, 2,720
miles across. Its period of revolution is nearly sixteen days, its distance from Saturn’s
centre, 771,000 miles. The orbit of Japetus (No. VIII) is the largest, and its period the
longest of any secondary body in the Solar System. It circulates in 79⅓ days at a distance of
2,225,000 miles, equal to 59½ of Saturn’s equatorial radii. Hence its path is of about the
same proportional dimensions as that of our moon. Japetus is remarkable for its variability
in light. It is capable of tripling or quadrupling its minimum lustre. Sir William Herschel
noticed that these maxima coincided with a position on the western side of the planet, and
inferred rotation of the lunar kind. “From the changes in this body,” he argued in 1792, “we
may conclude that some part of its surface, and this by far the largest, reflects much less
light than the rest; and that neither the darkest nor the brightest side is turned toward the
planet, but partly one and partly the other, though probably less of the bright side.”
This explanation, however, he admitted to be incomplete. There was, and is, outstanding
variability, which seems to intimate the presence of an atmosphere and the formation of [425]
clouds. But no positive knowledge has yet been gained regarding the physical state of
Saturn’s moons. We may, nevertheless, conjecture that, since tidal friction has destroyed the
rotation (as regards Saturn) of the remotest member of the family, it has not spared those
more exposed to its grinding-down action. All presumably rotate in the same time that they
revolve.
The five inner satellites move in approximately circular orbits; the three outer in ellipses
about twice as eccentric as the terrestrial path. All, Japetus only excepted, keep strictly to the
plane of the rings. And since this makes an angle of 27° with the planet’s orbit, eclipses are
much less frequent here than in the Jovian system. They can only occur when Saturn is
within a certain distance (different for each) from the node of the satellite-orbit. Even
Mimas (No. I), although it wheels round the ring at an interval of only 34,000 miles, often
slips outside the obliquely projected shadow-cone. Its distance from Saturn’s centre is
118,000 miles, and it completes a circuit in 22½ hours. Perpetually wrapped in the glare of
its magnificent primary, it is a very shy object, only to be caught sight of in its timid
excursions by the very finest telescopes. Like all the Saturnian moons, except Titan, and, by
a rare conjunction, Japetus, it is far too much contracted to be visible in transit across the
disk.
The movements of these bodies have been carefully studied, and their mutual
perturbations to some extent unraveled. They have proved exceedingly interesting to
students of celestial mechanics. Titan has, in this department, chiefly to be reckoned with. [426]
He exercises in the Saturnian system a similar overpowering influence to that wielded by
Jupiter in the Solar System.
FOOTNOTES:
[28] A ninth satellite, Phœbe, was discovered in 1904. Its existence had been
suspected for many years, and it was discovered at the Arequipa Observatory,
Peru, on March 14, 1899, by means of photography. Since that date, it has been
several times lost and rediscovered.—E. S.
URANUS AND NEPTUNE.—William F. Denning
Our knowledge of this distant orb is extremely limited, owing to his apparently
diminutive size and feebleness. No markings have ever been sighted on his miniature disk,
and we can expect to learn nothing until one of the large telescopes is employed in the work.
No doubt this planet exhibits the same belted appearance as that of Uranus, and there is
every probability that he possesses numerous satellites.
Directly the new planet was discovered, Mr. Lassell turned his large reflector upon it and
sought to learn something of its appearance, and possibly detect one or more of its satellites.
On October 3 and 10, 1846, he was struck with the appearance of the disk, which was
obviously not spherical. He subsequently confirmed this impression, and concluded that a
ring, inclined about 70°, surrounded the planet. Professor Challis supported this view, but
later observations in a purer sky led Mr. Lassell to abandon the idea. Thus the ring of
Neptune, like the ring of Uranus, though apparently obvious at first, vanished in the light of
more modern researches.
But if Mr. Lassell quite failed to demonstrate the existence of a ring, he nevertheless
succeeded in discovering a satellite belonging to the planet. This was on October 10, 1846.
The new satellite was found to have a period of 5 days, 21 hours, and 3 minutes, and to be
situated about 220,000 miles distant from the planet.
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