Hit' ii- .i, iii'llir I"' !|TW niilll'iiinuFirMiiiiiiiTiViriiiiuilltf^ //^r/jny //ff^ /f//'/:vrh W. C. I B -4- S [y^.r/^rr/?t/) C//?//^^«^^ =^.^v^/. 'T GFOi / COSMOS: A SKETCH OF A PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE UNIVERSE. BY ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT. TBJLNSZ.ATED FROM THX OEBSIAN, BY E. C. OTTE. NatorsB vero rerum vis atque majestaa In omnibua momenti3 fide caret, ei quia niudo partes ejus ac non totam complectatur animo. — Plin., Hist. Nat., lib. vii., c. 1. VOL. in. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, 329 & 331 PEARL STREET, FRANKLIN SQUARE. 185 6. CONTENTS OF VOL. III. INTRODUCTION. rago Historical Review of the attempts made with the object of considering the Phenomena of the Universe as a Unity of Nature 5-25 SPECIAL RESULTS OF OBSERVATIONS IN THE DOMAIN OF COSMICAL PHENOMENA A. Uranological portion of the physical description of the world. — a. Astrognosy 26-28 I. The realms of space, and conjectures regarding that which appears to occupy the space intervening between the heavenly bodies 29-41 II. Natural and telescopic vision, 41-73 ; Scintillation of the stars, 73-83 ; Velocity of light, 83-89 ; Results of pho- tometry, 89-102 41-102 III. Number, distribution, and color of the fixed stars, 103- 139; Stellar masses (stellar swarms), 139-143; The Milky Way interspersed with a few nebulous spots, 143-151 103-151 IV. New stars, and stars that have vanished, 151—160 ; Va- riable stars, whose recurring periods have been determ- ined, 160—177; Variations in the intensity of the light of stars whose periodicity is as yet uninvestigated, 177- 182 151-182 V. Proper motion of the fixed stars, 182-185 ; Problemat- ical existence of dark cosmical bodies, 185—188 ; Par- allax— measured distances of some of the fixed stars, 188-194; Doubts as to the assumption of a central body for the whole sidereal heavens, 194-199 182-199 yj. Multiple, or double stars — Their number and reciprocal distances. — Period of revolution of two stars round a c(\mmon center of gravity . . 1 99-21 3 IV CONTENTS. TABLES. Pago Photometric Tables of Stars 100-102 Clusters of Stars 141-143 New Stars 155-160 Variable Stars 172-177 Parallaxes : 193 Elements of Orbits of double Stars 213 SPECIAL RESULTS OF OBSERVATION IN THE DOMAIN OF COSMICAL PHENOMENA. INTRODUCTION. In accordance with the object I have proposed to myself, and which, as far as my own powers and the present state of science permit, I have regarded as not unattainable, I have, in the preceding volumes of Cosmos, considered Nature in a two-fold point of view. In the first place, I have en- deavored to present her in the pure objectiveness of external phenomena ; and, secondly, as the reflection of the image im- pressed by the senses upon the inner man, that is, upon his ideas and feelings. The external world of phenomena has been delineated un- der the scientific form of a general picture of nature in her two great spheres, the uranological and the telluric or ter- restrial. This delineation begins with the stars, which glim- mer amid nebuloB in the remotest realms of space, and, pass- ing from our planetary system to the vegetable covering of the earth, descends to the minutest organisms which float in the atmosphere, and are invisible to the naked eye. In order to give due prominence to the consideration of the existence of one common bond encircling the whole organic world, of the control of eternal laws, and of the causal connection, as far as yet known to us, of whole groups of phenomena, it was necessary to avoid the accumulation of isolated facts. This precaution seemed especially requisite where, in addition to the dynamic action of moving forces, the powerful influence of a specific difference of matter manifests itself in the ter- restrial portion of the universe. The problems presented to us in the sidereal, or uranological sphere of the Cosmos, are, considering their nature, in as far as they admit of being ob- served, of extraordinary simplicity, and capable, by means of the attractive force of matter and the quantity of its mass, of being submitted to exact calculation in accordance with « COSMOb. the theor}'- of motion. If, as I believe, Ave are justified m re* garding the revolving meteor-asteroids (aerolites) as portions of our planetary system, their fall upon the earth constitutes the sole means by which we are brought in contact with cosmical substances of a recognizable heterogeneity.^ I here refer to the cause which has hitherto rendered terrestrial phenomena less amenable to th« rules of mathematical de- duction than those mutually disturbing and readjusting move- ments of the cosmical bodies, in which the fundamental force of homooreneous matter is alone manifested. I have endeavored, in my delineation of the earth, to ar- range natural phenomena in such a manner as to indicate their causal connection. In describing our terrestrial sphere, I have considered its form, mean density, electro-magnetic currents, the processes of polar light, and the gradations ac- cording to which heat increases with the increase of depth. The reaction of the planet's interior on its outer crust im- plies the existence of volcanic activit}' ; of more or less con- tracted circles of waves of commotion (earthquake waves), and their efiects, which are not always purely dynamic ; and of the eruptions of gas, of mud, and of thermal springs. The upheaval of fire-erupting mountains must be regarded as the highest demonstration of the inner terrestrial forces. "We have therefore depicted volcanoes, both central and chain formations, as generative no less than as destructive agents, and as constantly forming before our eyes, for the most part, periodic rocks (rocks of eruption) ; we have likewise shown, in contrast wijh this formation, how sedimentary rocks are in the course of precipitation from fluids, which hold their minutest particles in solution or suspension. Such a com- parison of matter still in the act of development and solidi- fication with that already consolidated in the form of strata of the earth's crust, leads us to the distinction of geognostic epochs, and to a more certain determination of the chronolog- ical succession of those formations in which lie entombed ex- tinct genera of animals and plants — the fauna and flora of a former world, Avhose ages are revealed by the order in which they occur. The origin, transformation, and upheaval of ter- restrial strata, exert, at certain epochs, an alternating actior on all the special characteristics of the physical configura tion of the earth's surface ; influencing the distribution of fluids and solids, and the extension and articulation of con * Cosmos, vol. i. (Harper's edit.), p ^.3-65, 136. INTRODUCTION. 7 tinental masses in a horizontal and vertical direction. On these relations depend the thermal conditions of oceanic cur- rents, the meteorological processes in the aerial investment of our planet, and the typical and geographical distribution of organic Ibrms. Such a reference to the arrangement of tellm'ic phenomena presented in the picture of nature, will, I think, suilice to show that the juxtaposition of great, and apparently complicated, results of observation, facilitates our insight into their causal connection. Our impressions of na- ture will, however, be essentially weakened, if the picture fail in warmth of color by the too great accumulation of minor details. In a carefully-sketched representation of the phenomena of the material world, completeness in the enumeration of individual features has not been deemed essential, neither does it seem desirable in the delineation of the reflex of ex- ternal nature on the inner man. Here it was necessary to observe even stricter limits. The boundless domain of tha world of thought, enriched for thousands of years by the vig- orous force of intellectual activity, exhibits, among different races of men, and in difierent stages of civilization, sometimes a joyous, sometimes a melancholy tone of mind ;^ sometimes a delicate appreciation of the beautiful, sometimes an apa- thetic insensibility. The mind of man is first led to adore the forces of nature and certain objects of the material world ; at a later period it yields to religious impulses of a higher and purely spiritual character.! The inner reflex of the outer world exerts the most varied influence on the myste- rious process of the formation of language,! iii which the original corporeal tendencies, as well as the impressions of surrounding nature, act as powerful concurring elements. Man elaborates within himself the materials presented to him by the senses, and the products of this spiritual labo- belong as essentially to the domain of the Cosmos as do the phenomena of the external world. ■ As a reflected image of Nature, influenced by the crea- tions of excited imagination, can not retain its truthful purity, there has arisen, besides the actual and external world, an ideal and internal world, full of fantastic and partly sym- bolical myths, heightened by the introduction of fabulous ani- mal forms, whose several parts are derived from the orgau* * Cosmos, vol. i,, p. 23-25 ; vol, ii., p. 25 and 97. t Ibid., vol. ii., p. 38-43, and 56-60. t Ibid . vol. i., p. 35'^-359: -ol. ii., p. 112-117. 8 COSMOS. isms of the present world, and sometimes even from the relics of extinct species. =* Marvelous flowers and trees spring from this mythic soil, as the giant ash of the Edda-tSongs, the world-tree Yggdrasil, whose branches tower above the heav- ens, while one of its triple roots penetrates to the " foaming caldron springs" of the lower world. f Thus the cloud-re- gion of physical myths is filled with pleasing or with fearful forms, according to the diversity of character in nations and climates ; and these forms are preserved for centuries in the intellectual domain of successive generations. If the present work does not fully bear out its title, the adoption of which I have myself designated as bold and in- considerate, the charge of incompleteness applies especially to that portion of the Cosmos which treats of spiritual life ; that is, the image reflected by external nature on the inner world of thought and feeling. In this portion of my work I have contented myself with dwelling more especially upon those objects which lie in the direction of long-cherished studies ; on the manifestation of a more or less lively appre- ciation of nature in classical antiquity and in modern times ; on the fragments of poetical descriptions of nature, the col- oring of which has been so essentially influenced by individ- uality of national character, and the religious monotheistic view of creation ; on the fascinating charm of landscape painting ; and on the history of the contemplation of the physical universe, that is, the history of the recognition of the universe as a whole, and of the unity of phenomena — a recognition gradually developed during the course of two thousand years. In a work of so comprehensive a character, the object of which is to give a scientific, and, at the same time, an ani- mated description of nature, a first imperfect attempt must rather lay claim to the merit of inciting than to that of sat- isfying inquiry. A Book of Nature, worthy of its exalted title, can neierbe accomplished until the physical sciences, notwithstanding their inherent imperfectibihty, shall, by theij * M. von Olfer'8 Ueberreste vorweltlicher Ricsenfhiere in Beziehung aiij Ostasiatische Sagen in the Abh. der Berl. Akad., 1832, s. 51. On the opinion advanced by Empedocles regarding the canse of the extinction (if the earliest animal forms, see Vlc^eVsGeschichte der Philosophic. bd. ii., s. 344. t See, for the world-tree Yggdrasil, and the rushing (foaming) cab dron-spring Hvergelmir, the Dentsche Mythologie of Jacob Grimm, 1844, B. 530, 7.jG; also Mallet's Northern Ayitiquities (Bohn's edition), 1847 p i!0, 489. and 4f>2. and front ispien' to ditto. INTRODUCTION 9 gradual development and extension, have attained a higher degree ol" advancement, and until wo shall have gained a more extended knowledge of the two grand divisions ot the CosiMOS — the external world, as made ])erceptible to us by the senses ; and the iimer, rcilected intellectual world. I thiidv I have here suthciently indicated the reasons which determined me not to give greater extension to the general picture ol'nature. It remains for this third and fourth volume of my Cosmos to supply much that is wanting in the previ- ous portions of the work, and to present those results of ob- servation on which the present condition of scientific opinion is especially grounded. I shall here follow a similar mode of arrangement to that previously adopted, for the reasons which I have advanced, in the delineation of nature. But, before entering upon the individual facts on which special departments of science are based, I would fain offer a few more general explanatory observations. The unexpected in- dulgence with which my undertaking has been received by a large portion of the public, both at home and abroad, ren- ders it doubly imperative that I should once more define, as distinctly as possible, the fundamental ideas on which the whole work is based, and say something in regard to those demands wdiich I have not even attempted to satisfy, be- cause, according to my view of empirical — ^. e., experiment- al— science, they did not admit of being satisfied. These explanatory observations involuntarily associate themselves with historical recollections of the earlier attempts made to discover the one universal idea to which all phenomena, -in their causal connection, might be reduced, as to a sole prin- ciple. The fundamental principle* of my work on the Cosmos, as enunciated by me more than twenty years ago, in the French and German lectures I gave at Paris and Berlin, comprehended the endeavor to combine all cosmic al phenom- ena in one sole picture of nature ; to show in what manner the common conditions, that is to say, the great laws, by which individual groups of these phenomena are governed, have been recognized ; and what course has been pursued in ascending from these laws to the discovery of their causal connection. Such an attempt to comprehend the plan of the universe — the order of nature — must begin with a gen* eralization of particular facts, and a knowledge of the con- * Cosmos, vol. i., p. 48-50. and 68-77. 10 COSMOS. ditions under Avhich physical changes regularly and period- icall)'' manifest themselves ; and must conduct to the thought- ful consideration of the results yielded by empirical observa- tion, but not to "a contemplation of the universe based on speculative deductions and development of thought alone, or to a theory of absolute unity independent of experience." We are, I here repeat, far distant from the period when it was thought possible to concentrate all sensuous perceptions into the unity of one sole idea of nature. The true path was indicated upward of a century before Lord Bacon's time, by Leonardo da Vinci, in these few words : " Cominciare dall' esperienza e per mezzo di questa scoprirne la ragione."* " Commence by experience, and by means of this discover the reason." In many groups of phenomena we must still content ourselves with the recognition of empirical laws ; but the highest and more rarely attained aim of all natural in ■ quiry must ever be the discovery of their causal connection. i The most satisfactory and distinct evidence will always ap- pear where the laws of phenomena admit of being referred to mathematical principles of explanation. Physical cosmog- raphy constitutes merely in some of its parts a cosmology. The two expressions can not yet be regarded as identical. The great and solemn spirit that pervades the intellectual * Op. cit., vol. ii. p. 283. + In the Introductory Observations, in Cosmos, vol. i., p. 50, it should not have been generally stated that '• the ultimate object of the experi- mental sciences is to discover laws, and to trace their progressive gen- eralization." The clause "in many kinds of phenomena" should have been added. The caution with which I have expressed myself in the second volume of this work (p. 313). on the relation borne by Newton to Kepler, can not, I think, leave a doubt that I clearly distinguish be- tween the discovery and interpretation of natural laws, i. e-, the explana- tion of phenomena. I there said of Kepler: "The rich abundance of accurate observations furnished by Tycho Brahe, the zealous opponent of the Copernican system, laid the foundation for the discovery of those eternal laws of the planetary movements which prepared imperishable renown for the name of Kepler, and which, interpreted by Newton, and proved to be theoretically and necessarily true, have been transferred into the bright and glorious domain of thought, as the intellectual rec- ognition of nature. ^^ Of Newton I said (p. 3.51): "We close it [the great epoch of Galileo, Kepler, Newton, and Leibnitz] with the figure of the earth as it was then recognized from theoretical conclusions. New- ton was enabled to give an explanation of the system of the univei*se, because Ire succeeded in discovering the ibrce from wliose action the laws of Kepler necessarily result." Comjiare on this subject ("On Laws and Causes") the adinira])le remarks in Sir .John Herscliel's address at the fifteenth meeting of the British Association at Cambridge, 1845, [>. xlii.; and Edinh. ner..\a\. 87, 1818. p. 180-183. 1\1 ItOUL'C'l'IUN'. 11 labor, ol' which the limits are here delined, arises Ironi tlie siibhme consciousness of striving toward the infinite, and of graspin<^r alJ that is revealed to us amid the boundless and inex.hau;>liblc lullness of creation, development, and being. This active striving, -which has existed in all ao:es. must frequently, and muler various forms, have deluded men into the idea that they had reached the goal, and discovered the principle Avhich could explain all that is varia])le in the or- ganic world, and all the phenomena revealed to us by sen- suous perception. After men had lor a long time, in accord- ance with the earliest ideas of the Hellenic people, vener- ated the agency of spirits, embodied in human forms, =* in the creative, changing, and destructive processes of nature, the germ of a scientiHc contemplation developed itself in the physiological fancies of the Ionic school. The first principle of the origin of things, the first principle of all phenomena, was referred to two causesf — either to concrete material prin- ciples, the so-called elements of Nature, or to processes of rarefaction and condensation, sometimes in accordance with mechanical, sometimes with dynamic views. The hypothe- sis of four or live materially differing elements, which was probably of Indian origin, has continued, from the era of the didactic poem of Empedocles down to the most recent times, to imbue all opinions on natural philosophy — a primeval evi- dence and monument of the tendency of the human mind to seek a generalization and simplificatioii of ideas, not only with reference to the forces, but also to the qualitative na- ture of matter. In the latter period of the development of the Ionic phys- iology, Anaxagoras of Clazomense advanced from the postu- late of simply dynamic forces of matter to the idea of a spirit independent of all matter, uniting and distributing the homo- geneous particles of which matter is composed. The world- arranging Intelligence {yovc;) controls the continuously pro- gressins, formation of th^ world, and is the primary source * In the memorable passage {Metaph., xii., 8, p. 1074, Bekker) in which Aristotle speaks of " the relics of an eaiHer acquired and subse- quently lost wisdom,'' he refers with extraordinary freedom and sig- nificance to the veneration of physical foi'ces, and .of gods in human forms: "much," says he, "has been mythically added for the persuu' sion of the midtiUide, as also on account of the laws and for other useful ends." t The important difference in these philosophical directions rpoTroi, is clearly indicated in Arist., Pliya. Auscidt., 1, 4, p. 187, Bekk. (Cora* pare Brandis, in the Rhein. Museum fi'ir Philologie. Jahrg. iii., s. 105.) 12 COSMOS. of all motion, and therefore of all physical phenomena. An- axagoras explains the apparent movement of the heavenly bodies from east to west by the assumption of a centrifugal force, =* on the intermission of wliich, as Ave have already ob- served, the fall of meteoric stones ensues. This hypothesis indicates the origin of those theories of rotatory motion w^hick more than two thousand years afterward attained considera- ble cosmical importance from the labors of Descartes, Huy- gens, and Hooke. It would be foreign to the present work to discuss whether the world- arranging Intelligence of the philosopher of Clazomense indicates! the Godhead itself, or the mere pantheistic notion of a spiritual principle animating all nature. In striking contrast with these two divisions of the Ionic school is the mathematical symbolism of the Pythagoreans, which in like manner embraced the whole universe. Here, in the world of physical phenomena cognizable by the senses, the attention is solely directed to that which is normal in con- figuration (the five elementary forms), to the ideas of num- bers, measure, harmony, and contrarieties. Things are re- flected in numbers which are, as it were, an imitative repre- sentation [fiiiirjaig) of them. The boundless capacity for rep- etition, and the illimitability of numbers, is typical of the character of eternity and of the infinitude of nature. The essence of things may be recognized in the form of numerical relations ; their alterations and metamorphoses as numerical combinations. Plato, in his Physics, attempted to refer the nature of all substances in the universe, and their different stages of metamorphosis, to corporeal forms, and these, again, to the simplest triangular plane figures. $ But in reference * Cosmos, vol. i., p. 133-13.5 (note), and vol. ii., p. 309, 310 (and note). Simplicius, in a remarkable passage, p. 491, most distinctly contrasts the centripetal with the centrifugal force. He there says, " The heavenly bodies do not fall in consequence of the centrifugal force being superior to the inherent falling force of bodies and to their down- ward tendency." Hence Plutarch, in his work, De Facie in Orbe Ltince, p. 923, compares the moon, in consequence of its not falling to the earth, to " a stone in a sling." For the actual signification of the TrepLxt^prjaL^ of Anaxagoras, compare Schaubach, in Anaxag. Clazom. Fragm., 1827, p. 107-109. t Schaubacl], Op. cit., p. 151-156, and 185-189. Plants are likewise eaid to be animated by the intelligence vovq ; Aristot., De Plant., i., p. 815, Bekk. X Compare, on this portion of Plato's mathematical physics, B6ckh, De Platonico Syst. CceJestium Globoruvi, 1810 et 1811; Martin, Etudes tur le Timie, tom. ii., ]). 234-242; and Brandis, in the Geschichte der Qriccliiteh-B omvich en Philosovhie. th. ii.. nhth. i.. 1814, ^ 37.'). INTRODUCTION. 13 to ultimate principles (the elements, as it were, of the ele ments), Plato exclaims, with modest difTidcnce, " God alone, and those whom he loves among men, know what they arc.'' Such a mathematical mode of treating physical phenomena, together with the development of the atomic theory, and the pliilosophy of measure and harmony, have long obstructed the development of the physical sciences, and misled fanciful in- quirers into devious tracks, as is shown in the history of the physical contemplation of the universe. " There dwells a captivating charm, celebrated by all antiquity, in the simple relations of time and space, as manifested in tones, numbers, and lines."* The idea of the harmonious government of the universe re- veals itself in a distinct and exalted tone throughout the writ- ings of Aristotle. All the phenomena of nature are depicted in the Physical Lectures [AHScidtatio?ies PJiysicoi) as mov- ing, vital agents of one general cosmical force. Heaven and nature (the telluric sphere of phenomena) depend upon the " unmoved motus of the universe."! The " ordainer" and the ultimate cause of all sensuous changes must be regarded as something non-sensuous and distinct from all matter. $ Unity in the ditierent expressions of material force is raised to the rank of a main principle, and these expressions of force are themselves always reduced to motions. Thus we find already in " the book of the souF'^ the germ of the undulatory theory of light. The sensation of sight is occasioned by a vibration * Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 3.31, note. Compare also Gruppe, Ueber die Fragmente des Arcki/tas, 1810, 8. 33. + Avhtot. ,Polit.,\\\., 4,1^. 13'26,-dudMetapk.,xu.,7,Tp. ] 072, 10, Bekk., and xii., 10, p. 1074-5. The pseudo-Aristotelian work, De Mund-o, which 0^ann ascribed to Chrysippus (see Cosmos, vol. ii.. p. 28, 29), also contains (cap. 6, p. 397) a very eloquent passage on the world-or- derer and tcorld-sustainer. X The proofs are collected in Ritter, History of Philosophy (Bohn, 1838-46), vol. iii., p. 180, et seq. ^ Compare Aristot., De Anima, ii., 7, p. 419. In this i)assage the analogy with sound is most distinctly expressed, although in other por- tions of his writings Aristotle has greatly modified his theory of vision. Thus, in De Insomniis, cap. 2, p. 459, Bekker, we Hud the following words: "It is evident that sight is no less an active than a passive agent, and that vision not only experiences some action from the air (the medium), but itself also acts upon the medium." He adduces iu evidence of the truth of this proposition, that a new and very pure me- tallic mirror will, under certain conditions, when looked at by a woman, retain on its surface cloudy specks that can not be removed without difficulty. Compare also Martin, Etudes snr le Tim4e dc Platon., torn ii^ p 159-163. 14 COSMOS. — a movement of the medium between the eye and the object seen — and not by emissions from the object or the eye. Hear- mg is compared with sight, as sound is Hkewise a consequence of the vibration of the air. Aristotle, while he teaches men to investigate generalities in the particulars of perceptible unities by the force of reflect- ive reason, always includes the whole of nature, and the in- ternal connection not only of forces, but also of organic forms. In his book on the parts (organs) of animals, he clearly in- timates his behef that throughout all animate beings there is a scale of gradation, in which they ascend fromi lower to liigh- er forms. Nature advances in an uninterrupted progressive course of development, from the inanimate or " elementary" to plants and animals ; and, " lastly, to that which, though not actually an animal, is yet so nearly allied to one, that on the whole there is little difference between them."=* In the transition of formations, " the gradations are almost imper- ceptible."! The miity of nature was to the Stagirite the great problem of the Cosmos. " In this unity," he observes, with singular animation of expression, " there is nothing unconnect- ed or out of place, as in a bad tragedy."! The endeavor to reduce all the phenomena of the universe to one principle of explanation is manifest throughout the physical works of this profound philosopher and accurate ob- server of nature ; but the imperfect condition of science, and ignorance of the mode of conducting experiments, i. e., of calling forth phenomena under definite conditions, prevented the comprehension of the causal connection of even small groups of physical processes. All things were reduced to the ever-recurring contrasts of heat and cold, moisture and dry- ness, primary density and rarefaction — even to an evolution of alterations in the organic world by a species of inner divis- ion (antiperistasis), which reminds us of the modern hypothesis of opposite polarities and the contrasts presented by + ^-nd — .§ * Aristot., De partihus Anim., lib. iv., cap. .5, p. 681, Hn. 12, Bekker. t Aristot., Hist. Anim., lib. ix., cap. 1, p. 588, lin. 10-24, Bekker. When any of the representatives of the four elements in the animal kingdom on oar globe fail, as, for instance, those which represent tlie element of the purest fire, the intermediate stages may perhaps be found to occur in the moon. (Biese, Die Phil, des Aristoteles, bd. ii., s. 18G.) It is singular enough that the Stagirite should seek in another planet those intermediate links of the chain of organized beings which we (lad in the extiiu^t animal and vegetable forms of an »^arlier world. X Aristot., Metapk., lib. xiii., cap. 3, p. 1090, lin. 20, Bekker. ^ The iivTnrepi'JTaaic of Aristotle plays an important [)art in all liio JNTKODrcrioV. 15 The so-called solutions of the problems only reproduce the same facts in a disguised form, and the otherwise vigorous and concise style of the Slagirite degenerates in his explana- tions of meteorological or optical processes into a self-com- placent diliuseness and a somewhat Hellenic verbosity. As Aristotle's inquiries were directed almost exclu.man in the Abhandl. der Berliner Akademie avfdasJahr 1825, 8. 128. * " By the movement of the heavenly sphere, all that is unstable in natural bodies, and all terrestrial phenomena are produced." — Aristot., Meteor., i., 2, p. 339, and De Gener. et Corrvpt., ii., 10, p. 33G. t Aristot., De Ccelo, lib. i., c. 9, p. 279 ; lib. ii., c. 3, p. 286 ; lib. ii., c 13, p. 292, Bekker. (Compare Biese, bd. i., s. 352-1, 357.) X Aristot., Phys. Auscult., lib. ii., c. 8, p. 199; De Anima, lib. iii., c 12, p. 434; De Animal. General., lib. v., c. 1, p. 778, Bekker. 16 COSMOS. tribution. of masses) maintain the planets in their eternal Dib- its.* The stars here reveal the image of the divinity in the visible world. We do not here refer, as its title might lead to suppose, to the little pseudo-Aristotelian M^ork entitled the '' Cosmos," undoubtedly a Stoic production. Although it de- scribes the heavens and the earth, and oceanic and aerial currents, with much truthfulness, and frequently with rhetor- ical animation and picturesque coloring, it shows no tenden- cy to refer cosmical phenomena to general physical princi- ples based on the properties of matter. I have purposely dwelt at length on the most brilliant pe- riod of the Cosmical views of antiquity, in order to contrast the earliest efforts made toward the generalization of ideas with the efforts of modern times. In the intellectual move- ment of centuries, whose influence on the extension of cos- mical contemplation has been defined in another portion of the present work,! the close of the thirteenth and the begin- ning of the fourteenth century were specially distinguished ; but the Ojnis Majus of Roger Bacon, the Mirror of Nature of Vincenzo de Beauvais, the Physical Geography {Liber Cos- Qnograjohicus) of Albertus Magnus, the Picture of the World {Imago Mundi) of Cardinal Petrus d'Alliaco (Pierre d'Ailly), are works which, however powerfully they may have influ- enced the age in which they were written, do not fulfill by their contents the promise of their titles. Among the Italian opponents of Aristotle's physics, Bernardino Telesio of Cosen- za is designated the founder of a rational science of nature. All the phenomena of inert matter are considered by him as the effects of two incorporeal principles (agencies or forces) — heat and cold. All forms of organic life — "animated" * See the passage in Aristot., Meteor., xii., 8, p. 1074, of which there is a remarkable elucidation in the Commentary of Alexander Aphro- jlisiensis. The stars are not inanimate bodies, but must be regarded as active and living beings. (Aristot., De Ccelo, lib. ii., cap. 12, p. 292.) They are the most divine of created things; to, ■QeioTepa tuv (pavepdv. (Ai'istot., De Ccelo, lib. i., cap. 9, p. 278, and lib. ii., cap. 1, p. 284.) In the small pseudo-Aristotelian work De Mundo, which frequently breathes a religious spirit in relation to the preserving almightiness of God (cap. 6, p. 400), the high a'ther is also called divine (cap. 2, p. 392). That which the imaginative Kepler calls moving spirits {animfE motr'ues) in his work, Mysteriuvi Cosmographicum (cap. 20, p. 71), is the distort- ed idea of a force (virtus) whose main seat is in the sun {anima rnvti' di), and which is decreased by distance in accordance with the laws of light, and impels the planets in elliptic orbits. (Compare Apell, Epoch en der Gesch. dcr Mcnschheil, bd. i., s. 274.) > ^-nsmos, vol. ii., p. 241-250. INTRODLCTION. 17 plants and animals — are the cil'ect of these two ever-divided forces, of which the one, heat, specially appertains to the ce- lestial, and the other, cold, to the terrestrial spliere. With yet more unbridled fancy, but with a profound spirit of inquiry, Giordano Bruno of Nola attempted to comprehend the whole universe, in three works,* entitled Dc la causa Priricipio c U?io ; Cotitcmplationi circa lo Infmito, Uni- verso c Moduli innumerabili ; and De Minimo et Maximo. In the natural philosophy of Telesio, a cotemporary of Co- pernicus, we recognize at all events the tendency to reduce the changes of matter to two of its fundamental forces, which, although " supposed to act from without," yet resemble the fundamental forces of attraction and repulsion in the dy- namic theory of nature of Boscovich and Kant. Tlie cos- mical views of the Philosopher of Nola are purely meta- physical, and do not seek the causes of sensuous phenomena in matter itself, but treat of "the infinity of space, filled with self - illumined worlds, of the animated condition of those worlds, and of the relations of the highest intelligence — God — to the universe." Scantily endowed with mathematical knowledge, Giorda- no Bruno continued nevertheless to the period of his fearful martyrdomf an enthusiastic admirer of Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, and Kepler. He Avas cotemporary with Galileo, but did not live to see the invention of the telescope by Hans Lippershey and Zacharias Jansen, and did not therefore wit- ness the discovery of the " lesser Jupiter world," the phases of Venus, and the nebulcB. AYith bold confidence in what he terms the lume interno, ragione naturale, altezza delV intelletto (force of intellect), he indulged in happy conjec- tures regarding the movement of the fixed stars, the planet- * Coinpai-e the acute and learned commentary on the works of the Philosopher of Nola, in the treatise Jordano Bruno par Christian Bar- tholmess, torn, ii., 1847, p. 129, 149, and 201. t He was burned at Rome on the 17th of February, 1600, pursuant to the sentence "ut quani clementissime et citra sansninis effusionem puniretur." Bruno was imprisoned six years in the Piovibi at Venice, and two years in the Inquisition at Rome. When the sentence of death was announced to him, Bruno, calm and unmoved, gave utterance to the following noble expression: " Majori forsitan cum timore sententi- am in me fertis quam ego accipiam." When a fugitive from Italy in 1580, he taught at Geneva, Lyons, Toulouse, Paris, Oxford, Marburg, Wittenberg (which he calls the Athens of Germany). Prague, and Helm- Rtedt, where, in 1589, he completed the scientific instruction of Duko Henry Julius of Brunsyvick-Wolfenbiittel. — Bartholmess, toip. ' ,, p. 167- 178. He also taught at Padua Kubsequently to 1592. 18 COSMOS. ary nature of comets, and the deviation from the spherical form observed in the figure of the earth. ^ Greek antiquity is also replete with uranological presentiments of this na- ture, which were realized in later times. In the development of thought on cosmic al relations, of which the main forms and epochs have been already enu- merated, Kepler approached the nearest to a mathematical application of the theory of gravitation, more than seventy- eight years before the appearance of Newton's immortal Avork, Pri?icipia Philowphia, Naturalis. For while the eclectic Simplicius only expressed in general terms " that the heavenly bodies were sustained from falling in conse- quence of the centrifugal force being superior to the inher- ent falling force of bodies and to the downward traction ;" while Joannes Philoponus, a disciple of Ammonius Hermeas, ascribed the movement of the celestial bodies to " a primi- tive impulse, and the continued tendency to fall ;" and while, as we have already observed, Copernicus defined only the general idea of g'ravitation, as it acts in the sun, as the center of the planetary world, in the earth and in the moon, using these memorable words, " Gravitatem non aliud esse quam appetentiam quandam naturalem partibus inditam a divina providentia opificis universorum, ut in unitatem integrita- temque suam sese conferant, in formam globi coeuntes ;" Kepler, in his introduction to the book De Stella Martis,\ was the first who gave numerical calculations of the forces of attraction reciprocally exercised upon each other, accord- ing to their relative masses, by the earth and moon. He * Bartliolmess, torn, ii., p. 219, 232, 370. Bruno carefully collected all the separate observations made on the celestial phenomenon of the sudden appearance, in 1572, of a new star in Cassiopeia. Much dis- cussion has been directed in modern times to the relation existin": be- tween Bruno, his two Calabrian fellow-countrymen, Bernardino Tele- sio and Thomas Campanella, and the platonic cardinal, Nicolaus Krebs of Cusa. See Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 310, 311, note. t " Si duo lapides in aliquo loco Mundi collocai'entur propinqui in- vicem, extra orbem virtutis tertii cognati corporis ; illi lapides ad simil- itudinem duorum Magneticorum corporum coireut loco intermedio, qui- libet accedens ad ulterum tanto intervallo, quanta est alterius moles in comparatione. Si luna et terra non retinerentur vi animali (!) aut alia aliqua aequipollente, qutelibet in suo circuitu. Terra adscenderet ad Lu- nam quinquagesima quarta parte intervalli, Luna descenderet ad Ter- ram quinquaginta tribus circiter partibus intervalli; ibi jungerentur, posito tamen quod substantia utriusque sit uuius et ejusdem densitatis." — Kepler, Astronomia nova, sen Physica cmlestis de Moiibus Stelles Mar- tis, 1G09. Introd., fol. v. On the older views i;^garding gravitation, see Cosmos, vi 1. ii., p. 310. INTRODUCTION. 19 distinctly adduces the tides as evidence* that the attractive force of the moon (^virtus tractoria) extends to the earth and that this force, similar to that exerted hy the magnet on iron, would deprive the earth of its water if the lorrnci should cease to attract it. Unfortunately, this ^va-Oii man was induced, ten years afterward, in 1019, probably from deference to Galileo, who ascribed the ebb and flow of the ocean to the rotation of the earth, to renounce his correct explanation, and depict the earth in the Harmonicc Munch as a living monster, whose whale-like mode of breathing oc- casioned the rise and fall of the ocean in recurring periods of sleeping and waking, dependent on solar time. When we remember the mathematical acumen that pervades one of the works of Kepler, and of which Laplace has already made honorable mention,! it is to be lamented that the discoverer of the three great laws of all planetary motion should not have advanced on the path whither he had been led by his views on the attraction of the masses of cosmical bodies. Descartes, who was endowed with greater versatility of physical knowledge than Kepler, and who laid the founda- tion of many departments of mathematical physics, under- took to comprise the whole world of phenomena, the heav- * " Si Terra cessaret attrahere ad se aquas suas, aquae marine oraues elevai-entur et iu corpus Luna; influerent. Orbis virtutis tractoriie, qu5 (s. 173-192). t See Laplace {deft OHciUaf.inns de V Atmotph^re, du Jinx So/aire el Lvnaire) in the M4cai?i(]iie Celnst", livre iv., and iu tlx^ Expoiition d» Si/sL du Monde. 1824. p. 29l-29n. 22 COSMOS. tro-inagnetic, and organic processes. Newton^ even distin- guished tile attraction of masses, as manifested in the mo- tion of cosmical bodies and in the phenomena of the tides, from molecular attraction, Avhich acts at infinitely small distances and in the closest contact. Thus we see that among the various attempts which have been made to refer whatever is unstable in the sensuous world to a single fundamental principle, the theory of grav- itation is the most comprehensive and the richest in cosmic- al results. It is indeed true, that notwithstanding the brill- iant progress that has been made in recent times in stcechi- ometry (the art of calculating with chemical elements and in the relations of volume of mixed gases), all the physical theories of matter have not yet been referred to mathematic- ally-determinable principles of explanation. Empirical laws have been recognized, and by means of the extensively- dif- fused views of the atomic or corpuscular philosophy, many points have been rendered more accessible to mathematical investigation ; but, owing to the unbounded heterogeneous- ness of matter and the manifold conditions of aggregation of particles, the proofs of these empirical laws can not as yet by any means be developed from the theory of contact- at- traction with that certainty which characterizes the estab- lishment of Kepler's three great empirical laws derived from the theory of the attraction of masses or gravitation. At the time, however, that jNTewton recognized all move- ments of the cosmical bodies to be the results of one and the same force, he did not, like Kant, regard gravitation as an essential property of bodies,! but considered it either as the * Adjicere jam licet de spirita quodam subtilissimo corpora crassa pervadeiite et iu iisdem lateiite, cujus vi et actionibus particulai corpo- rum ad minimas distantias se mutuo aftrahunt et coutiguae facta cohte- rent. — Newton, Principia Phil. Nat. (ed. Le Sueur ct Jacquier, 1760), Schul. gen., t. iii., p. GTfi ; comi)are also Newton's Optics (ed. 1718), Query 31, p. 305, 353, 367, 372. (Laplace, Syst. du Monde, j). 384, and Cosmos, vol. i., p. 63 (note).) t Haclenus plianonjena ccelonim et maris nostri per vim gravitatis exposal, sed causam gra%'itatis nondum assignavi. Oritur utique htco vis a causa aliqua. qua* penetrat ad usque centra solis et planetaruin, sine virtutis diminutione ; quaeque agit non pro quantitate superficierum particularum, in quas agit (ut soleut causie mechanicae), sed pro quanti- tate materia:' solida). — Rationem harum gravitatis proprietatum ex pha?- nomenis nondum potui deducere et hypotheses non fingo. Satis est quod gravitas revera existat et agat secundum leges a nobis expositas. — Newton, Principia Phil. Nat., p. 676. " To tell us that every spe- cies of things is endowed with an occult specific quality, by which it acts and produces manifest effects, is to tell us nothing; but to derive INTIIODUCTION. 28 result of some higher and still unknown power, or of " the centrifugal force of the asther, which fills the realms of space, and is rarer within bodies, but increases in density outward. The latter view is set forth in detail in a letter to Robert Boyle* (dated February 28, 1678), which ends with the words, " I seek the cause of gravity in the aether." Eight years afterward, as we learn from a letter he wrote to Hal ley, Newton entirely relinquished this hypothesis of the rarer and denser sether.f It is especially worthy of notice, that in 1717, nine years before his death, he should have deemed it necessary expressly to state, in the short preface to the sec- ond edition of his Optics, that he did not by any means con- sider gravity as an " essential property of bodies ;"$ while two or three general principles of motiou from phenomena, and after- ward to tell us how the properties and actions of all corporeal things follow from those manifest principles, would be a very great step in phi- losophy, though the causes of those principles were not yet discovered ; and therefore I scruple not to propose the principles of motion, and leave their causes to be found out." — Newton's Optics, p. 377. In a previ- ous portion of the same work, at query 31, p. 351, he writes as follows: " Bodies act one upon another by the attraction of gravity, magnetism, and electricity; and it is not improbable that there may be more at- tractive powers than these. How these attractions may be performed I do not here consider. What I call attraction may be performed by impulse, or by some other means unknown to me. I use that word here to signify only in general any force by whicli bodies tend townnl one another, whatsoever be the cause." * " I suppose the rarer a)ther within bodies,- and the denser without them." — Operum Neiotoni, tomus iv. (ed. 1782, Sam. Horsley), p. 386. The above observation was made in reference to the explanation of the discoveiy made by Grimaldi of the diffraction or inflection of light. At the close of Newton's letter to Robert; Boyle, February, 1678, p. 94, he says: "I shall set down one conjecture more which came into my mind: it is about the cause of gravity.". . ." His correspondence with Olden- burg (December, 1675) shows that the great philosopher was not at that time averse to the " aether hypotheses." According to these views, the impulse of material light causes the sether to vibrate ; but the vibra- tions of the aither alone, which fias some affinity to a nervous fluid, does not generate light. In reference to the contest with Hooke, consult Horsley, t. iv., p. 378-380. t See Brewster's Life of Sir Isaac Newton, p. 303-305. X Newton's words '' not to take gravity for an essential property of bodies" in the " Second Advertisement" contrast with his remarks on the forces of attraction and repulsion, which he ascribes to all molecu- lar particles, in order, according to the theory of emission, to explain the phenomena of the refraction and repulsion of the rays of light from reflecting surfaces "without their actual contact." (Nev/ton, Optics, book ii., prop. 8, p. 241, and Brewster, Op. cit., p. 301.) According to Kant (see Die Metaphysischen Anfangsgrunde der Naturwissenschaft, 1800, s. 28), we can not conceive the existence of matter without these forces of attraction and repulsion. All physical phenomena are there- 24 COSMOS. Cxilbert, as early as 1600, regarded magnetism as a force in- herent in all matter. So undetermined was even Newton, the profound and experienced thinker, regarding the " ulti- mate mechanical cause" of all motion. It is indeed a brilliant efibrt, worthy of the human mind, to comprise, in one organic whole, the entire science of na- ture from the laws of gravity to the formative impulse (ni- sus formativus) in animated bodies ; but the present imper- fect state of many branches of physical science offers innu- merable difficulties to the solution of such a problem. The imperfectibility of all empirical science, and the boundless- ness of the sphere of observation, render the task of explain- ing the forces of matter by that which is variable in matter, an impracticable one. What has been already perceived by no means exhausts that which is perceptible. If, simply re- ferring to the progress of science in modern times, we com- pare the imperfect physical knowledge of Gilbert, Robert Boyle, and Hales, with that of the present day, and remem- ber that every few years are characterized by an increasing rapidity of advance, we shall be better able to imagine the periodical and endless changes which all physical sciences are destined to undergo. New substances and new forces will be discovered. Although many physical processes, as those of light, heat, and electro-magnetism, have been rendered accessible to a mathematical investigation by being reduced to motion or vi- brations, we are still without a solution to those often mooted and perhaps insolvable problems : the cause of chemical dif- ferences of matter ; the apparently irregular distribution of the planets in reference to their size, density, the inclination of their axes, the eccentricity of their orbits, and the num- fore reduced by him, as previously by Goodwin Knight {Pkilos. Trans' act. 1748, p. 264), to the conflict of two elementary forces. In the at- omic theories, which were diametrically opposed to Kant's dynamic views, the force of attraction was referred, in accordance with a view specially promulgated by Lavoisier, to the discrete solid elementarv molecules of which all bodies are supposed to consist; while the force of repulsion was attributed to the atmospheres of heal: surrounding all elementary corpuscles. This hypothesis, which regards the so-called caloric as a constantly expanded matter, assumes the existence of two elementary substances, as in the mythical idea of two kinds of &;ther. (Newton, Optics, query 28, p. 339.) Here the question arises, What causes this caloric matter to expand? Considerations on the density of molecules in comparison with that of their aggregates (the entire body) lead, according to atomic hypotheses, to the result, that the dis- tance between elementaiy corpuscles is far greater than their diameters. INTKODUCTIOX. :i5 ber and distance of their satellites ; the configuration of con tinents, and the position of their highest mountain chains. Those relations in space, which we have referred to merely by way of illustration, can at present be regarded only as something existing in nature, as a fcict, but which I can not designate as merely causal, because their causes and mutual connection have not yet been discovered. They are the re- sult of occurrences in the realms of space coeval with the formation of our planetary system, and of geognostic process- es in the upheaval of the outer strata of the earth into con- tinents and mountain chains. Our knowledge of the prime- val ages of the world's physical history does not extend suf- ficiently far to allow of our depicting the present condition of things as one of development.^' Wherever the causal connection between phenomena has not yet been fully recognized, the doctrine of the Cosmos, or the physical description of the universe, does not constitute a distinct branch of physical science. It rather embraces the whole domain of nature, the phenomena of both the celestial and terrestrial spheres, but embraces it only under the single point of view of efforts made toward the knowledge of the universe as a whole."! As, in the " exposition of past events in the moral and political world, the historian^ can only di- vine the plan of the government of the world, according to human views, through the signs which are presented to him, and not by direct insight," so also the inquirer into nature, in his investigation of cosmical relations, feels himself pene- trated by a profound consciousness that the fruits hitherto yielded by direct observation and by the careful analysis of phenomena are far from having exhausted the number of impelling, producing, and formative forces. * Cosmos, vol. i., p. 94-97. , t Op. cit., p. 55-62. t Wilhelm von Humboldt, GesammcUe Werlce, bd. i., s. 23. Vol. III.— B A. RESULTS OF OBSERVATIONS IN THE URANOLOGICAL POR- TION OF THE PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE WORLD. We again commence with the depths of cosmical spacb, and the remote sporadic starry systems, which appear to tel- escopic vision as faintly shining nehiilcB. From these we gradually descend to the double stars, revolving round one common center of gravity, and which are frequently bicol- ored, to the nearer starry strata, one of which appears to in- close our ovrai planetary system ; passing thence to the air- and-ocean-girt terrestrial spheroid which we inhabit. We have already indicated, in the introduction to the General Delineation of Nature,'^ that this arrangement of ideas is alone suited to the character of a work on the Cosmos, since we can not here, in accordance with the requirements of di- rect sensuous contemplation, begin with our own terrestrial abode, whose surface is animated by organic forces, and pass from the apparent to the true movements of cosmical bodies. The uranological, Avhen o23posed to the telluric domain of the Cosmos, may be conveniently separated into two di- visions, one of which comprises astrognosy, or the region of the fixed stars, and the other our solar and j^lcmetaj-y sys- tem. It is unnecessary here to describe the imperfect and unsatisfactory nature of such a nomenclature and .such class- ifications. Names were introduced into the physical sci- ences before the difierences of objects and their strict limita- tions were sufficiently known. f The most important point, however, is the connection of ideas, and the order in which the objects are to be considered. Innovations in the no- menclature of groups, and a deviation from the meanings hitherto attached to well-known names, only tend to dis- tract and confuse the mind. a. ASTROGNOSY. (Thk Domain ok the Fixed Stars.) Nothing is stationary in space. Even the fixed stars move, as Halleyt endeavored to show in reference to Sirius, * Cosmos, voL i., p. 79-83. r Op. cif., p. .'56, .')? t Hallnv. in thv >/,.?7^.«. Transact, for 1717. vul. xxx.. {). 73G. AriTUOGNOSY. 27 Arcturus," and Aldcbaran, and as in modern times has been incontrovcrtibly proved with respect to many others. The bright star Arcturus has, during the 2100 years (since the times of Aristilhis and Hipparehus) that it has been ob- served, changed its position in relation to the neighboring fainter stars 2^- times the moon's diameter. Encke remarks " that the star f-i Cassiopeia) appears to have moved 3i lunar diameters, and 61 Cygni about G lunar diameters, if the an- cient observations correctly indicated its position." Conclu- sions based on analogy justify us in believing that there is every where progressive, and perhaps also rotatory motion. The term " fixed stars" leads to erroneous preconceptions ; it may have referred, in its earliest meaning among the Greeks, to the idea of the stars being riveted into the crys- tal vault of heaven ; or, subsequently, in accordance with the Roman interpretation, it may indicate fixity or immo- bility. The one idea involuntarily led to the other. In Gre- cian antiquity, in an age at least as remote as that of Anax- imenes of the Ionic school, or of Alcmaion the Pythagorean, all stars were divided into ivandering {liorpa irXavdyfieva or nXavrjrd) and non-icandering fixed stars {airXavelg dorepeq or dnXavf] dor pa). ^ Besides this generally adopted desig- nation of the fixed stars, which Macrobius, in his Somniuiii Scipionis, Latinized by Sph(xra aiolanes,^ we frequently meet in Aristotle (as if he wished to introduce a new tech- nical term) with the phrase riveted stars, evdeSufieva darpa, instead of dnXavrj,'^ as a designation for fixed stars. From this form of speech arose the expressions of sidera mjixa ccelo of Cicero, Stellas qtcas p)utci'imis ajjixas of Pliny, and as- * Pseudo-Plat., Da plac. Philos., ii., 1.5, IG ; Stob., Eclog. Phys., p. 582; Plato, in the Timcens, p. 40. t Macrob., Somn. Scip., i., 9-10 ; slellce inerrantes, in Cicero, De Nat. Deornm, iii., 20. I The principal passage in which we meet with the technical expres- sion kvdtdefj.£va uarpa, is in Aristot., De Caclo, ii., 8, p. 289, 1. 34, p. 290, 1. 19, Bekker. This altered nomenclature forcibly attracted my atten- tion in my investigations into the optics of Ptolemy, and his experi- ments on refraction. Professor Franz, to whose philological acquire- ments I am indebted for frequent aid, reminds me that Ptolemy {Syn- tax, vii., 1) speaks of the fixed stars as affixed or riveted; loairep Tzpo- GaEcpvKOTEq. Ptoleuiy thus objects to the expression a literate the image of tl^.e star toward which the eye is directed." VISIBILITY OF STARS. 51 gtars fainter than those of the sixth magnitude — have been able to distinguish the satelUtes of Jupiter without a tele- scope. The angular distance of the third and brightest sat- ellite from the center of the planet is 4' 42" ; that of the fourth, which is only one sixth smaller than the largest, is 8' 16" ; and all Jupiter's satellites sometimes exhibit, as Ar- ago maintains,* a more intense light for equal surfaces than * Arago, in the Annuaire pour 1842, p. 284, and in the Comptea Retidus, torn, xv,, 1842, p. 750. (Schuin., Astron. Nachr., No. 702.) '• I have instituted some calculations of magnitudes, in relerence to your conjectures on the visibility of Jupiter's satellites," writes Dr. Galle, in letters addressed to me, " but I have found, contrary to my expecta- tions, that they are not of the fifth magnitude, but, at most, only of the sixth, or even of the seventh magnitude. The third and brightest sat- ellite alone appeared nearly equal in brightness to a neighboring star of the sixth magnitude, which I could scarcely recognize with the naked eye, even at some distance from Jupiter ; so that, considered in refer- ence to the brightness of Jupiter, this satellite would probably be of the fifth or sixth magnitude if it were isolated from the planet. The fourth satellite was at its greatest elongation, but yet I could not estimate it at more than the seventh magnitude. The rays of Jupiter would not pi-e- vent this satellite from being seen if it were itself bnghter. From a comparison of Aldebaran with the neighbonng star d Tauri, which is easily recognized as a double star (at a distance of 5^ minutes), I should estimate the radiation of Jupiter at five or six minutes, at least, for or- dinary vision." These estimates correspond with those of Arago, who is even of opinion that this false radiation may amount in the case of some persons to double this quantity. The mean distances of the four satellites from the center of the main planet are undoubtedly 1' 51", 2' 57", 4' 42", and 8' J.6". " Si nous supposons que I'image de Jupiter, dans certains yeux exceptionnels, s'epanouisse seulement par des ray- ons d'une ou deux minutes d'amplitude, il ne semblera pas impossible que les satellites soient de terns en tems aper^us, sans avoir besoin de recourir a I'artifice de I'ampiification. Pour vei'ifier cette conjecture, j'ai fait construire une petite lunette dans laquelle I'objectif et I'ocu- laire out a pen pres le meme foyer, et qui des lors ne grossit poiyit. Cette lunette ne detruit pas enti^rement les rayons divergents, mais elle en reduit considerablement la longueur. Cela a suffi pour qu'un satellite convenablement ecarte de la plauete, soit deverni visible. Le fait a ete constate par toua les jeunes astronomes de I'Observatoire." ** If we suppose that the image of Jupiter appeal's to the eyes of some persons to be dilated by rays of only one or two minutes, it is ntt im- possible that the satellites may from time to time be seen without the aid of magnifying glasses. In order to verify this conjecture, I caused a small instrument to be constructed in which the ol)ject-glass and the eye-piece had nearly the same focus, and which, therefore, didnot mag nify. This insti-ument does not entirely destroy the diverijing rays, al though it considerably reduces their len^jth. This method has sufficed to render a satellite visible when at a sufficient distance from the planet. This observation has been confirmed by all the young astronomers at the Observatoiy." (Arago, in the Comptes Rendus, tom. xv., 1842, p. 751.) 52 " COSMOS. Jupiter himself; occasionally, however, as shown by recent observations, they appear like gray spots on the planet. The rays or tails, which to our eyes appear to radiate from the planets and fixed stars, and wliich were used, since the ear- hest ages of mankmd, and especially among the Egyptians, as pictorial representations to indicate the sliining orbs of heaven, are at least from five to six minutes in length. (These lines are regarded by Hassenfratz as caustics on the crystalline lens : intersectioyi?, des deux caustiques.) " The image of the star which we see with the naked eye is magnified by diverging rays, in consequence of which it occupies a larger space on the retina than if it were concen- As a remakable instance of acute vision, and of the great sensibility of the retina in some individuals who are able to see Jupiter's satellites with the naked eye, I may instance the case of a master tailor, named Schon, who died at Breslau in 1837, and with reference to whom I have received some interesting communications from the leai'ned and active director of the Breslau Observatoiy, Von Boguslawski. " After having (since 1820) convinced ourselves, by several ngid tests, that in serene moonless nights Schon was able correctly to indicate the position of sev- eral of Jupiter's satellites at the same time, we spoke to him of the em- anations and tails which appeai'ed to prevent others from seeing so clearly as he did, when he expressed his astonishment at these ob- structing radiations. From the animated discussions between himself and the by-stauders regarding the difficulty of seeing the satellites with the naked eye, the conclusion was obvious, that the planet and fixed stars must always appear to Schon like luminous points having no rays. He saw the third satellite the best, and the first very plainly when it was at the gi-eatest digression, but he never saw, the second and the fourth alone. When the air was not in a very favorable condition, the satellites appeared to him like faint streaks of light. He never mistook small fixed stars for satellites, probably on account of the scintillating and less constant light of the former. Some years before his death Schon complained to me that his failing eye could no longer distinguish Jupiter's satellites, whose position was only indicated, even in clear weather, by light faint streaks." These circumstances entirely coin- cide with what has been long known regarding the relative luster of Jupiter's satellites, for the brightness and quality of the light probably exert a greater influence than mere distance from the main planet on persons of such great perfection and sensibihty of vision. Schon never saw the second nor the fourth satellite. The former is the smallest of all ; the latter, although the largest after the third and the most remote, is peiiodically obscured by a dai'k color, and is generally the faintest of all the satellites. Of the third and the first, which were best and most frequently seen by the naked eye, the former, which is the largest of all, is usually the brightest, and of a very decided yellow color; the latter occasionally exceeds in the intensity of its clear yellow light the luster of the third, which is also much larger. (Madler, Astr., 1846, s. 231-231, and 439.) Sturm and Aiiy, in the Comptes Rendns, t. xx., p. 764-6, show how, under proper conditions of refraction in the organ of vision, remote luminous poin*e may appear as light streaks. NATURAL VlrilUN. 53 trated in a single point. The impression on the nerves is weaker. A very dense starry swarm, in which scarcely any of the separate stars belong even to the seventh magnitude, may, on the contrary, be visible to the unaided eye in con- sequence of the images of the many difierent stars crossing each other upon the retina, by which every sensible point of its surface is more powerfully excited, as if by one concen- trated image."* * " L'image ipanouie d'une etoile de 7eme grandeur n'ebraule pas suffisamment la rctiiie: elle u'y iait pas iiaitre une sensation apprecia- ble de liiniiere. Si l'image n''6tait point ipanouie (par des rayuns di- vergents), la sensation aurait plus de force, et I'etoile se verrait. La premiere classe d'etoiles invisibles a I'oeil nu ne serait plus alors la sep- tieme: pour la trouver, il faudrait peut-etre descendre alors jusqu'd la 12eme. Considerons un groupe d'etoiles de 7eme grandeur tellement rapproch6es les unes des autres que les intervalles echappent necessaire- ment k I'ceil. Si la vision avail de la netlet€, si l'image de chaque etoile 6tait tres petite et Lien terminee, I'observateur aperceverait un cliamp de lumiere dont chaque point aurait V6clat concentri d'une etoile de 7eme grandeur. V eclat concentri. d'une etoile de 7eme grandeur suffit a la vision a I'oeil nu. Le groupe serait done visible a I'ojil nu. Di- latons mainteuant sur la r6tine l'image de chaque etoile du groupe ; remplaqous chaque point de I'ancienne image generale par un petit cer- cle : ces cercles empieteront les uns sur les autres, et les divers points de la retine se trouveront eclaires par de la lumiere venant simultan • ment de plusieurs etoiles. Pour pen qu'on y reflechisse, il I'estera evi- dent qu' excepte sur les bords de l'image generale, I'aire lumineuse ainsi eclairee a precisement, a cause de la superposition des cercles, la memo intensite que dans le cas ou chaque etoile n'eclaire qu'un seul point au fond de I'ceil ; mais si chacun de ces points revolt une lumiere egale en intensite a la lumiere concentree d'une etoile de 7eme gran- deur, il est clair que I'epanouissement des images individuelles des etoiles contigues ne doit pas empecher la visibilite de I'ensemble. Les instruments telescopiques ont, quoiqu'a uu beaucoup moindre degr6, le defaut de donner aussi aux etoiles un diametre sensible et factice. Avec ces instruments, comme a I'ceil nu, on dint done apercevoir des groupes, composes d'etoiles inferieures en intensite a celles que les memes lu- nettes ou telescopes feraient apercevoir isolemeut." " The expanded image of a star of the seventh magnitude does not cause sufficient vibration of the retina, and does not give rise to an ap- preciable sensation of light. If the image were not expanded (by di- vergent rays), the sensation would be stronger and the star discernible. The lowest magnitude at which stars are visible would not therefore be the seventh, but some magnitude as low perhaps as the twelfth de- gree. Let us consider a group of stars of the seventh magnitude so close to one anotlier that the intervals between them necessarily escape the eye. If the sight were very clear, and the image of each star small and well defined, the observer would perceive a field of light, each point of which would be equal to the concentrated brightness of a star of the seventh magnitude. The concentrated light of a star of the sev- enth magnitude is sufficient to be seen by the naked eye. The group, therefore, would be visible to the naked eye. Let us now dilate iho 54 COSMuS. Telescopes, although in a much less degree, unfortunatt^ly also give the stars an incorrect and spurious diameter ; but, according to the splendid investigations of Sir AVilliam Her- echel,* these diameters decrease with the increasing power of the instrument. This distinguished observer estimated that, at the excessive magnifying power of 6500, the. appar- ent diameter of Vega Lyrse still amounted to 0"36. In ter- restrial objects, the form, no less than the mode of illumina- tion, determines the magnitude of the smallest angle of vision for the naked eye. Adams very correctly observed that a longf and slender stafi^ can be seen at a much greater distance than a square whose sides are equal to the diameter of the staff. A stripe may be distinguished at a greater distance than a spot, even when both are of the same diameter. Ara- go has made numerous calculations on the influence of form (outline of the object) by means of angular measurement of distant lightning conductors visible from the Paris Observa- tory. The Qninimum optical visual angle at which terres- trial objects can be recognized by the naked eye has been gradually estimated lower and lower from the time when Robert Hooke fixed it exactly at a full minute, and Tobias Mayer required 34" to perceive a black speck on white pa- per, to the period of Leeuwenhoek's experiments with spi- der's threads, which are visible to ordinary sight at an angle of 4"*7. In the recent and most accurate experiments of Hueck, on the problem of the movement of the crystalline image of each star of the group on the retina, and substitute a small circle for each point of tlie former general image ; these circles will impinge upon one another, and the different points of the retina will be illumined by light emanating simultaneously from many stars. A slight consideration will show, that, excej^ting at the margins of the general image, the luminous air has, in consequence of the superposi- tion of the circles, the same degree of intensity as in those cases where each star illumines only one single point of" the retina ; but if each of these points be illumined by a light equal in intensity to the concen- trated light of a star of the seventh magnitude, it is evident that the dilatation of the individual images of contiguous stars can not prevent the visibility of the whole. Telescopic instruments have the defect, although in a much less degree, of giving the stars a sensible and spu. rious diameter. We therefore perceive with instruments, no less than with the naked eye, groups of stars, inferior in intensity to those which the same telescojnc or natural sight would recognize if they were iso- lated."— Arago, in the Annuaire du Bureau des Longitudes pour Van 1842, p. 284. * Sir William Herschel, in the Philos. Transact, for 1803, vol. 93, p. 225, and for 1805, vol. 94, p. 184. Compare also Arago, in the An 7iua?rc^o?/r 1842, p. 360-374. \ isiBii.n\ III oiijL'i' rs. 50 lens, vvliile lines on a black ground were seen at au uiigle of 1"2; a spider's thread at 0"G ; and a fine glistening wire at scarcely 0''-2. This problem does not admit gen- erally of a numerical solution, since it entirely depends on the Ibrm of the objects, their illumination, their contrast with the back-ground, and on the motion or rest, and the nature of the atmospheric strata in which the observer is placed. During my visit at a charming country-seat belonging to the Marquess de Selvalegre at Chillo, not far from Q,uito, where the long-extended crests of the volcano of Pichincha lay stretched before me at a horizontal distance, trigonomet- rically determined at more than 1)0,000 feet, I was much struck by the circumstance that the Indians who were stand- ing near me distinguished the figure of my traveling com- panion Bonpland (who was engaged in an expedition to the volcano) as a white point moving on the black basaltic sides of the rock, sooner than we could discover him with our tel- escopes. The wdiite moving image was soon detected with the naked eye both by myself and by my friend the unfor- tunate son of the marquess, Carlos Montufar, who subsequent- ly perished in the civil war. Bonpland was enveloped in a white cotton mantle, the poncho of the country ; assuming the breadth across the shoulders to vary from three to five feet, according as the mantle clung to the figure or fluttered in the breeze, and judging from the known distance, we found that the angle at which the moving object could be distinctly seen varied from 1" to 12". White objects on a black ground are, according to Hueck's repeated experiments, distinguish- ed at a greater distance than black objects on a white ground. The light w'as transmitted in serene Aveather through rar- efied strata of air at an elevation 15,360 feet above the level of the sea to our station at Chillo, which was itself sit- uated at an elevation of 8575 feet. The ascending distance was 91,225 feet, or about 171 miles. The barometer and thermometer stood at very difierent heights at both stations, being probably at the upper one about 17'2 inches and 46°'4, while at the lower station they were found, by accurate ob- servation, to be 22-2 inches and 65"-7. Gauss's heliotrope light, which has become so important an element in German trigonometrical measurements, has been seen with the naked eye reflected from the Brocken on Hohenhagen, at a distance of about 227,000 feet, or more than 42 miles, being fre- quently visible at points in which the apparent breadth of a three-inch mirror Avas only 0"'43. 56 COSMOS. The visibility of distant objects ii, modifier' by the absorp- tion of the rays passing from the terrestrial object to thf naked eye at unequal distances, and through strata of air more or less rarefied and more or less saturated with moist- ure ; by the degree of intensity of the light diffused by the radiation of the particles of air ; and by numerous meteoro- logical processes not yet fully explained. It appears from the old experiments of the accurate observer Bouguer that a difference of -^-^1^ in the intensity of the light is necessary to render objects visible. To use his own expression, we only negatively see mountain-tops from wliich but little light is radiated, and which stand out from the vault of heaven in the form of dark masses ; their visibility is solely owing to the difference in the thickness of the atmospheric strata ex- tending respectively to the object and to the horizon. Strong- ly-illumined objects, such as snow-clad mountains, Avhite chalk cliffs, and conical rocks of pumice-stone, are seen pos- itively. The distance at which high mountain summits may be recognized from the sea is not devoid of interest in relation to practical navigation, where exact astronomical determina- tions are wanting to indicate the ship's place. I have treat- ed this subject more at length in another work,* where I considered the distance at which the Peak of Teneriffe might be seen. The question whether stars can be seen by daylight with the naked eye through the shafts of mines, and on very high mountains, has been with me a subject of inquiry since my early youth. I was aware that Aristotle had maintainedf ^ Humboldt, Relation Hist, du Voyage avx Regions Equinox., torn, i., p. 92-97; and Bouguer, Traite d'OpUque, p. 360 and 365. (Cora- pare, also, Captain Beechey, in the Manual of Scientific Inquiry for the Use of the Royal Navy, 1849, p. 71.) t The passage hi Aristotle referred to by Buffon occurs in a work where we should have least expected to find it — De Generat. Animal., V. i., p. 780, Bekker. Literally translated, it runs as follows: " Keen- ness of sight is as much the power of seeing far as of accurately distin- guishing the differences presented by the objects viewed. These two properties are not met with in the same individuals. For he who holds his hand over his eyes, or looks through a tube, is not, on that account, more or less able to distinguisli differences of color, although he will see objects at a greater distance. Hence it arises that persons in caverns or cisterns are occasionally enabled to see stars J'^ The Grecian 'Oovyua- ra, and more especially (ppeara, are, as an eye-witness, Professor Franz, observes, subterranean cisterns or reservoirs which communicate with the light and air by means of a vertical shaft, and widen toward the bot- tom, like the neck of a bottle. Pliny (lib. ii., cap. 14) says, " AltitudD VISIUILITY OF STARS. 57 that stars might occasionally be seen from CLverns and cis- terns, as through tubes. Pliny alludes to the same circum- Btance, and mentions the stars that have been most distinctly recognized during solar eclipses. While practically engaged m mining operations, I was in the habit, during many years, of passing a great portion of the day in mines where I could see the sky through deep shafts, yet I never was able to ob- serve a star ; nor did I ever meet with any individual in the Mexican, Peruvian, or Siberian mines who had heard of stars having been seen by daylight ; although in the many latitudes, in both hemispheres, in which I have visited deep mines, a sufficiently large luimber of stars must have passed the zenith to have allbrded a favorable opportunity for their being seen. Considering this negative evidence, I am the more struck by the highly credible testimony of a celebrated optician, who in his youth saw stars by daylight through the shaft of a chimney.^ Phenomena, whose manifestation de- pends on the accidental concurrence of favoring circum- stances, ought not to be disbelieved on account of their rarity The same principle must, I think, be applied to ih^ asser- tion of the profound investigator Saussure, that stars have been seen with the naked eye in bright daylight, on the de- clivity of Mont Blanc, and at an elevation of 12,757 feet " Q,uelques-uns des guides m'ont assure avoir vu des etoiles en plein jour ; pour moi je n'y songeais pas, en sorte que je n'ai point ete le temoin de ce phenomene ; mats V assertion U7iifonne des guides ne me laisse aucun doute sur la rea- lite. II faut d'ailleurs etre entierement a I'ombre d'une epais* seur considerable, sans quoi Pair trop fortement eclaire fait evanouir la faible clarte des etoiles." " Several of the guides assm'ed me," says this distinguished Alpine inquirer, " that cogitminores videri Stellas; affixas coelo solis fulgor interdiii non cerni, quum *que ac noctu kiceant ; idque maiiiiestuin fiat defectii solis et prcB- altis 'puteisy Cleomedes ( Cycl. Theor., p. 83, Bake) does not speak of stars seen by day. but asserts " that the suu, when observed from deep cisterns, appears lai'ger, on account of the darkness and the damp air." * " We have ourselves heard it stated by a celebrated optician that the earliest circumstance which drew his attention to astronomy waa the regular appearance, at a certain hour, for several successive days, of a considerable star, through the shaft of a chimney." — John Herschel, Outlines of Astr., § 61. The chimney-sweepers whom I have ques- tioned agree tolerably well in the statetiient that " they have never seen stars by day, but that, when observed at night, through deep shafts, the sky appeared quite near, and the stars larger." I will not enter upon any discussion regarding the connection between these two illusions. C 2 68 COSMOS. they had seen stars at hroad daylight : not having myself been a witness of this phenomenon, I did not pay much at- tention to it, but the unanimous assertions of the guides left me no doubt of its reality.* It is essential, however, that the observer should be placed entirely in the shade, and that he should even have a thick and massive shade above his head, since the stronger light of the air would otherwise dis- perse the faint image of the stars." These conditions are therefore nearly the same as those presented by the cisterns of the ancients, and the chimneys above referred to. I do not find this remarkable statement (made on the morning of the 2d of August, 1787) in any other description of the Swiss mountains. Two well-informed, admirable observers, the brothers Hermann and Adolph Schlagentweit, who have re- cently explored the eastern Alps as far as the summit of the Gross Glockner (13,016 feet), were never able to see stars by daylight, nor could they hear any report of such a phe- nomenon having been observed among the goatherds and chamois-hunters. Although I passed many years in the Cordilleras of Mexico, Q.uito, and Peru, and frequently in clear weather ascended, in company with Bonpland, to ele- vations of more than fifteen or sixteen thousand feet above the level of the sea, I never could distinguish stars by day- hght, nor was my friend Boussingault more successful in his subsequent expeditions ; yet the heavens were of an azure so intensely deep, that a cyanometer (made by Paul of Geneva) which had stood at 39° when observed by Saussure on Mont Blanc, indicated 46° in the zenith under the tropics at ele- vations varying between 17,000 and 19,000 feet.f Under the serene etherially-pure sky of Cumana, in the plains near the sea-shore, I have frequently been able, after observing an eclipse of Jupiter's satellites, to find the planet again with the naked eye, and have most distinctly seen it when the sun's disk was from 18° to 20° above the horizon. The present would seem a fitting place to notice, although cursorily, another optical phenomenon, which I only observed once during my numerous mountain ascents. Before sunrise, on the 22d of June, 1799, when at Malpays, on the decHv- ity of the Peak of TeneriHe, at an elevation of about 11,400 feet above the sea's level, I observed with the naked eye * Consult Saussure, Voyage dans les Alpes (Neuchatel, 1779, 4to), torn, iv., ^ 2007, p. 199. t Humboldt, Essai sur la Geographic des Plantes, p. 103. Comparo also my Voi/. avx Regions Eqniyiox, torn, i., p. 14-3, 248. >!NiJi;i..\rioi\ or iiii; sTAUri. 'd\t ot,rs near the horizon iiickeriiig with a singular oscillating motion. Luminous jjoints ascended, moved laterally, and ft>ii back to their former position. This phenomenon lasted only from seven to eight minutes, and ceased long before the sun's disk appeared above the horizon of the sea. The same motion was discernible through a telescope, and there was 110 doubt that it was the stars themselves which moved.* Did this change of position depend on the much-contested phenomenon of lateral radiation ? Does the undulation of the rising sun's disk, however inconsiderable it may appear when measured, present any analogy to this phenomenon in the lateral alteration of the sun's margin ? Independently of such a consideration, this motion seems greater near the horizon. This phenomenon of the undulation of the stars was observed almost half a century later at the same spot by a well-informed and observing traveler. Prince Adalbert of Prussia, who saw it both with the naked eye and through a telescope. I found the observation recorded in the prince's manuscript journal, where he had noted it down, before he learned, on his return from the Amazon, that I had wit- nessed a precisely similar phenomenon.! I was never able to detect any trace of kiteral refractio)i on the declivities of the Andes, or during the frequent 'mirages in the torrid plains or llanos of South America, notwithstanding the het- erogeneous mixture of unequally-heated atmospheric strata. As the Peak of Teneriffe is so near us, and is so frequently * Humboldt, in Fr. von Zacli's Monatliche Correspondcnz zur Erd- und Himmels-Kunde, bd. i., 1800, s. 396 ; also Voi/. aux Reg. Equin., toin. i., p. 12.5: "On croyait voir de petites fusees lancees dans I'air, Des points lumineux eleves de 7 a 8 degres, paraissent d'abord se mou- voir dans le sens vertical, mais puis se convertir eu uue veritable oscil- lation horizontale. Ces images lumineux etaient des images de plu- sieurs etoiles agrandies (en apparence) par des vapeurs et revenant au raeme point d'ou elles etaient partis." " It seemed as if a number of small rockets were being projected in the air; luminous points, at an elevation of 7° or 8*-^, appeared moving, first in a vertical, and then os- cillating in a horizontal direction. Tliese were the images of many stars, apparently magnified by vapors, and returning to the same point from which they had emanated." t Prince Adalbert of Prussia, Aus meiriem Tagebuche, 1847, s. 213. Is the phenomenon I have described connected with the oscillations of 10"-12'', observed by Carlini, in the passage of the polar star over the field of the great Milan meridian telescope? (See Zach's Corres- vcndance Astronomique et Giog., vol. ii., 1819, p. 81.) Brandes (Geh- let-'s Uingearb. Phi/s. Wurtersb., bd. iv., s. 549) refers the phenomenon to mirage. The star-like heliotrope light has also frequently been seen, by the admirable and skillful observer, Colonel Baeyer, to o.^cillate to and fro in a horizontal direction. 60 COSMOS. ascended before sunrise by scientific travelers provided with instruments, I v^^ould hope that this reiterated invitation on my part to the observation of the undulatioii of the stag's may not be wholly disregarded. I have already called attention to the fact that the basis of a very important part of the astronomy of our planetary system was already laid before the memorable years 1608 and 1610, and therefore before the great epoch of the in- vention of telescopic vision, and its application to astronom- ical purposes. The treasure transmitted by the learning of the Greeks and Arabs was augmented by the careful and persevering labors of George Purbach, Regiomontanus {i.e., Johann Miiller), and Bernhard Walther of Niirnberg. To their efforts succeeded a bold and glorious development of thought — the Copernican system ; tliis, again, was followed by the rich treasures derived from the exact observations of Tycho Brahe, and the combined acumen and persevering spirit of calculation of Kepler. Two great men, Kepler and Galileo, occupy the most important turning-point in the his- tory of measuring astronomy ; both indicating the epoch that separates obser^'-ation by the naked eye, though aided by greatly improved instruments of measurement, from tele- scopic vision. Galileo was at that period forty-four, and Kepler thirty-seven years of age ; Tycho Brahe, the most exact of the measuring astronomers of that great age, had been dead seven years. I have already mentioned, in a pre- ceding volume of this work (see vol. ii., p. 328), that none of Kepler's cotemporaries, Galileo not excepted, bestowed any adequate praise on the discovery of the three laws which have immortalized his name. Discovered by purely empir- ical methods, although more rich in results to the whole do- main of science than the isolated discovery of unseen cos- mical bodies, these laws belong entirely to the period of '}iat- ural vision, to the epoch of Tycho Brahe and his observa- tions, although the printing of the work entiiied Astronomia nova seu P/iysica codestis cle motibiis Stellcs Martis was not completed until 1609, and the third law, that the squares of the periodic times of revolution of two planets are as the cubes of their mean distances, was first fully developed in 1619, in the Harmonice Mundi. The transition from natural to tele&oopic vision which characterizes the first ten years of the seventeenth century was more important to astronomy (the knowledge of the re- gions of space) than the year 1492 (that of the discoveries ASTHONOMICAl, msCON EUIES. til of Columbus) in respect to our knowledge of terrestrial space. It not only infinitely extended our insii;s. iy,l The advantages which were at that period supposed to be obtainable only by gigantic length, led great minds, as is frequently the case, to extravagant expectations. Auzout considered it necessary to relute Hooke, who is said to have proposed the use of telescopes having a length of upward of 10,000 feet (or nearly two miles),* in order to see animals in the moon. A sense of the practical inconvenience of op- tical instruments having a focal length of more than a hund- red feet, led, through the influence of Newton (in following out the earlier attempts of Mersenne and James Gregory of Aberdeen), to the adoption, especially in England, of shorter reflecting telescopes. The careful comparison made by Brad- ley and Pond, of Hadley's five-feet reflecting telescopes, with the refractor constructed by Constantin Huygens (which had, as already observed, a focal length of 123 feet), fully demonstrated the superiority of the former. Short's expens- ive reflectors were now generally employed until 1759, when John DoUond's successful practical solution of the problem of achromatism, to which he had been incited by Leonhard Euler and Klingenstierna, again gave preponderance to re- fracting instruments. The right of priority, which appears to have incontestably belonged to the mysterious Chester More, Esq., of More Hall, in Essex (1729), was first made known to the public when John Dollond obtained a patent for his achromatic telescopes.! The triumph obtained by refracting instruments was not, however, of long duration. In eighteen or twenty years after the construction of achromatic instruments by John Dollond, by the combination of crown with flint glass, new fluctua- eu tower that had been brought from Marly ; and we also placed them in a tube mounted on a three-sided ladder, a method which, in the dis- covery of the satellites of Saturn, gave us all the success we had hoped." — Delambre, Hist, de VAstr. Moderne, torn, ii., p. 78.5. Optical instru- ments having such enormous focal lengths remind us of the Arabian in- struments of measurement — quadrants with a radius of about 190 feet, upon whose graduated limb the image of the sun was received as in the gnomon, through a small round aperture. Such a quadrant was erect- ed at Samarcand, probably constructed after the model of the older sex- tants of Al-Chokaiidi (which were about 60 feet in height). Compare Sedillot, ProUgomenes des Tables d^Oloug-Beg, 1847, p. Ivii. and cxxix. * See Delambre, Hist, de VAstr. Mod., t. ii., p. 594. The mystic Capuchin monk, Schyrle von Rheita, who. however, was well versed in optics, had already spoken in his work, Oculus Enoch et Elice (Antv., 1645), of the speedy practicability of constructing telescopes that should magnify 4000 times, by means of which the lunar mountains might be accurately laid down. Ccjmpare also Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 323 (note). t Edinb. Encyclopedia, vol. xx., p. 479. t>4 COSxMOS. tions of opinion were excited by the just admiration award- -ed, both at home and abroad, to the immortal labors of a German, William Herschel. The construction of numerous seven-feet and twenty-feet telescopes, to which powers of from 2200 to 6000 could be apphed, was followed by that of his forty-feet reflector. By this instrument he discovered, in August and September, 1789, the two innermost satellites of Saturn — Enceladus, the second in order, and, soon after- ward, Mimas, the first, or the one nearest to the ring. The discovery of the planet Uranus in 1781 was made with Herschel's seven-feet telescope, while the faint satellites of this planet were first observed by him in 1787, with a twen- ty-feet ''front view'" reflector.* The perfection, unattained till then, which this great man gave to his reflecting tele- scopes, in which light was only once reflected, led, by the uninterrupted labor of more than forty years, to the most important extension of all departments of physical astron- omy in the planetary spheres, no less than in the world of nebulae and double stars. The long predominance of reflectors wus followed, in the earher part of the nineteenth century, by a successful emu- lation in the construction of achromatic refractors^ and heli- ometers, paralactically moved by clock-work. A homoge- neous, perfectly smooth flint glass, for the construction of object-glasses of extraordinary magnitude, was manufactured in the institutions of Utzschneider and Fraunhofer at Mu- nich, and subsequently in those of Merz and Maiiler ; and in the establishments of Guinand and Bontems (conducted for MM.Lerebours and Cauchoix) in Switzerland and France. It will be sufficient in this historical sketch to mention, by way of example, the large refractors made under Fraunho- fer's directions for the Observatories of Dorpat and Berlin, in which the clear aperture was 9*6 inches in diameter, with a focal length of 14-2 feet, and those executed by Merz and Mahler for the Observatories of Pulkowa and Cambridge, in the United States of America ;t they are both adjusted with * Consult Mruve, Etudes d'Aslr. Stellaire, 1847, note 59, p. 24. I have retained the designations of forty, twenty, and seven-feet Herscliel reflecting telescopes, although in other parts of the work (the original German) I have used French measurements. 1 liave adopted these designations not merely on account of their greater convenience, hat also because they have acquired historical celebrity from the important labors both of the elder and younger Herschel in England, and uf the latter at Feldhausen, at the Cape of Good Hope. t See Schumacher's Astr. Nachr., No. 371 and GIL Canchoix and Tr.LESCOPES. 05 object-glasses of 15 inches in diameter, and a local lcii<;lli of 22"5 feet. The heliometer at the Koiiigsberg Observa- tory, which continued for a long time to be the largest in existence, has an aperture of 6"4 inches in diameter. This instrument has been rendered celebrated by the memorable labors of Bessel. The well-illuminated and short dyalitic refractors, which were first executed by Plosl in Vienna, and the advantages of which were almost simultaneously recognized by Rogers in England, are of sufficient merit to warrant their construction on a large scale. During this period, to the ellbrts of which I have refer- red, because they exercised so essential an influence on the extension of co.smical views, the improvements made in in- struments of measurement (zenith sectors, meridian circles, and micrometers) were as marked in respect to mechanics as they were to optics and to the measurement of time. Among the many names distinguished in modern times in relation to instruments of measurement, we will here only mention those of Ramsden, Troughton, Fortin, Reichenbach, Gam- bey, Ertel, Steinheil, Repsold, Pistor, and Oertling ; in rela- tion to chronometers and astronomical pendulum clocks, we may instance Mudge, Arnold, Emery, Earnshaw, Breguet, Jiirgensen, Kessels, Winnerl, and Tiede ; while the noble la- bors of William and John Herschel, South, Struve, Bessel, and Dawes, in relation to the distances and periodic motions of the double stars, specially manifest the simultaneous per- fection acquired in exact vision and measurement. Struve's classification of the double stars gives about 100 for the num- ber whose distance fromi one another is below 1", and 336 for those between 1" and 2" ; the measurement in every case being several times repeated.* During the last few years, two men, unconnected with any industrial profession — the Earl of Rosse, at Parson's Town (about fifty miles west of Dublin), and Mr. Lassell, at Starfield, near Liverpool, have, with the most unbounded liberality, inspired with a noble enthusiasm for the cause of science, constructed under their own immediate superintend- ence two reflectors, which have raised the hopes of astron- omers to the highest degree. f Lassell's telescope, which has Lerebours have also consti'ucted object-glasses of more than 13-3 iuches in diameter, and nearly 25 feet focal length. * Struve, Stellarum duplicium el multiplicium Mensurm Micrometricce, p. 2, 41. t Mr. Airy has recently given a comparative description of the meth- ods of constructing these two telescopes, including an account of the 6G cosMijs. an aperture only two feet in diameter, with a focal length of twenty feet, has already been the means of discovering one satellite of Neptune, and an eighth of Saturn, besides which two satellites of Uranus have been again distinguish- ed. The n^w colossal telescope of Lord Rosse has an aper- ture of six feet, and is fifty-three feet in length. It is mount- ed in the meridian between two walls, distant twelve feet on either side from the tube, and from forty-eight to fifty-six feet in height. Many nebulse, which had been irresolvable by any previous instruments, have been resolved into stellar swarms by this noble telescope ; while the forms of other nebulse have now, for the first time, been recognized in their true outlines. A marvelous efiiilgence is poured forth from the speculum. The idea of observing the stars by daylight with a tele- scope first occurred to Morin, who, with Gascoigne (about 1638, before Picard and Auzout), combined instruments of measurement wdth the telescope. Morin himself says,=^ "It was not Tycho's great observations in reference to the posi- tion of the fixed stars, when, in 1582, twenty-eight years before the invention of the telescope, he was led to compare Venus by day with the sun, and by night with the stars," but " the simple idea that Arcturus and other fixed stars might, like Venus, when once they had been fixed in the field of the telescope before sunrise, be followed through the heavens after the sun had risen, that led him to a discovery which might prove of importance for the determination of longitude at sea." No one was able before him to distin- guish the fixed stars in the presence of the sun. Since the mixing of the metal, the contrivances adopted for casting and polishing the specula and mounting the instruments. — Abstr. of the Asir. Soc, vol. ix., No. 5, March, 1849. The etiect of Lord Rosse's six feet metal- lic reflector is thns referred to (p. 120) : " The astronomer royal, Mr. Airy, alluded to the impression made by the enormous light of the tel- escope; partly by the modifications produced in the appearances of nebulae already figured, partly by the great number of stars seen even at a distance from the Milky Way, and partly from the prodigious brill- iancy oi S-atnrn. The account given by another astronomer of the ap- pearai^ce of Jupiter was, that it resembled a coach-lamp in the tele- scope; and this well expi-esses the blaze of hght which is seen in the instrament." Compare also Sir John Herschel, Outl. of Astr., ^ 870. "The sublimity of the spectacle afforded by the magnificent reflecting telescope constructed by Lord Rosse of some of the larger globular clus- ters of nebula?, is declared by all who have witnessed it to be such as no words can express. This telescope has resolved or rendered resolv- able multitudes of nebulse which had resisted all inferior powers." * Delambre. Hist, de VAstrmi. Moderne, t. ii., p. 255. 'nM.i'.S(^(U'i'.<. r»7 ei'iiployineul, by Koiiut. oj'gri'tit meridian ti-k'.-c.ojjes in IG'Jl, observations cl" llio stars by day have been IVequeiit and iriiit- fnl in results, having- been, in some cases, advantageously applied to the measurement of the double stars. Struve states* that he has determined the smallest distances of ex- tremely faint stars in the Dorpat refractor, with a power of only 320, in so bright a crepuscular light that he could read with ease at midnight. The polar star has a companion of the ninth magnitude, which is situated at only 18" distance : it was seen by day in the Dorpat refracting telescope by Struve and Wrangel,t and was in like manner observed on one occasion by Encke and Argclander. Many conjectures have been hazarded regarding the cause of the great power of the telescope at a time when the dif- fused light of the atmosphere, by multiplied reflection, ex- erts an obstructing action. $ This question, considered as an * Struve, Mens. Microm., p. xliv. - t Schnmachei'^s Jahrbtick fur 1839, s. 100. X La lumiere af.mosphdrique diffuse ne pent s'expliquer par le reflet des rayons solaires siir la surface de separation des couches de diifereu- tes deusites dout on suppose I'atmosphere coniposee. En effet, suppo- sons le soleil place a I'horizon, les surfaces de separation dans la direc- tion du zenith seraient horizontales, par consequent la reflexion serait horizontale aussi, et nous ne venions aucune lumiere au zenith. Dans la supposition des couches, aucun rayon ne nous arriverait par voie d'une premiere reflexion. Ce ne seraient que les reflexions multiples qui pouriaient asir. Done pour expliquer In lumiere diffuse, il faut so figurer I'atmosphere composee de molecules (spheriques, par exemple) dent chacune donne une image du soleil a pen pres conime les boules de verres que nous plaQons dans nos jardins. L'air pur est bleu, par- ceque d'apres Newton, les molecules de l'air ont V epaisseur qui convi- ent a la reflexion des rayons bleus. II e.uch strata exist, n) ray would reach us by means of direct reflection. Repeated reflections would be necessary to produce any effect. In order, there- fore, to explain the phenomenon o'i diffused light, we must suppose the atmosphere to be composed f)f molecules (of a spherical form, for in 68 cos.M')?'. optical problem, excited the strongest interest in the mind of Bessel, whose too early death was so unfortunate for the cause of science. In his long correspondence with myself, he frequently reverted to this subject, admitting that he could not arrive at any satisfactory solution. 1 feel conlident it will not be unwelcome to my readers if I subjoin, in the form of a note, some of the opinions of Arago,^ as expressed stance), each of -^vhich presents an image of the sun somewhat in the same manner as an ordinary glass ball. Pure air is blue, because, aiv cording to Newton, the molecules of the air have the thickness neces sary to reflect blue rays. It is therefore natural that the small images of the sun, reflected by the spherical molecules of the atmosphere, should present a bluish tinge ; this color is not, how*ever, pure blue, but white, in which the blue predominates When the sky is not perfectly pure and the atmosphere is blended with perceptible vapors, the diffused light is mixed with a large proportion of white. As the moon is yellow, the blue of the air assumes somewhat of a greenish tinge bv niglit, or, in other words, becomes blended with yellow." — MSS. of 1847. * D^vn des Effcts dcs Lunettes sur la VisibiliiS dcs etoiles. {Lcttre de M. Arago a M. de Humboldt en Die, 1847.) " L'oeil n'est done que d'nne sensibilite circonscrite, bornee. Quand la liimiere qui frappe la re tine, n'a pas assez d'lnteusite, Toe 11 ne sent rien. C'est par un manque d'inteusite que beaucoup d'itoiles, meme dans les nuits les plus prolondes echnpj)eut a nos observations. Les lu- nettes out pour eff"et, quayit aux etoiles, d'angmenter I'iutensite de I'image. Le foisceau cylindriqne de rayons paralleles venant d'une etoile, qui s'appuie sur la surface de la lentille objective, et qui a cette surface cir- culaire ponr base, se trouve considerablement resserre ^ la sortie de la lentille oculaire. Le diametre du premier cylindre est au diametre du second, corame la distance focale de I'objectif est a la distance fo- cale de I'oculaire, ou bien comme le diametre de I'objectif est au dia- metre de la -portion d^oculaire qu'occupe le faisceau emergent. Les in- tensites de lumiere dans les deux cylindres en question (dans les deux cylindres, incident et emergent) doiveiit etre entr'elles comme les etcn- dues superticielles des bases. Ainsi la lumiere emergente sera plus con- deusee, fins intense que la lumiere naturelle tombant sur I'objectif, dans le rapport de la surface de cet objectif a la surface circulaire de la base du faisceau emergent. Le faisceau Emergent, quand la lunette grossit, etant plus etroit que le faisceau cylindrique qui tombe sur I'objectif, il est evident que la pupille, quelle que soit son coverture, I'ecueillera plus de rayons par I'intermediaire de la lunette que sans elle. La lunette augmentera done toujours I'iutensite de la lumiere des itoiles. " Le cas le plus favorable , quant a I'eflet des lunettes, est evidomment celui ou l'oeil reijoit la totalite du faisceau emergent, le cas ou ce fais- ceau a moins de diametre que la pupille. Alors tovte la lumiere que I'objectif embrasse, concourt, par I'eutremi.se du telescope, d la forma- tion de I'image. A l'oeil nu, au contraire, une portion seule de cette meme lumiere est mise a profit ; c'est la petite portion que la surface de la pupille decoupe dans le faisceau incident naturel. L'intensite de I'image lelescopique d'une etoile est done a I'iutensite de I'image h Vaeil nu, comme la surface de V objectif est a celle de la pupille. " Ce qui precede est relatii a 1 1 vi^ibilite d'ua seul point, d'unu sculo TELESCOPES. G9 ill one of the numerous manuscripts to which I was permit- ted, free access during my Irequent sojourn in Paris. Ac- ^toile. Venous k I'observation d'lm objct ayaut dcs dimensions an gulaires sensiblos, d I'observation d'uno plancte. Dans Ics caa les plus iiivorables, c'est-a-dire lorsque la jmpille re^oit la totaliti'; du pincuaa emergent, Tiiitensito de I'image dc chaque point de la planete se calcu- lera ptkr la proportion que nous venous dc donner. La (juantite totale de liimierc toncouraut a former Venscmble de I'image a i'cuil nu, sera done aussi a la qiianlild totale de lumiere qui forme i'image de la pla- n^to k I'aide d'une lunette, comme la surface de la pupillo est k la sur- face de I'objwctif. Les iutensites comparatives, non plus de pointe isoles, mais des deux images d'une planete, qui se forment sur la retine a I'oeil nu, et par rintermcdiaire d'une lunette, doivent evidemment diminuer proportionnellement aux dlcndues stipe rjicielles de ces deux im- ages. Les dimensions I'miaires Clus deux images sont entr'elles conuiie le diametre de I'objectif est au diametre du faisceau emergent. Le nombre de fois que la surface de I'image amplifiee surpasse la surface de I'image a Toeil nu, s'obtiendra done en divisant le carre dvi diametre de Vobjectif\itiV le carre du diametre du faisceau Emergent, ou bien la sur- face de Vobjectif par la surface dc la basecirculaire du faisceau 6mergent. " Nous avons deja obtenu le rapport des quantitis totales dc lumiere qui engeudrenl les deux images d'une planete, en divisant la surface de I'objectif par la surface de la pupille. Ce nombre est plus petit que le quotient auquel on arrive en divisant la surface de Vobjectif "pax la sur' face du faisceau Emergent. II en resulte, quant aux planetes, qu'une lunette iait moius gagner en intensite de lumiere, qu'elle ue fait perdre eu agrandissant la surface des images sur la retine; I'inteiisite de ces images doit done aller continuellement en s'affaiblissant a mesure que le pouvoir amplificatif de la lunette ou du telescope s'accroit. " L'atmosphci'e peut etre considerce comme une planete a dimen- eions indefinies. La portion qu'on en verra dans une lunette, subira done aussi la loi d'atlaiblissemeut que nous venous d'indiquer. Le rap- port enti-e I'intensite de la lumiere d'une planete et le champ de lumiere atmosphenque a travers lequel on la verra, sera le meme a I'oeil nu et dans les lunettes de tons les grossissements, de toutes les dimensions. Les lunettes, soiis le rapport de Vintensit^, ne favorisent done pas la visi- biiite des planetes. " II u'en est point aiusi des 6toiles. L'intensite de I'image d'une etoile est plus forte avec une lunette qu'a Tceil nu ; au contraire, le champ de la vision, uniformement eclaire dans les deux cas par la lumiere atmos- phenque, est plus clair a I'oeil nu que dans la lunette. II y a done deux raisons, sans sortir des considerations d'intensite, pour que dans une lu- nette de I'image de I'etoile predomine sur celle de I'atmosphere, nola- blement plus qu'a I'oeil nu. " Cette predominance doit aller graduellement en augmentant avec le grossisseraent. En efFet, abstraction faite de certaine augmentation du diametre de I'etoile, consequence de divers effets de diffraction ou d^ interferences, abstraction faite aussi d'une plus forte reflexion que la lumiere subit sur les surfaces plus obliques des oculaires de tres courts foyers, Vinfensit6 de la lumiere de Vetoile est constante taut que I'ouver- ture de I'objectif ne varie pas. Comme ou I'a vu, la clarti. du champ de la lunette, au contraire, dimiyme sans cesse a mesure que le pouvoir amplificatif s'accroit. Done toutes autres circonstauces restant egales, une etoile sera d'autant p'u' visible, sa oredomineiice s ;r la lumiere du 70 COSMOS. cording to the ingenious explanation of my friend, high mag- nifying powers facilitate the discovery and recognition of the champ du telescope sera d'autaut phis trancbee qu'on fera usage d'un grossissement phis fort." " The eye is endowed with only a hmited sensibihty ; for when the light which strikes the retina is not sufficiently strong, the eye is not sensible of any impression. In consequence of deficient intensity, in.uuy stars escape our observation, even in the darkest nights. Telescopic glasses have the effect of augmenting the intensity of the images of the stars. The cylindrical pencil of parallel rays emanating from a star, and striking tlie surface of the object-glass, on whose circular surface it rests as on abase, is considerably contracted on emerging from the eye- piece. The diameter of the first cylinder is to that of the second as the focal distance of the object-glass is to the focal distance of the eye- piece, or as the diameter of the object-glass is to tlie diameter of the part of the eye-piece covered by the emerging rays. The intensities of the light in these two cylinders (the incident and emerging cylin- ders) must be to one another as the supeihcies of their bases. Thus, the emerging light will be more condensed, more intense, than the nat- ural light faUing on the object-glass, in the ratio of the surface of this object-glass to the circular surface of the base of this emerging pencil. As the emerging pencil is narrower in a magnifying instrument than the cylindi'ical pencil falling on the object-glass, it is evident that the pupil, whatever may be its aperture, wuU receive more rays, by the interven- tion of the telescope, than it could without. The intensity of the light of the stars will, therefore, always be augmented when seen through a telescope. " The most favorable condition for the use of a telescope is undoubt edly that in which the eye receives the whole of the emerging rays, and, consequently, when the diameter of the pencil is less than that of the pupil. The whole of the light received by the object-glass then co- operates, through the agency of the telescope, in the formation of the image. In natural vision, on the contrary, a portion only of this light is rendered available, namely, the small portion which enters the pupil naturally firom the incident pencil. The intensity of the telescopic im age of a star is, therefore, to the intensity of the image seen with the naked eye, as the surface of the object-glass is to that of the pvpil. " The preceding observations relate to the visibility of one point or one star. We will now pass on to the consideration of an object having sensible angular dimensions, as, for instance, a planet. Under the most favorable conditions of vision, that is to say, when the pupil receives the whole of the emerging pencil, the intensity of each point of the plan- et's image may be calculated by the proportions we have already given. The total qiiantity of light contributing to form the whole of the image, as seen by the naked eye, will, therefore, be to the total quantity of the light forming the image of the planet by the aid of a telescope, as the surface of the pupil is to the surface of the o!)ject-glass. The compar- ative intensities, not of mere isolated points, but of the images of a plan- et formed respectively on the retina of the naked eye, and by the in- tervention of a telescope, must evidently diminish proportionally to the superficial extent of these two images. The linear dimensions of the two images are to one another as the diameter of the object-glass is to that of the emerging pencil. We therefore obtain the number of times that the surface of the magnified image exceeds the surface of the im- T£Ll::SCOP£S. 71 fixed stars, since they convey a greater quantity of" intense light to the eye without perceptibly enlarging the image ; age wlien seen by the naked eye by dividing the square of the diameter of the object-glass by the square of the diameter of the emerging pencil, or ratlier the surface of the object-glass by the surface of the circular base of the emerging pencil. " By dividing the surface of the object-glass by the surface of the pa pil, we have aheady obtained the ratio of the total quantities of hght produced by the two images of a planet. This number is lower than the quotient which we obtain by dividing the surface of the object- glass by the surface of the emerging pencil. It follows, therefore, with respect to planets, that a telescope causes us to gain less in intensity of light than is lost by magnifying tlie surface of the images on the retina; the intensity of these images must therefore become continually fainter, in proportion as the magnifying power of the telescope increases. '* The atmosphere may be considered as a planet of indefinite dimen- sions. The portion of it that we see in a telescope will therefore also be subject to the same law of diminution that we have indicated. The relation between the intensity of the light of a planet and the field of at- mospheric light through which it is seen, will be the same to the naked eye and in telescopes, whatever may be their dimensions aud magnify- ing powei's. Telescopes, therefore, do not favor the visibility of planets in respect to the intensity of their light. " The same is not the case with respect to the stars. The intensity of the image of a star is greater when seen with the telescope than with the naked eye ; the field of vision, on the conti'ary, uniformly illumined in both cases by the atmospheric light, is clearer in natural than in tel- escopic vision. There are two reasons, then, which, in connection with the consideration of the intensity of light, explain why the image of a star preponderates in a telescope rather than in the naked eye over that of the atmosphere. " This predominance must gradually increase with the increased magnifying power. In fact, deducting the constant augmentation of the star's diameter, consequent upon the different effects of diffraction or interference, and deducting also the sti'onger reflection experienced by the light on the more oblique surfaces of ocular glasses of short focal lengths, the intensity of the light of the star is constant as long as the aperture of the object-glass does not vary. As we have already seen, the brightness of the field of view, on the contrary, diminishes inces- santly in the same ratio in Avhich the magnifying power increases. All other circumstances, therefore, being equal, a star will be more or less visible, and its prominence on the field of the telescope w^ill be more or less marked, in proportion to the magnifying powers we employ," — Arago, Manuscript of 1847. I will further add the following passage from the Annualre du Bu- reau des Long, pour 1846 (Notices Sclent, par M. Arago), p. 381 : " L'experience a montre que pour le commun des hommes, deux espaces eclaires et contigus ne se distinguent pas I'un de I'autre, a moins que leurs intensites comparatives ne presentent, au minimum, une dif ference de ^'^. Quand une lunette est tournee vers le firmament, son champ semble unifomiement cclaire : c'est qu' alors il existe, dans uu plan passant par le foyer et perpendicnlaire k Taxe de I'objectif une image indifinie de la region atmospheriqixe vers laquelle la lunette est dirigee. Supposons qu'un astre. c'est-a-dire un objet situe bien au- 72 COSMOS, while, in accordance with another law, they mfluence the aerial space on which the fixed star is projected. The tele- scope, by separating, as it were, the illuminated particles of air surrounding the object-glass, darkens the field of view, and diminishes the intensity of its illumination. We are en- abled to see, however, only by means of the difierence be- tween the light of the fixed star and of the aerial field or the mass of air which surrounds the star in the telescope. Plan- etary disks present very different relations from the simple ray of the image of a fixed star ; since, like the aerial field {Vair aerienne), they lose in intensity of light by dilatation in the magnifying telescope. It must be further observed, that the apparent motion of the fixed star, as well as of the planetary disk, is increased by high magnifying powers. This circumstance may facilitate the recognition of objects by day, in instruments whose movements are not regulated paralactically by clock-work, so as to follow the diurnal mo- tion of the heavens. Difierent points of the retina are suc- cessively excited. " Very faint shadows are not observed," Arago elsewhere remarks, " until we can give them motion." In the cloudless sky of the tropics, during the driest sea- son of the year, I have frequently been able to find the pale disk of Jupiter with one of Dollond's telescopes, of a magni- fying power of only 95, when the sun was already from 15° to 18° above the horizon. The diminished intensity of the light of Jupiter and Saturn, when seen by day in the great Berlin refractor, especiallj^ when contrasted with the equally reflected light of the inferior planets, Venus and Mercury, frequently excited the astonishment of Dr. Galle. Jupiter's deld de I'atmosphere, se trouve dans la direction de la lunette : sou image ne sera visible cju'autant qu'elle augmentera de -^q, au raoins, I'iutensite de la portion de I'image focale ind^Jinie de I'atmosphere, sur laquelle sa propre image limil^e ira se placer. Sans cela le champ visuel continuera Si paraitre partout de la meme intensite." " Experience has shown that, in ordinary vision, two illuminated and contiguous spaces can not be distinguished from each other unless their comparative intensities present a minimum difference of ^'fj^th. When a telescope is directed toward the heavens, its field of view appears uniformly illumined : there then exists in a plane passing through the focus, and perpendicular to the axis of the object-glass, an indefinite im- age of the atmospheric region towai'd which the instrument is pointed. If we suppose a star, that is to say, an object very far beyond the atmos- phere, situated in the direction of the telescope, its image will not be visible except it exceed, by at least ^f^th, the intensity of that portion of the indefinite focal image of the atmosphere on which its limited proper image is thrown. Otherwise the visual field will contirue to appear esery where of the same intensity. SCINTILLATION OF THE STARS. 73 occnltations have occasionally been observed by daylifrl^i, with the aid of poAvcri'ul telescopes, as in 1792, by Flau- gerguos, and iii 1620, by Struve. Argelauder (on the 7th oi" December, 1849, at Bonn) distinctly saw three of the sat ellites of Jupiter, a quarter of an hour after sunrise, with one of Fraunhofer's live-feet telescopes. He was unable to distinguish the fourth ; but, subsequently, this and the other satellites were observed emerging from tlie dark maririn of the moon, by the assistant astronomer Schmidt, with the eight-feet heliometer. The determination of the limits of the telescopic visibility of small stars by daylight, in differ- ent climates, and at different elevations above the sea's level, is alike interesting in an optical and a meteorological point of view. Among the remarkable phenomena whose causes have been much contested,- in natural as well as in telescopic vision, we must reckon the nocturnal scintillation of the stars. Accord- ing to Arago's investigations, two points must be specially dis- tinguished in reference to this phenomenon=^ — firstly, change * The earliest explanations given by Arago of scintillation occur in the appendix to the 4th book of my Voyage atix Regions Equinoxiales, torn, i., p. 623. I i-ejoice that I am able to enrich this section on nat- ural and telescopic vision with the following explanations, which, for the reasons already assigned, I subjoin in the original text. Des causes de la scintillation des 6toiles. "Ce qu'il y a de plus remarquable dans le phenomene de la scintil- lation, c'est le changement de couleur. Ce changement est beaucoup plus frequent que I'observalion ordinaire I'indique. En etFet, en agi- taut la lunette, on transforme I'image dans une ligne ou un cercle, et tons les points de cette ligne ou de ce cercle paraissent de couleurs dif- ferentes. C'est la resultante de la superposition de toutes ces images que I'on voit, lorsqu'on laisse la lunette immobile. Les rayons qui so reunisseut au foyer d'une lentille, vibrent d'accord ou en desaccord, s'ajoutent ou se detruisent, suivant que les couches qu'ils ont traver- sees, ont telle ou telle relringence. L'ensemble des rayons rouges pent se detruire seul. si ceux de droite et de gauche, et ceux de haut et do bas, ont traverse des milieux inegalement refringents. Nous avons dit seul, parceque la difference de refringence qui correspond k la destruc- tion du rayon rouge, n'est pas la meme que cella qui amcne la destruc- tion du rayon vert, et rcciproquement. Maiutenant, si des rayons rouges sent detruits, ce qui reste sera le blanc moins le rouge, c'est-d-dire du vert. Si le vert au contraire est detruit par interference, I'image sera du blanc moins le vert, c'est-a-dire du rouge. Pour expliquer pourquoi les planetes a grand diametre ne scintillent pas ou tres pen, il faut se rappeler que le disque peut etre considere comme une aggi-egation d'^toiles ou de petits points qui scintillent isolement; mais les images de difFereutes couleurs que chacun de ces points pris isolement don- nerait, empietant les unes sur les autres, formeraient du blanc. Lora* qu'on place un diaT)hrasrme ^u un bouchon perce d'lin trou ^ur I'objec- Vol. III.— D' 74 COSMOS. in the intensity of the light, from a sudden decrease to perfect extinction and rekindhng ; secondly, change of color. Both tif d'une lunette, les etoiles acquierent un disque eutoure d'uiie serie d'anueaux lumiueux. Si I'ou enfonce I'oculaire, le disque de I'etoile augmente de diametre, et il se produit dans son centre un trou obscur ; si on I'enfonce davantage, un point lumiueux se substitue au point noir, Un nouvel eufoncement donne naissance k un centre noir, etc. Pre nons la lunette lorsque le centre de I'image est noir, et visons a une etoile qui ne scintille pas : le centre restera noir, comme il I'etait au- paravant. Si au contraire on dirige la lunette a une etoile qui scintille, on verra le centre de I'image lumiueux et obscur par intermittence. Dans la position ou le centre de I'image est occupe par un point lumi- neux, on veiTa ce point dispai'aitre et renaitre successivement. Cette disparition ou reapparition du point central est la preuve directe de V interference variable des rayons. Pour bien concevoir I'absence de lumiere au centre de ces images dilatees, il faut se rappeler que les rayons regulierement refractes par I'objectifne se reunissent et ne peu- vent par consequent interferer qu'au foyer: par consequent les images dilatees que ces rayons peuvent produire, resteraient toujours pleines (sans trou). Si dans une certaine position de I'oculaire un trou se pre- sente au cenh'e de I'image, c'est que les rayons regulierement refrac- tes inierferent avec des rayons diffracUs sur les bords du diapbragme circulaire. Le phenomene n'est pas constant, parceque les rayons qui interferent dans un certain moment, n'interferent pas un instant apres, lorsqu'ils out traverse des couches atmospheriques dont le pouvoir re- fringent a varie. On trouve dans cette experience la preuve manifesto du role que joue dans le phenomene de la scintillation I'inegale refran- gibilite des couches atmospheriques traversees par les rayons dont le faisceau est tres etroit. II resulte de ces considerations que I'explica- tlon des scintillations ne pent etre rattachee qu'aux phenomeues des interferences lumineuses. Les rayons des etoiles, apres avoir traverse une atmosphere ou il existe des couches inegalement chaudes, inegale- ment denses, inegalement humides, vont se reunir au foyer d'une len- tille, pour y former des images d'intensite et de couleurs perpetuelle- ment changeantes, c'est-a-dire des images telles que la scintillation les presente. II y a aussi scintillation hors du foyer des lunettes. Les ex- plications proposees par Galileo, Scaliger, Kepler, Descartes, Hooke, Huygeus, Newton et John Michell, que j'ai examine dans un memoire presente a I'Institut en 1840 {Comptes Rendus, t. x., p. 83), sont inad- raissibles. Thomas Young, auquel nous devons les premieres lois des interferences, a cru inexplicable le phenomene de la scintillation. La faussete de I'ancienne explication par des vapeurs qui voltigent et de- placent, est dej4 prouvee par la circonstance que nous voyons la scin- tillation des yeux, ce qui supposerait un deplacement d'une minute. Les ondulations du bord du soleil sont de 4" k 5", et peut-etre des pie- ces qui manque7it, done encore efFet de I'interfereuce des rayons." On the causes of ike scintillation of the stars. "The most remarkable feature in the phenomenon of the stars' scin- tillation is their change of color. Tliis change is of mucli more frequent occurrence than would appear from ordinary observation. Indeed, on shaking the telescope, the image is transformed into a line or circle, and all the points of this line or circle appear of ditfereut colors. W^e huvo here the i-esults of the superposition of all the images seen when the telescope is at rest. The rays united in the locus of a lens vibrate ic SCINTILLATION OF THE STARS. 75 these alterations are more intense in reality than they appear to the naked eye ; for when the several points of the retina harmony or at variauco with one another, and increase or destroy ono another according to tlie various degrees of refraction of the strata through which they have passed. The whole of the red rays alone can destroy one another, if the rays to the right and left, above and below them, have passed through unequally refracting media. We have used the term alone, because the difference of refraction necessary to destroy the red ray is not the same as that which is able to destroy the green ray, and vice versa. Now, if the red rays be destroyed, that which re« mains will be white minus red, that is to say, green. If the green, on the other hand, be destroyed by interference, the image will be white minus green, that is to say, red. To miderstand why planets having large diameters should be subject to little or no scintillation, it must be remem- bered that the disk may be regarded as an aggregation of stars or of small points, scintillating independently of each other, while the images of diflerent colors presented by each of these points taken alone would impinge upon one another and form white. If we place a diaphragm or a coi'k pierced with a hole on the object-glass of a telescope, the stars present a disk surrounded by a series of luminous rings. On push- ing in the eye-piece, the disk of the star increases in diameter, and a dark point appears in its center; when the eye-piece is made to recede still further into the instrument, a luminous point will take the place of the dark point. On causing the eye-piece to recede still further, a black center will be observed. If, while the center of the image is black, we point the instrument to a star which does not scintillate, it will remain black as before. If, on the other hand, we point it to a scin- tillating star, we shall see the center of the image alternately luminous and dark. In the position in which the center of the image is occu- pied by a luminous point, we shall see tfiis point alternately vanish and reappear. This disappearance and reappearance of the central point is a direct proof of the variable interference of the rays. In order to comprehend the absence of light from the center of these dilated im- ages, we must remember that rays regularly refracted by the object- glass do not reunite, and can not, consequently, interfere except in the focus; thus the images produced by these rays will always be uniform and without a central point. If, in a certain position of the eye-piece, a point is observed in the center of the image, it is owing to the inter- ference of the regularly refracted rays with the rays diffracted on the margins of the circular diaphragm. The phenomenon is not constant, for the rays which interfere at one moment no longer do so in the next, after they have passed through atmospheric strata possessing a varying power of refraction. We here meet with a manifest proof of the im- portant part played in the phenomenon of scintillation by the unequal refrangibility of the atmospheric stx-ata traversed by raj s united in a very narrow pencil." *' It follows from these considerations that scintillation mnst necessa- rily be referred to the phenomena of luminous interferences alone The rays emanating from the stars, after traversing an atmosphere composed of strata having different degrees of heat, density, and humidity, com- bine in the focus of a lens, where they foi'm imuges perpetually chang- ing in intensity and color, that is to say, the images presented by scin- tillation. There is another form of scintillation, independent of the fo cus of the telescope. The explanations of this phanomenon advanced 76 COSMOS. are once excited, they retain the impression of hght which they have received, so that the disappearance, obscuration and change of color in a star are not perceived by us to their full extent. The phenomenon of scintillation is more striking- ly manifested in the telescope when the instrument is shaken, for then different points of the retina are successively excited, and colored and frequently interrupted rings are seen. The principle of interference explains how the momentary colored effulgence of a star may be followed by its equally instanta- neous disappearance or sudden obscuration, in an atmosphere composed of ever-changing strata of different temperatures, moisture, and density. The undulatory theory teaches us generally that two rays of light (two systems of waves) em- anating from one source (one center of commotion), destroy each other by inequality of path ; that the light of one ray added to the light of the other produces darkness. When the retardation of one system of waves in reference to the other amounts to an odd number of semi-undulations, both systems endeavor to impart simultaneously to the same molecule of ether equal but opposite velocities, so that the effect of their combination is to produce rest in the molecule, and therefore darkness. In some cases, the refrangibility of the different strata of air intersecting the rays of light exerts a greater in- fluence on the phenomenon than the difference in length of their path.=^ , The intensity of scintillations varies considerably in the dif- ferent fixed stars, and does not seem to depend solely on their altitude and apparent magnitude, but also on the nature of their own light. Some, as for instance Vega, flicker less than Arcturus and Procyon. The absence of scintillation in plan- ets with larger disks is to be ascribed to compensation and to the naturahzing mixture of colors proceeding from different points of the disk. The disk is to be regarded as an aggregate by Galileo, Scaliger, Kepler, Descartes, Hooka, Huygens, Newton, and John Michell, which I examined in a memoir presented to the Institute in 1840 {Comptes Rendus, t, x., p. 83), are inadmissible. Thomas Young, to whom we owe the discoveiy of the first laws of interference I'egarded scintillation as an inexplicable phenomenon. The erroneous- ness of the ancient explanation, which supposes that vapors ascend and displace one another, is sufficiently proved by the circumstance that we see scintillations with the naked eye, which presupposes a displace ment of a minute. The undulations of the margin of the sun are from 4" to 5", and are perhaps owing to chasms or inteiTuptions, and there- fore also to the effect of interference of the rays of light." {Ext-^acfs from Arago's MSS. of 1847.) * See Arago, in the Annuaire pour 1835 p. 168. SCINTILLATION (. V THE STARS. 77 oi stars wliich naturally compensate for the light destroyed by interference, and again combine the colored rays into white light. For this reason, we most rarely meet with traces of scintillation in Jupiter and Saturn, but more frequently in Mercury and Venus, for the apparent diameters of the disks of these last-named planets diminish to 4"-4 and 9"-5. The diameter of Mars may also decrease to 3"-3 at its conjunc- tion. In the serene cold winter nights of the temperate zone, the scintillation increases the magnificent impression produced by the starry heavens, and the more so from the circumstance that, seeing stars of the sixth and seventh magnitude flicker- ing in various directions, we are led to imagine that we per- ceive more luminous points than the unaided eye is actually capable of distinguishing. Hence the popular surprise at the few thousand stars which accurate catalogues indicate as vis- ible to the naked eye 1 It was known in ancient times by the Greek astronomers that the flickering of their light dis- tinguished the fixed stars from the planets ; but Aristotle, in accordance with the emanation and tangential theory of vi- sion, to which he adhered, singularly enough ascribes the scin- tillation of the fixed stars merely to a straining of the eye. " The riveted stars (the fixed stars)," says he,^ " sparkle, but not the planets ; for the latter are so near that the eye is able to reach them ; but in looking at the fixed stars [npog 6e rovg fievovrag), the eye acquires a tremulous motion, owing to the distance and the effort." In the time of Galileo, between 1572 and 1604 — an epoch remarkable for great celestial events, when three starsf of greater brightness than stars of the first magnitude suddenly appeared, one of which, in Cygnus, remained luminous for twenty-one years — Kepler's attention was specially directed to scintillation as the probable criterion of the non-planetary nature of a celestial body. Although well versed in the sci- ence^ of optics, in its then imperfect state, he was unable to rise above the received notion of moving vapors. $ In the Chinese Records of the newly appeared stars, according to the great collection of Ma-tuan-lin, their strong scintillation is occasionally mentioned. The more equal mixture of the atmospheric strata, in and near the tropics, and the faintness or total absence of scintil- * Anstot., De Ccelo, ii., 8, p. 290, Bekker. t Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 32G. X CanscB scintillationis, in Kepler, Dc Stella nova in pede Serpentarii, 1606, cap. xviii., p. 92-97. 8 COSMOS. latioii of the fixed stars when they have risen 12° or 15° above the horizon, give the vault of heaven a peculiar char- acter of mild effulgence and repose. I have already referred in many of my delineations of tropical scenery to this charac- teristic, which was also noticed by the accurate observers La Condamine and Bouguer, in the Peruvian plains, and by Garcin,^ in Arabia, India, and on the shores of the Persian Gulf (near Bender Abassi). As the aspect of the starry heavens, in the season of the serene and cloudless nights of the tropics, specially excited my admiration, I have been careful to note in my journals the height above the horizon at which the scintillation of the stars ceased in different hygrometric conditions. Cumana and the rainless portion of the Peruvian coast of the Pacific, before the season of the garua (mist) had set in, were pecul- iarly suited to such observations. On an average, the fixed stars appear only to scintillate when less than 10° or 12° above the horizon. At greater elevations, they shed a mild, planetary light ; but this diflerence is most strikingly per- ceived when the same fixed stars are watched in their grad- ual rising or setting, and the angles of their altitudes meas- ured or calculated by the known time and latitude of the place. In some serene and cahii nights, the region of scin- tillation extended to an elevation of 20° or even 25° ; but a comiection could scarcely ever be traced between the differ- ences of altitude or intensity of the scintillation and the hy- grometric and thermometric conditions, observable in the low- er and only accessible region of the atmosphere. I have ob- served, during successive nights, after considerable scintilla- tion of stars, having an altitude of 60° or 70^, wlien Saus- sure's hair-hygrometer stood at 85°, that the scintillation en- tirely ceased when the stars were 15° above the horizon, al- though the moistm'e of the atmosphere was so considerably increased that the hygrometer had risen to 93°. The intri- cate compensatory phenomena of interference of the rays of light are modified, not by the quantity of aqueous vapor con- tained in solution in the atmosphere, but by the unequal dis- tribution of vapors in the superimposed strata, and by the upper currents of cold and warm air, which are not percept- ible in the lower regions of the atmosphere. The scintilla- tion of stars at a great altitude was also strikingly increased during the thin yellowish red mist which tinges the heavens * Lettre de M. Garcin, Dr. en Med. a M. de Rimimur, in Hist, de V Academie Roy ale des Sciences, Ann^e 1743, p. 28-32. SCINTILLATION' uK THK ^^TARS. TU shortly before an earthquake. These observations only reler to the serenely bright and rainless seasons of the year with in the tropics, from 10° to 12° north and south of the equa- tor. The phenomena of light exhibited at the commence- ment of the rainy season, during the sun's zenith-passage, depend on veiy general, yet powerful, and almost tempestu- ous causes. The sudden decrease of the northeast trade-wind, and the interruption of the passage of regular upper currents from the equator to the poles, and of lower currents from the poles to the equator, generate clouds, and thus daily give rise, at definite recurring periods, to storms of wind and torrents of rain. I have observed during several successive years that in regions where the scintillation of the fixed stars is of rare occurrence, the approach of the rainy season is an- nounced many days beforehand by a flickering light of the stars at great altitudes above the horizon. This phenome- non is accompanied by sheet lightning, and single flashes on the distant horizon, sometimes without any visible cloud, and at others darting through narrow, vertically ascending col- umns of clouds. In several of my writings I have endeav- ored to delineate these precursory characteristics and physi- ognomical changes in the atmosphere.^ The second book of Lord Bacon's Novum Organum gives us the earliest vieAvs on the velocity of light and the prob- ability of its requiring a certain time for its transmission. He speaks of the time required by a ray of light to traverse the enormous distances of the universe, and proposes the * See Voyage aux RSgions Equin., t. i., p. 511 and 512, and t. ii., p. 202-208; also my Vietcs nf Nature, \). 16, 138. " En Arable, de meine qu'a Bender-Abassi, port ftmieux da Golfe Persique, I'air est pai'faitement serein presque toute i'annee. Le priu- temps, I'ete, at I'automne se passent, sans qu'on y voie la moindre rosee. Dans ces memes temps tout le monde couche dehors sur le liaut des maisons. Qiiand on est ainsi couche, il n'est pas possible d'exprimer le plaisir qu'on prend a contempler la beaute du ciel, I'eclat des etoiles. C'est une lumiere pure, ferme eteclatante, sans etincellement. Ce n'est qu'au milieu de I'hiver que la scintillation, quoique tres foible, s'y fait apercevoir." " lu Arabia," says Garcin, "as also at Bender-Abassi, a celebrated port on the Persian Gulf, the air is perfectly serene throughout nearly the whole of the year. Spring, summer, and autumn pass without ex- hibiting a trace of dew. During these seasons all the inhabitants sleep on the roofs of their houses. It is impossible to describe the pleasure experienced in contemplating the beauty of the sky, and the brightness of the stars, while thus lying in the open air. The light of the stars is pure, steady, and brilliant ; and it is only in the middle of the winter that a slight degree of scintillation is observed." — Garcin, in HiM. dt VAcad. des Sc, 1743. p. 30, SU COSMOS. question whether those stars yet exist which we noAV see shining.* "VYe are astonished to meet with this happy con- jecture in a work whose intellectual author v/as far behind his cotemporaries in mathematical, astronomical, and phys- ical knowledge. The velocity of reflected solar light was first measured by K-omer (November, 1G75) by comparing the periods of occult ation of Jupiter's satellites ; while the velocity of the direct light of the fixed stars Avas ascertained (in the autumn of 1727) by means of Bradley's great discov- ery of aberration, which afforded objective evidence of the translatory movement of the earth, and of the truth of the Copernican system. In recent times, a third method of measurement has been suggested by Arago, which is based on the phenomena of light observed in a variable star, as, for instance, Algol in Perseus. t To these astronomical meth- ods may be added one of terrestrial measurement, lately con- ducted with much ingenuity and success by M. Fizeau in the neighborhood of Paris. It reminds U3 of Galileo's early * In speaking of the deceptions occasioned by the velocity of sound and light, Bacon says : " This last instance, and others of a like nature, have sometimes excited in us a most marvelous doubt, no less than whether the image of the sky and stars is perceived as at the actual moment of its existence, or rather a little after, and whedier there is not (wdth regard to the visible appearance of the heavenly bodies) a true and apparent place which is observed by astronomers in parallaxes. It appeared so incredible to us that the images or radiations of heavenly bodies could suddenly be conveyed through such immense spaces to the eight, and it seemed that they ought rather to be transmitted in a def- inite time. That doubt, however, as far as regards any great ditTerence between the true and apparent time, was subsequently completely set at rest when we considered . . . ." — The works of Francis Bacon, vol. xiv., Lond., 1831 {Novum •Orgamim), p. 177. He then recalls the cor- rect view he had previously announced precisely in the manner of the ancieuts. Compare Mrs. Somerville's Connection of the Physical Sci- ences, p. 36, and Cosmos, vol. i., p. 154, 15.5. t See Arago's explanation of his method in the Annuaire du Bureau des Longitndes pour 1842, p. 337-343. •' L'observation attentive des phases d'Algol a six mois d'intervalle servira a determiner directement la Vitesse de la lumiere de cette etoile. Pros du maximum et du mini- mum le changement d'intensite s'opere lentement ; il est an contraire rapide k certaines epoques intermediares entre celles qui correspondent aux deux etats extremes, quaud Algol, soit en diminuant, soit en aug- mentant d'eclat, passe pour la troisieme gi-andeur." " The attentive observation of the phases of Algol at a six-months in- terval will serve to determine directly the velocity of that star's light. Near the m.aximum and the minimum the change of intensity is very slow; it is, on the contrary, rapid at cei'tain intermediate epochs be- tv/een those corresponding to the two extremes, when Algol, either di- minifihing or increasing in brightness, appears of the third magnitude. SCINTILLATION OF THE STARS. 81 and fruitless experiments with two alternately obscured lan- terns. Horrebow and Du Hamcl estimated the time occupied in the passage of light from the sun to the earth at its mean dis- tance, according to Romer's first observations of Jupiter's satel- htes, at 14' 1", then 11' ; Cassini at 14' 10" ; while Newton* * Newton, Optics, 2d ed. (London, 1718), p. 325. " Light moves from the sun to us in seven or eight minutes of time." Newton com- pares the velocity of sound (114(3 feet in 1") with that of hght. As, from ohservatious on the occultations of Jupiter's satellites (Newton's death occurred about half a year before Bradley's discovery of aberra- tion), he calculates that hght passes from the sun to the earth, a distance, as he assumed, of 70 milUons of miles, in 7' 30" ; this result yields a ve- locity of light equal to 155,555§ miles in a second. The reduction of these [ordinaiy] to geographical miles (60 to 1*^) is subject to variations according as we assume the figure of the earth. According to Encke's accurate calculations in the Jahrhich fur 1852, an equatorial degree is equal to 69-1637 English miles. According to Newton's data, we should therefore have a velocity of 134,944 geographical miles. Newton, how- ever, assumed the sun's parallax to be 12". If this, according to Encke's calculation of the transit of Venus, be 8"'57116, the distance is greater, and w^e obtain for the velocity of light (at seven and a half minutes) 188,928 geographical, or 217,783 ordinaiy miles, in a second of time ; therefore too much, as before we had too little. It is certainly very re- markable, although the circumstance has been overlooked by Delambre {Hist, de V Astronomie Moderne, torn, ii., p. 653), that Newton (proba- bly basing his calculations upon more recent English observations of the first satellite) should have approximated within 47" to the true re- sult (namely, that of Struve, which is now generally adopted), while the time assigned for the passage of light over the semi-diameter of the earth's orbit continued to vacillate between the veiy high amounts of 11' and 14' 10", from the period of Romer's discovery in 1675 to the be- ginning of the eighteenth century. The first treatise in which Romer, the pupil of Picard, communicated his discovery to the Academy, bears the date of November 22, 1675, He found, from observations of forty emersions and immersions of Jupiter's satellites, " a retardation of light amounting to 22 minutes for an interval of space double that of the sun's distance from the earth," (Memoirs de V Acad, de 1666-1699, torn, x,, 1730, p, 400.) Cassini does not deny the retardation, but he does not concur in the amount of time given, because, as he erroneously argues, ditierent satellites presentetl different results. Du Hamel, secretary to the Paris Academy {Regie?M6ovg GvoTi)0(j)f/c 6oKEi Tiatv opaaOai. Thus, too, Geniinus, Phcen. (ed. Hllder. 1590), p. 46. t Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 330, 331. X Muhamedis Alfragani Chronologica et Ast. Elementa, 1590, cap. xxiv., p. 118. $ Some MSS. of the Almagest i-efer to such subdivisions or interme- diate clas3e.s, as they add the words /xit^uv or sTiuaauv to the deteim- ination of magnitudes. (Cod. Pans, No. 2389.) Tycho expressed this mcrease or dimiimtion l>y points. 92 cosMoy. appeared stars in Cygnus and Opliiuchus (tie former of which continued luminous for twenty-one years). Avitli the bright- ness of other stars, called attention to photometric determina- tions. The so-called dark stars of Ptolemy, which were be- low the sixth ma-vri infancy." The increasing interest taken in variable se^rs and the recent celestial phenomenon of the extraordinary in- crease of light exhibited in the year 1837 in a star of the con- stellation Argo, has made astronomers more sensible of the importance of obtaining certain determinations of light. It is essential to distinguish between the mere arrangement of stars according to their luster, without numerical estimates of the intensity of light (an arrangement adopted by Sir John Herschel in his Manual of Scientific Inquiry jyrepared for the Use of the Navy), and classifications in which intensity of light is expressed by numbers, under the form of so-called relations of magnitude, or by more hazardous estimates of the quantities of radiated light. ^ The first numerical scale, based on estimates calculated with the naked eye, but improved by an ingenious elaboration of the materialsf probably deserves the preference over any other approximative method practi- cable in the present imperfect condition of photometrical in- struments, however much the exactness of the estimates must be endangered by the var}dng powers of individual observers — the serenity of the atmosphere — the different altitudes of widely-distant stars, which can only be compared by means of numerous intermediate stellar bodies — and above all by the unequal color of the light. Very brilliant stars of the first magnitude, such as Sirius and Canopus, a Centauri and Acher- nar, Deneb and Vega, on account of their white light, admit far less readily of comparison by the naked eye than fainter stars below the sixth and seventh magnitudes. Such a com- parison is even more difficult AA'hen Ave attempt to contrast yellow stars of intense light, hke Procyon, Capella, or Atair, with red ones, like Aldebaran, Arcturus, and Betelgeux.J * Compare, foi' the numerical data of the pliotometric results, four tables of Sir John Herschel's Astr. Obs. at the Cape, a), p. 341 ; b), p. 367-371 ; c), p. 440 ; and d), in his Outlines pf Astr., p. 522-525, 645- 646. For a mere arrangement without numbers, see the Mawtal of Scientific Inquiry prepared for the Use of the Navy, 1819, p. 12. In order to improve the old conventional mode of classing the stars accord- ing to magnitudes, a scale of photometric magnitudes, consisting in the addition of 0*41, as explained more in detail in Astr. Obs. at the Cape, p. 370, has been added to the vulgar scale of magnitudes in the Outlines of Astronomy, p. 645, and these scales are subjoined to this poi'tion of the present work, together with a list of northern and southern stars. t Argelander, Diirchmiisterung des nordl. Himmels zwischen 45° und 80° Deel. 1846, s. xxiv.-xxvi. ; Sir .John Hei'schel, Astr. Observ. at the Cape of Good Hope, \^. 327, 340, 365. t Op. cit.. p. .304, and Outl.. p. 522. PHOTOMETRY. 05 Sir Johii Herschel has endeavored to determine the rela- tion between the intensity of solar light and that of a star of the first magnitude by a photometric comparison of the moon with the double star a Centauri of the southern hemisphere, which is the third in brightness of all the stars. He thus fulfilled (as had been already done by WoUaston) a wish ex- pressed by John Michell^ as early as 1767. Sir John Her- schel found from the mean of eleven measurements conduct- ed with a prismatic apparatus, that the full moon was 27,408 times brighter than a Centauri. According to Wollaston, the light of the sun is 80 1 ,072 times brighter than the full moon ;t whence it follows that the light transmitted to us from the sun is to the light which we receive from a Centauri as 22,000 millions to 1. It seems, therefore, very probable, when, in accordance with its parallax, we take into account the distance of the star, that its (absolute) proper luminosity exceeds that of our sun by 2^^ times. Wollaston found the brightness of Sirius 20,000 million times fainter than that of the sun. From what we at present believe to be the paral- lax of Sirius (0-"230), its actual (absolute) intensity of lighl exceeds that of the sun 63 times. $ Our sun therefore be- longs, in reference to the intensity of its process of light, to the fainter fixed stars. Sir John Herschel estimates the in- tensity of the light of Sirius to be equal to the light of nearly * Phi/os. Transaet., vol. Ivii., for the year 1767, p. 234. t Wollciston, iu the Philos. Transact, for 1829, p. 27. Herscbel's Outlines, \i. 5,53. Wollaston's comparison of the light of the sun with that of the moon was made in 1799, and was based on observations of the shadows thrown by lighted wax tapers, while in the experiments made on Sirius in 1826 and 1827, images reflected from thermometer bulbs were employed. The earlier data of the intensity of the smi'a light, compared with that of the moon, differ widely from the results here given. They were deduced by Michelo and Euler, from theoret- ical grounds, at 450,000 and 374,000, and by Bouguer, from measure- ments of the shadows of the light of wax tapers, at only 300,000. Lam- bert assumes Venus, in her greatest intensity of light, to be 3000 times fainter than the full moon. According to Steinheil, the sun must be 3,286,500 times further removed from the earth than it is, in order to appear like Arcturus to the inhabitants of our planet (Struve, Stellarum Compositarinii Mensurce MlcrometrictE, p. clxiii.) ; and, according to Sir John Herschel, the light of Arcturus exhibits only half the intensity of !Janopus. — Herschel, Ohserv. at the Cape, p. 34. All these conditions of intensity, more especially the important comparison of the bright ness of the sun, the full moon, and of the asli-colored light of oin- satel- lite, which varies so greatly according to the different positions of the earth considered as a reflectiug body, deserve further and serious in- vestigation. X Chdl. of Asf/r., p. 553 ; Astr. Observ. at the Cape, p. 363. 96 COSMOS. two hundred stars of the sixth magnitude. Since it is very probable, from analogy Avitli the experiments already made, that all cosmic al bodies are subject to variations both in their movements through space and in the intensity of their light, although such variations may occur at very long and unde- termined periods, it is obvious, considering the dependence of all organic life on the sun's temperature and on the intens- ity of its light, that the perfection of photometry constitutes a great and important subject for scientific inquiry. Such an improved condition of our knowledge can render it alone possible to transmit to future generations numerical determ- inations of the photometric condition of the firmament. By these means we shall be enabled to explain numerous geog- nostic phenomena relating to the thermal history of our at- mosphere, and to the earlier distribution of plants and ani- mals. Such considerations did not escape the inquiring mind of William Herschel, who, more than half a century ago, be- fore the close connection between electricity and magnetism had been discovered, compared the ever-luminous cloud-en- velopes of the sun's body with the polar light of our own ter- restrial planet.* Arago has ascertained that the most certain method for the direct measurement of the intensity of light consists in observing the complementary condition of the colored rings seen by transmission and reflection. I subjoin in a note,t in * William Herschel, On the Nahire of the Sun and Fixed Stars, in the Philos. Transact, for 1795, p. 62 ; and On the Changes that happen to the Fixed Stars, in the Philos. Transact, for 1796, p. 186. Compare also Sir John Herschel, Observ. at the Cape, p. 350-352. t Extract of a Letter from M. Arago to M. de Humboldt, May, 1850. (a.) Mesnrcs Photom^triques. " II n'existe pas de photometre proprement dit, c'est-a-dire d'instru- ment donnant I'intensite d'une lumiere isolee; le photometre de Les- lie, a I'aide duquel il avait eu I'audace de vouloir comparer la lumiere de la lune k la lumiere du soleil, par des actions calorifiques, est com- pletement defectueux. .T'ai prouve, eu effet, que ce pretendu photo- metre monte quand on I'expose a la lumiore du soleil, qu'il descend sous Paction de la lumiere du feu ordinaire, et qu'il reste complete- ment stationnaire lorsqu'il re9oit la lumiere d'une lampe d'Argand. Tout ce qu'on a pu faire jusqu'ici, c'est de comj)arer entr'elles deux lu- mieres en presence, et cette comparaison n'est meme a I'abri de toute objection que loi'squ'on ramene ces deux lumieres k I'egalite par im affaiblissement graduel de la lumiere la plus forte. C'est comme cnte- num de cette egalite que j'ai eraj^loye les anneaux colores. Si on place I'une sur I'autre deux lentilles d'un long foyer, il se fonne autour de leur point de contact des anneaux colores taut par voie de redexion que par voi ^ de transmission. Les anneaux reflechis sont comnlementaires PHOTOMETRY. *J1 his own words, the results of my friend's photometric method, to which he has added an account of the optical principle on which his cyanometcr is based. eu couleiir des amieaux traiismis ; ces deux series d'anneaux se ueu- traliseut muluelloment qiiaiid les deux lumicres qui les Ibrnient et qui ari'ivent simullauement sur les deux leulilles, sunt egales entr'elles. " Dans le cas coiitraire on voit des traces ou d'anneaux leflechis ou d'anneaux transmis, suivant que la lumiere qui forme les premiers, est plus forte ou plus foible que la lumiere k laquellc on doit les seconds. G'est dans cc sens seulement que les anneaux colort-s jouent un role dans les mesures de la lumiere auxquelles je me suis livre." (i.) Cyanometre. " Mon cyanometre est une extension de mon polariscope. Ce der- nier instrument, comme tu sais, se compose (I'lm tube ferme a I'une de ses extremites par une plaque de cristal do roche perpendiculaire k I'axe, de 5 millimetres d'epaisseur; et d'un prisme done de la double refraction, place du cote de Tceil. Parmi les couleurs varices quo donne cet appareil, lorsque de la lumiere polarisee le traverse, et qu'on fait tourner le prisme sur lui-meme, se trouve par un lieureux hasard la nuance du bleu de ciel. Cette couleur bleue ibrt affaiblie, c'est-a-diro trcs melangee de blanc lorsque la lumiere est presque neutre, aug« meute d'intensite — progressivement, a mesure que les rayons qui pene- trent dans I'instrument, renferment une plus grande proportion de ray- ons polarises. " Supposons done que le polariscope soit dirige sur une feuille de pa- pier blanc ; qu'entre cette feuille et la lame de cristal de roche il ex- iste une pile de plaques de verre susceptible de changer d'inclinaison, CO qui rendra la lumiere eclairante du papier plus ou njoins polarisee; la couleur bleue fournie par I'instrument va en augmentaut avcc I'in- clinaison de la pile, et Ton s'arrete lorsque cette couleur paralt la memo que celle de la region de I'atmosphere dont on veut determiner la teinte cyanometrique, et qu'on regarde a I'osil nu immediatement a cote do I'instrument. La mesure de cette teinte estdonnee par I'inclinaison de la pile. Si cette derniere partie de I'instrument se compose du meme nombre de plaques et d'une meme espece de verre, les observations faites dans divers lieux seront parfaitemeut comparables entr'elles." («.) Photometric Measurements. " There does not exist a photometer properly so called, that is to say, no instrument giving the intensity of an isolated light ; for Leslie's photometer, by means of which he boldly supposed that he could com . pare the light of the nKJon with that of the suu, by their caloric actions, is utterly clefective. I found, in fact, that this pretended photometer rose on being exposed to the light of the sun, that it fell when exposed to a moderate fire, and that it remained altogether stationary when brouglit near the light of an Argand lamp. All that has hitherto been done has been to compare two lights when contiguous to one another; but even this comparison can not be relied on unless the two lights be equalized, the stronger being gradually reduced to the intensity of the feebler. For the purpose ot^judging of this inequality I employed col- ored rings. On placing on one another two lenses of a great focal length, colored rings will be formed round their point of contact as much by means of reflection as of transmiss-^on. The colors of the re- Vol. Ill— E 98 COSMOS. The so-called relations of the magnitude of the fixed stars, as given in our catalogues and maps of the stars, sometimes indicate as of simultaneous occurrence that Avhich belongs to very different periods of cosmical alterations of light. The order of the letters which, since the beginning of the seven- teenth century, have been added to the stars in the general- ly consulted tlranometria Bmjeri, are not, as was long sup- posed, certain indications of these alterations of light. Arge- lander has ably shown that the relative brightness of the stars can not be inferred from the alphabetical order of the letters, and that Bayer was influenced in his choice of these letters by the form and direction of the constellations. =^ fleeted rings are complementary to those of the transmitted rings ; these two series of rings neutralize one another when the two hghts By which they are formed, and which fall simultaneously on the two lenses, are equal. " In the contrary case, we meet with traces of reflected or transmit- ted rings, according as the light by which the former are produced is stronger or fainter than that from which .'h-i latter are formed. It is only in this maimer that colored rings can h:^. s?id to come into play in those photometric measurements to which 1 hav^ dit."^ted my atten- tion." (&.) Ci/anometer. *•' My cyanometer is an extension of my pol&iisoope. This latter in- slrumeut, as you know, consists of a tube closed at one end by a plate of rock crystal, cut perpendicular to its axis, and 5 niiliimei.'es in thick- ness; and of a double refracting prism placed near the part lO which the eye is applied. Among the varied colors yielded by this apparc::tus, when it is traversed by polarized light and the prism turns on itself, wo fortunately find a shade of azure. This blue, which is very faiut thtit is to say, mixed with a large quantity of white when the light is olmcst neutral, gradually increases in intensity in proportion to the quantity of polarized rays which enter the instrument. " Let us suppose the polariscopo directed toward a sheet of Avhite paf)er, and that between this paper and the plate of rock ciystal there is a pile of glass plates capable of being variously inclined, by which means the illuminating light of the paper would be more or less polar- ized ; the blue color yielded by the instrument will go on increasing with the inclination of the pile; and the process must be continued un- til the color appears of the same intensity with the region of the atmos- phere whose cyanometrical tin^e is to be determined, and which is seen by the naked eye in the immediate vicinity of the instrument. The amount of this color is given by the inclination of the pile ; and if this portion of the apparatus consist of the same number of plates formed of the same kind of glass, observations made at different places may re;idily be compared together." * Argelander, De fi-de Uranomeh-iic Bnycri, 1842, p 14-23. "In ea- dem classe littera prior majorem splendoreni nullo mojo indicat" (^ 9). Bayer did not, therefore, show that the light of Costo'- was more intense in 1603 than that of Pollux. PHOTOMETRIC SCALE. 90 PHOTOMETRIC ARRANGEMENT OF THE FIXED STARS. 1 close this section with a table taken from Sir John Herschel's Ovt ines of Astronomy, p. GI5 and G4G. I am indebteil for the mode of it? arrangement, and for the following lucid exposition, to my learned friend Dr. Galle, from whose communication, addressed to me in March, 1850. I extract tiie subjoined observations: "The numbers of the photometric scale in the Outlines of Astrow omy have been ol)tained l)y adding throughout 041 to the resnlts calcu- lated from the vulgar scale. Sir John llerschel arrived at these more exact determinations by observing their " sequences" of brightness, and by combining these observations with the average ordinary data of mag- nitudes, especially on those given in the catalogue of the Astronomical Society fur the year 18'27. See Obscrv. at the Cape, p. 304-352. The actual photometric measurements of several stars as obtained by the Astrometer (op.cit.,p. 353), have not been directly employed in this catalogue, but have only served generally to show the relation existing between the ordinary scale (of 1st, 2d, 3d, &c., magnitudes) to the act- ual pliotometi'ic quantities of individual stars. This comparison has given the singular result that our ordinary stellar magnitudes (1,2, 3 . . .) decrease in about the same ratio as a star of the first magnitude when removed to the distances of 1, 2, 3 . . . by which its brightness, accord- ing to photometric law, would attain the values 1, ith, ith, ^B^th . . . {Observ. at the Cape, p. 371, 372 ; Outlines, p. 521, 522) ; in order, how- ever, to make this accordance still greater, it is only necessary to raise our previously adopted stellar magnitudes about half a magnitude (or, more accurately considered, 0*41), so that a star of the 2-00 magnitude would in future be called 2-41, and star of 2-50 would become 2*91, and so forth. Sir John Herschel therefore proposes that this " photo- metn'c" (raised) scale shall in future be adopted {Observ. at the Cape, p. 372, and Outlines, p. 522) — a proposition in which we can not fail to concur ; for while, on the one hand, the difference from the vulgar scale would hardly be felt (Observ. at the Cape, p. 372), the table in the Out- lines (p. 045) may, on the other hand, serve as a basis for stars down to the fourth magnitude. The determinations of the magnitudes of the stars according to the rule, that the brightness of the stars of the first, second, third, fourth magnitude is exactly as 1, yth, ith, y^th ... as is now shown ajiproximalively, is therefore already practicable. Sir John Herschel employs a Centauri as the standard star of the first magnitude for his photometric scale, and as the unit for the quantity of light (Out- lines, p. 523; Obscrv. at the Cape, p. 372). If, therefore, we take the square of a star's photometric magnitude, we obtain the inverse ratio of the quantity of its light to that of a- Centauri. Thus, for instance, if K Ononis have a photometric magnitude of 3, it consequently has ^th of the lisht of a Centauri. The number 3 would at the same time in- dicate that K Orionis is 3 times more distant from us than a Centauri, provided both stars be bodies of equal magnitude and brightness. If another star, as, for instance, Sirius, which is four times as bright, were chosen as the unit of the photometric magnitudes indicating distances, the above conformity to law would not be so simple and easy of recog- nition. It is also worthy of notice, that the distance of a Centauri has been ascertained with some probability, and ihat this distance is the smallest of any yet detennined. Sir .John Henchel demonstrates (Out- lines, p. 521) the inferiority of other scales to the photometric, which 100 COSMOS. progresses in order of the squares, 1, 1th, ith, y^^th . . . He likewise treats of geometric progressions, as, for instance, 1, 1, 1th, |th, ... or 1, Id, Ith, -^^^th The gradations employed by yourself in your ob- servations under the equator, dui-ing your travels in America, are ar- ranged in a kind of ai'ilhmetical progression (Recueil d^Observ. Asfron., vol. i., p. Ixxi., and Schumacher's Asiron. Nachr., No. 374). These scales, however, correspond less closely than the photometric scale of progression (by squares) with the vulgar scale. In the following table the 190 stars have been given from the Outlines, without reference to their declination, whether southern or northern, being arranged solely in accordance with their magnitudes." hist of 190 stars from the first to the third magnitude, arranged accord- ing to the determinations of Sir John Herschcl, giving the ordinary magnitudes with greater accuracy, and likewise the magnitudes i?i ac- cordance 7cith his proposed photometric classification : Stars of the First Magnitude. star. Magnitude. Vulff. Phot, 008 0-29 Sirius 71 Argus (Var.) Canopus a Centauri |0-59 Arctnrus '0-77 Rigel :082 Capella llO a Lyra? ■ 1 0 Procyon 10 0-49 0-70 1 00 M8 1-23 14 1-4 1-4 star. Vulg. a Orionis 10 a Eridani 109 Aldebaran 11 [3 Centauri M7 a Crucis 1-2 Antares 1-2 a Aquilae 1-28 Spica ;i-38 Magnitude. Pilot. 1-43 1 50 5 58 6 6 69 1-79 Stars of the Second Magnitude. star. Fomalhaut Crucis Pollux .... Regulus ... Gruis Crucis Orionis Canis ?i. Scorpii a Cygni Castor c Ursae (Var.) a Urs3e(Var.) C Orionis 8 Argus a Persei y Argus £ Argus T] Ursae (Var.) y Orionis Magnitude. Vulg. I Phot. 1-54 1-95 1-57 1-98 1-6 j20 1-6 j20 1-66 2 07 1-73 2 14 1-84 2 25 1-86 2-S 1-87 2-28 1 90231 1-94235 1-95 2 36 1-96 2-37 201242 203 2 44 207 2-48 208 2-49 -18259 182-59 18|2-59 star. a Triancr austr. £ Sagittarii ... 13 Tauri Polaris d Scorpii a Hydrae 6 Canis a Pavonis y Leonis (3 Gruis a Arietis (7 Sagittarii . . . 6 Argus C Ursae (3 Andromedae. i3 Ceti A Argus (3 7 Auriga? . Andromeda? Magn itude. Vulg. PhoL 2 23 2 64 2-26 267 2-28 2 69 2 28 269 2-29 2-70 230 271 232 273 2 33 2-74 2-34 2-75 236 277 2-40 2-81 241 2-82 242 2-83 243 284 2-45 2-86 2-46 2-87 2-46 2-8'' 2-48 2-89 2 50 291 rHOTOMETlUC .^CALE. 101 Stars of the Third Magnitude. Star. y Cassiopeiae a Andromedae Q Centauri... a Cassiopeiae /9 Canis K Orionis y Geminorum 6 Orionis Algol (Var.) e Pegasi y Draconis .. j9 Leoiiis a Ophiuchi .. /3 Cassiopeiae y Cygni a Pegasi Q Pegasi y Centauri... a Coronte ... y Ursae e Scorpii C Argus ^ Ursae a Plioenicis .. L Argus e Bootis a Lupi t Centauri... •q Canis /3 Aquarii (5 Scorpii t Cygni J7 Ophiuchi .. y Corvi a Cephei 6 Centauri... a Serpentis .. (5 Leonis K Argus ^ Corvi Q Scorpii C, Centauri .. C Ophiuchi .. a Aquarii r Argus y Aquilfe 6 Cassiopeiae 6 Centauri... a Leporis & Ophiuchi .. Miignituite. Vulg. 252 254 2-54 257 2 58 259 259 2-61 262 2 62 2 62 3 2 63 3 2-63 3 2633 26313 265|3 2653 268i3 269 2-71 2-71 2-72 2-77 2-78 2-80|3 280,3 2-823 2-82 3 2-85'3 2 85 3 2-863 2-88 3 2 89 3 2903 2903 2913 2923 2 94 3 2 94 3 2 95 3 2-96 3 2-96 3 2-97 3 2 97 3 2 98 3 2 98 3 2 99 3 2 99 3 3 00 3 3 00 3 I'hi.t 2 2 93 95 95 98 99 00 00 02 03 03 03 04 04 04 04 06 06 09 10 12 12 13 18 19 21 21 23 23 26 26 27 29 30 31 31 32 33 35 35 36 37 37 star. Sagittarii . Bootis Draconis.. Ophiuchi . Draconis . Librae Virginia .. Argas Arietis ... Pegasi Sagittarii . Librae Sagittarii . Lupi Virginia 1 . Columbae . Aurigae Herculis.. Centauri . Capricorni Corvi Can. ven. . Ophiuchi . Cygni Persei Tauri Eridani Argus Hydri Persei Herculis .., Corvi Aurigae Urs. Min. . Pegasi Arae .. Magnitude. Vulg. Phot. 3-01 3-42 3-01342 302343 3 05346 3 06 3 47 307 308 308 309 3 11 311 3 12 3 13 3 14 314 315 3 48 3 49 3 49 350 3 52 3-52 3 53 3 54 3 55 3 55 3 56 3-17358 3181359 3 20361 320 3 22 322 23 24 26 26 326 3 26 3 27 3 27 3-28 3-28 3-29 330 331 3 31 3,^2 3-32 3 32 3-61 363 3-63 3 64 3 65 3-67 367 3-67 367 3-68 368 369 3-69 3-70 3-71 3 72 3 72 3 73 3-73 3 73 38 1// 38|/i 39l7r 39/3 40 1 y 40 1 J 41 f,/. 4lie Toucani Capricorni Argus Aquilae 3-32 3-73 Cygni 3 33:3-74 Persei 3-34i3 75 Ursa3 3 35|3 76 Triang. bor 3-35 3-76 Scorpii 3-35 3 76 Leporis 3-35 3 76 Lupi 3-36 3 77 Persei 3 36 3 77 Ursae 3 36|3 77 Aurigae (Var.) 3-37^-78 102 COSMOS. Star. V Scorpii I Orionis y Lyncis C Draconis .. a Arae 77 Sagittarii .. TT Herculis ... /? Can. min.'? . C Tauri (5 Draconis .. fx Geminorum y Bootis E Geminorum a Muscse a Hydril r Scorpii 6 Herculis... Magnitude. Vulg. 3-37 337 3 39 riiot. 3-78 3-78 3-80 3-40381 3-403-81 3-403-81 3-41 3-82 3-41 3-82 3-42383 3-42383 3-42,383 3 43:3 84 3 3- 3 3 3 43 3-84 43,3-84 443-85 443-85 443-85 Star. 6 Geminorum . . o Orionis /3 Cephei 1? Ursae C Hydrae y Hydras i3 Triang. austr. Ursae Aurigae Lyrffi Geminorum . . Cephei Ursae e Cassiopeias . . d- Aquila3 (T Scorpii Magnitude. ulg. I Phot. 44i3-85 r Arsus 3-50 3-91 45 45 45 45 46 46 46 46 47 48 48 49 49 50 50 386 3-86 386 386 3-87 3-87 387 3-87 88 89 89 90 90 91 91 " The following short table of the photometric quantities of seventeen stars of the first magnitude (as obtained from the photometric scale of magnitudes) may not be devoid of interest :" Sirius. 4" 165 r) Argus Canopus 2-041 a Centauri 1"000 Arcturus ..... .0-718 Rigel 0-661 i Capella 0-510 j aLyrce 0-510 | Procyon 0-510 | a Orionis 0-489 a Eridani 0-444 Aldebaran. . .0-444 i3 Centauri 0-401 a Crucis 0-391 Antares 0-391 a Aquilfe 0-350 Spica 0-312 " The following is the photometric quantity of stars strict- ly belonging to the 1st, 2d 6th magnitudes, in which the quantity of the light of a Centauri is regarded as the unit :" Magnitude on the vulgar scale. 1-00 2-00 3-00 Quantity of light. 0-500 0-172 0-086 Magnitude on the vulgar scale. 4-00 5-00 6-00 Quantity of light. 0-051 0-034 0-024 III. NUMBER, DISTRIBUTION, AND COLOR OF THE FIXED STARS. — STEI^ LAR MASSES (STELLAR SWARMS).— THE MILKY WAY INTERSPERSED WITH A FEW NEBULOUS SPOTS. We have already, in the first section oi' this fragmentary Astrognosy, drawn attention to a qnestion first mooted by Gibers.* If the entire vault of heaven were covered witli innumerable strata of stars, one behind the other, as with a wide-spread starry canopy, and light were undiminished in its passage through space, the sun would be distinguishable only by its spots, the moon would appear as a dark disk, and amid the general blaze not a single constellation would be visible. During my sojourn in the Peruvian plains, be- tween the shores of the Pacific and the chain of the Andes, I was vividly reminded of a state of the heivens which, though diametrically opposite in its cause to the one above referred to, constitutes an equally formidable obstacle to hu- man knowledge. A thick mi.st obscures the firmament in this region for a period of many months, during the season called el tiemjio de la garua. Not a planet, not the most. brilliant stars of the southern hemisphere, neither Canopus, the Southern Cross, nor the feet of the Centaur, are visible. It is frequently almost impossible to distinguish the position of the moon. If by chance the outline of the sun's disk be visible during the day, it appears devoid of rays, as if seen through colored glasses, being generally of a yellowish red, sometimes of a white, and occasionally even of a bluish green color. The mariner, driven onward by the cold south cur- rents of the sea, is unable to recognize the shores, and in the absence of all observations of latitude, sails past the harbors which he desired to enter. A dipping needle alone could, as I have elsewhere shown, save him from this error, by the local direction of the magnetic curves.f Bouguer and his coadjutor, Don Jorge Juan, complained, lono: before me, of the " unastronomical sky of Peru." A graver consideration associates itself with this stratum of vapors, in which there is neither thunder nor lightning, iti consequence of its incapacity for the transmission of light or electric charges, and above which the Cordilleras, free and cloudless, raise their elevated plateaux and snow-covered * Vide supra, p. 38, and noti?, t Cos/not, vol. i., {">. 178, and note. 10-i COSMOS. summits. According to what modern geology' has taught us to conjecture regarding the ancient history of our atmosphere, its primitive condition, in respect to its mixture and density, must have been unfavorable to the transmission of hght. When we consider the numerous processes which, in the pri- maiy world, may have led to the separation of the sohds, fluids, and gases around the earth's surface, the thought in- voluntarily arises how narrowly the human race escaped be- ing surrounded with an untransparent atmosphere, which, though perhaps not greatly prejudicial to some classes of vegetation, would yet have completely veiled the w^iole of the starry canopy. All knowledge of the structure of the universe would thus have been withheld from the inquiring spirit of man. Excepting our own globe, and perhaps the sun and the moon, nothing would have appeared to us to have been created. An isolated triad of stars — the sun, the moon, and the earth — would have appeared the sole occu- pants of space. Deprived of a great, and, indeed, of the sub- limest portion of his ideas of the Cosmos, man would have been left without all those incitements which, for thousands of years, have incessantly impelled him to the solution of important problems, and have exercised so beneficial an in- fluence on the most brilliant progress made in the higher spheres of mathematical development of thought. Before we enter upon an enumeration of what has already been achieved, let us dwell for a moment on the danger from which the spiritual development of our race has escaped, and the physical impediments which would have formed an im- passable barrier to our progi-ess. In considering the nuniber of cosmical bodies which fill the celestial regions, three questions present themselves to our notice. How many fixed stars are visible to the naked eye ? How many of these have been gradually catalogued, and their places determined according to longitude and lat- itude, or accordinof to their riofht ascension and declination ? What is the number of stars from the first to the ninth and tenth magnitudes which have been seen in the heavens bv means of the telescope ? These three questions may, from the materials of observation at present in our possession, be determined at least approximatively. Mere conjectures based on the gauging of the stars in certain portions of the Milky \Yay, ditier from the preceding questions, and refer to the theoretical solution of the question : How many stars might be distinguished throughout the whole heavens with NUMBER 01' TFIH FIXKI) STAU8. 105 Herschel's twenty-feet telescope, including the stellar light, " which is supposed to require 2000 years to reach our earth ?"* The numerical data which I here publish in reference to this subject arc chiefly obtained from the final results of my esteemed friend Argelander, director of the Observatory at Bonn. I have requested the author of the Durc]Lmusteru7ig des 7wrdlichen Himmels (Survey of the Northeryi Ileav- e?is) to submit the previous results of star catalogues to a new and careful examination. In the lowest class of stars visible to the naked eye, much uncertainty arises from or- ganic diflerence in individual observations ; stars between the sixth and seventh magnitude being frequently confoimd- ed with those strictly belonging to the former class. We obtaui, by numerous combinations, from 5000 to 5800 as the mean number of the stars throughout the whole heavens vis- ible to the unaided eye. Argelanderf determines the distri- * On the space-penetrating power of telescopes, see Sir John Her- schel, Outlines of Adr., § 803. t I can not attempt to include in a note all the grounds on which Argelander's views are based. It will suffice if I extract the following remarks from his own letters to me: "Some years since (1843) you recommended Captain Schwink to estimate from his Mappa Coelestis the total number of stars from the first to the seventh magnitude in- clusive, which the heavens appeared to contain; his calculations give 12,148 stars for the space between 30° south and 90° north declination; and consequently, if we conjecture that the proportion of stars is the same from 30° S. D. to the South Pole, we should have 16,200 stars of the above-named magnitudes throughout the whole firmament. This estimate seems to me to approximate very nearly to the truth. It is well known that, on considering the whole mass, we find each class contains about three times as many stars as the one preceding. (Struve, Catalogus Stellarum duplicium, p. xxxiv, ; Argelander, Bonner Zonen, s. xxvi.) I have given in my Uranometria 1441 stars of the sixth mag- nitude north of the equator, whence we should obtain about 3000 for the whole heavens; this estimate does not, however, include the stars of the 6*7 mag., which would be reckoned among those of the sixth, if only entire classes were admitted into the calculation. I think the number of the last-named stars might be assumed at 1000, according to the above rule, which would give 4000 stars for the sixth, and 12 000 for the seventh, or 18,000 for the first to the seventh inclusive. From other considerations on the number of tlie stars of the seventh magni- tude, as given in my zones — namely, 2257 (p. xxvi.), and allowing for those which have been twice or oftener observed, and for those which have probably been overlooked, I approximated somewhat more nearly to the truth. By this metliod I found 2340 stars of the seventh magni- tude between 45° and 80° N. D., and, therefore, nearly 17,000 for the whole heavens. Struve, in his Descriptio7i de V Observatoire de Poul- kova, p. 268, gives 13,400 for the number of stars down to the seventh magnitude in the region of the heavens explored by him (from — 15^ E 2 1Q6 COSMOS. butiori of the fixed stars according to difference of magnitude, down to the ninth, in about the following proportion . to -{-90°), whence we should obtain 21,300 for the whole firmament According to the introduction to Weisse's Catal. e Zonis Regiomonta' niSf ded., p. xxxii., Struve found in the zone extending from — 15° to -j-i5° by the calculus of probabilities, 3903 stars from the first to the seventh, aufl therefore 15,050 for the entire heavens. This number is lower than mine, because Bessel estimated the brighter stars nearly half a magnitude lower than I did. We can here only arrive at a mean result, which would be about 18,000 from the first to the seventh mag- nitudes inclusive. Sir John Herschel, in the passage of the Outlines of Astronomy, p. 521, to which you allude, speaks only of ' the whole num- ber of stars already registered, dowui to the seventh magnitude inclu- sive, amounting to from 12,000 to 15,000.' As regards the fainter stars, Struve finds within the above-named zone (from — 15° to -|-15°), for the faint stars of the eighth magnitude, 10,557 ; for those of the ninth, 37,739 ; and, consequently, 40,800 stars of the eighth, and 145,800 of the ninth mao^nitude for the whole heavens. Hence, accordiuii to Stiuve, we have, from the first to the ninth magnitude inclusive, 15,100-j- 40,800-{-145, 800=201,700 stars. He obtained these numbers by a careful comparison of those zones or parts of zones which comprise the same regions of the heavens, deducing by the calculus of probabilities the number of stars actually present from the numbers of those com- mon to, or different in, each zone. As the calculation was made from a very large number of stars, it is deserving of great confidence. Bes- sel has enumerated about 61,000 different stars from the first to the ninth inclusive, in his collective zones between — 15° and -j-45°, after deducting such stars as have been repeatedly observed, together with those of the 9-10 magnitude; whence we may conclude, after taking into account such as have probably been overlooked, that this portion of the heavens contains about 101,500 stars of the above-named magni- tudes. My zones between -|-45° and -|-80° contain about 22,000 stars ( Durchmusterung des nordl. Himmels, s. xxv.), which would leave about 19,000 after deducting 3000 for those belonging to the 9-10 magnitude. My zones ai'e somewhat richer than Bessel's, and I do not think we can fairly assume a larger number than 2850 for the stars actually existing between their limits (-{-45° and -|-80°), whence we should obtain 130,000 stars to the ninth magnitude inclusive, between — 15° and -|-80°. This space is, however, only 0'62181 of the whole heavens, and we therefore obtain 209,000 stars for the entire number, supposing an equal distribution to obtain throughout the whole firmament; these numbers, again, closely approximate to Struve's estimate, and, indeed, not improbably exceed it to a considerable 'tent, since Struve reck- oned stars of the 9*10 masrnitude anions: ihos'- of the ninth. The num- bers which, according to my view, may be asb imed for the whole firm- ament, are therefore as follows : first mag., 20; second, 65; third, 190; fourth, 425; fifth, 1100; sixth, 3200; seventh, 13,000; eighth, 40,000; ninth, 142,000: and 200,000 for the entire number of stars from the first to the ninth magnitude inclusive. If you would contend that Lalande {Hist. Celeste, p. iv.) has given the number of stars observed by himself with the naked eye at 6000, I would simply remark that this estimate contains very many that have been repeatedly observed, and that after deducting these, we obtain only about 3800 stars for the portion of the heavens between — 26° 30^ XUMUKU nF lllh KIXl'.I* HTAKS. 107 1st Mag. -M Mag. ;kl iMag. 4th Maj;. 5lh Maj{. 20 G5 190 425 1100 Gth Ma?. 7th Matr. Sth Mag. 0th Mag. 3200^ 13,000 40,000 142,000 The number of stars distinctly visible to the naked eye (amounting in the horizon of Berlin to 4022, and in that of Alexandria to 4638) appears at lirst sight strikingly small.* If we assume the moon's mean semi-diameter at 15' 33"'5, it would require 195,291 surfaces of the full moon to cover the whole heavens. li" we further assrnnc that the stars are uniformly distributed, and reckon in round numbers 200,000 stars from the first to the ninth magnitude, we shall have nearly a single star for each full-moon surface. This result explains why, also, at any given latitude, the moon does not more frequently conceal stars visible to the naked eye. If the calculation of occultations of the stars were extended to those of the ninth magnitude, a stellar eclipse would, according to Galle, occur on an average every 44' 30", for in this period the moon traverses a portion of the heavens equal in extent to its own surface. It is singular that Pliny, Avho was un- doubtedly acquainted with Hipparchus's catalogue of stars, and -j-90° observed by Laiande. As this space is 0-72310 of the whole heavens, we should again have for this zone 5255 stars visible to the naked eye. An examination of Bode's Uranography (containing 17,240 stars), which is composed of the most heterogeneous elements, does not give more than 5G00 stars from the first to the sixth magnitude inclusive, after deducting the nebulous spots and smaller stars, as well as those of the 6-7th magnitude, which have been raised to the sixth. A simi- lar estimate of the stars registered by La Caille between the south pole and the tropic of Capricorn, and varying from the first to the sixth mag- nitude, presents for the whole heavens two limits of 3960 and 5900, and thus confirms the mean result already given by yourself. You will perceive that I have endeavored to fulfill your wish for a more thor- ough investigation of these numbers, and I may further observe that M. Heis, of Aix-la-Chapelle, has for many years been engaged in a veiy careful revision of my Uranometrie. From the portions of this w^ork already complete, and from the great additions made to it by aii observ er gifted with keener sight than myself, I find 283G stars from the first to the sixth magnitude inclusive for the northern hemisphere, and there- fore, on the presupposition of equal distribution, 5672 as the number of stars visible throughout the whole firmament to the keenest unaided vision." {From the Marivscripts of Professor Argelandcr, March, 1830.) * Scliubert reckons the number of stars, from the first to the sixth irjagnituile, at 7000 for the whole heavens (which closely approximates to the calculation made by myself in Cosmos, vol. i., p. 150), and up- ward of 5000 for the horizon of Paris. He gives 70,000 for tne whole Bphere, including stars of the ninth magnitude. {Astronomit, th. iii., s. 54.) These numbers are all much too high. Argelander finds only 58,000 from the first to the eighth magnitude. 108 cosMoy. and who comments on his boldness in attempting, as it were, " to leave heaven as a heritage to posterity," should have enumerated only 1600 stars visible in the fine sky of Italy I-^' In this enumeration he had, however, descended to stars of the fifth, while half a century later Ptolemy indicated only 1025 stars doAvn to the sixth magnitude. Since it has ceased to be the custom to class the fixed stars merely according to the constellations to which they belong, and they have been catalogued according to determinations of place, that is, in their relations to the great circles of the equator or the ecliptic, the extension as well as the accuracy of star catalogues has advanced with the progress of science and the improved construction of instruments. No catalogues of the stars compiled by Timocharis and Aristyllus (283 B.C.) have reached us ; but although, as Hipparchus remarks in the fragment " on the length of the year," cited in the sev- enth book of the Almagest (cap. 3, p. xv., Halma), their ob- servations were conducted in a very rough manner (^Trdvv bXoaxspcog), there can be no doubt that they both determ- ined the declination of many stars, and that these determin- ations preceded by nearly a century and a half the table of fixed stars compiled by Hipparchus. This astronomer is said to have been incited by the phenomenon of a new star to attempt a sun^ey of the whole firmament, and endeavor to determine the position of the stars ; but the truth of this statement rests solely on Pliny's testimony, and has often been regarded as the mere echo of a subsequently invented tradition.! It does indeed seem remarkable that Ptolemy should not refer to the circumstance, but yet it must be ad- mitted that the sudden appearance of a brightly luminous * " Patrociiiatur vastitas ccbH, immeusa discreta aUitiidine, iu duo at- que septuaginta sigua. Hsec sunt reriim et animantium effigies, in qiias digessere coelum periti. In his quidem mille sexcentas adnotaverc Stel- las, insignes videlicet effectuvisuve" .... Plin., ii., 41. "Hipparchus nuncjuam satis laudatus, ut quo nemo magis approbaverit cognationern cum homine siderum auimasque nostras partem esse coeli, novam si el lam et aliam iu ojvo suo geuitam deprehendit, ejusque niotu, qua die fulsit, ad dubitationem est adductus, anne hoc sa^pius fieret moveren- turque et ese quas putamiis affixas ; itemque aiisus rem etiam Deo ini- probam, adnumerare posteris Stellas ac sidei'a ad nomeu expungere, or- ganis excogitatis, per qivee singulai'um loca atque magnitudines signaret, ut facile discerni posset ex eo, won mode au obireut nascerenturve, sed an omnino aliqna transirent moverenturve, item an crescerent niiinic- renturque, coelo in hereditate cunctis relicto, si quisquam qi" cretionem earn caperet inventus esset." — Plin., ii,, 26. t Delambre, Hist, de V Astr. Anc, torn, i., p. 290, and Hist, de VAstr Mod., torn, ii., p. 186. NUMBER OF THE FIXED STARS. 109 star in Cassiopeia (November, 1572) led Tyclio Bralic to compose his ratalofrue of the stars. According to an ingen- ious coujec'iiuc of {Sir John Herschel,* the star referred to by Ph'ny may have been the new star which appeared in JScorpio in the month of July of the year 131 before our era (as wo learn from the Chinese Annals of the reign of Wou-ti, of the Han dynasty). Its appearance occurred exactly six years before the epoch at which, according to Ideler's investiga- tions, Hipparchus compiled his catalogue of the stars. Ed- ward Biot, Avhose early death proved so great a loss to science, found a record of this celestial phenomenon in the celebra- ted collection of Ma-tuan-lin, which contains an account of all the comets and remarkable stars observed between the years B.C. 613 and A.I). 1222. The tripartite didactic poem of Aratus,t to whom we are indebted for the only remnant of the works of Hipparchus that has come down to us, was composed about the period of Eratosthenes, Timocharis, and Aristyllus. The astronomical non-meteorological portion of the poem is based on the ura- nography of Eudoxus of Cnidos. The catalogue compiled by Hipparchus is unfortunately not extant ; but, according to Ideler.j* it probably constituted the principal part of his work, cited by tSuidas, " On the arrangement of the region of the fixed stars and the celestial bodies," and contained 1080 de- terminations of position for the year B.C. 128. In Hippar- chus's other Commentary on Aratus, the positions of the start, w^hich are determined more by equatorial armillee than by the astrolabe, are referred to the equator by right ascension and declination ; while in Ptolemy's catalogue of stars, which is supposed to have been entirely copied from that of Hip- parchus, and which gives 1025 stars, together with five so- called nebulcE, they are referred by longitudes and latitudes * Outlines, ^ 831 ; Edward Biot, Snr les Etoiles Exfraordinaires oh- serv6.es en Chine, in the Connaissancc des temps po7tr 184(3. t It is worthy of remark that Aratus was mentioned with approba- tion almost simultaneously by Ovid {Amor., i., 15) and by the Apostle Paul at Athens, in an earnest discourse directed against the Epicureans and Stoics. Paul (Acts, ch. xvii., v. 28), although he does not mention Aratus by name, undoubtedly refers to a verse composed by him (Phccn., V. ,5) on the close communion of moi'tals with the Deity. t Ideler, U7itersnchungen i'lher den Ursprnng der Sternnarnen, s. xxx.- XXXV. Baily, in the Mem. of the Astron. Soc, vol. xiii., 1843, p. 12 and 15, also treats of the years according to our era, to which we mast refer the observations oi Aristyllus, as well as the catalogues of the stars com- piled by Hipparchus n'28. and not 140, B.C.) and by Ptolen}y (138 AD.V 1 10 COtiMOS. to the ecliptic. *" On comparing the number of fixed stars in the Hipparcho-Ptolemaic Catalogue, Almagest, ed. Halma, t. ii., p. 83 (namely, for the first mag., 15 stars ; second, 45 ; third, 208; fom-th, 474; fifth, 217; sixth, 49), with the numbers of Argelander as already given, wo find, as might be expected, a great paucity of stars of the fifth and sixth magnitudes, and also an extraordinarily large number of those belonging to the third and fourth. The vagueness in the determinations of the intensity of light in ancient and modern times renders direct comparisons of magnitude ex- tremely uncertain. Although the so-called Ptolemaic catalogue of the fixed stars enumerated only one fourth of those visible to the naked eye at Rhodes and Alexandria, and, owing to erroneous re- ductions of the precession of the equinoxes, determined their positions as if they had been observed in the year 63 of our era, yet, throughout the sixteen hundred years immediately following this period, we have only three original catalogues of stars, perfect for their time ; that of Ulugh Beg (1437), * Compare Delambre, Hist, de VAstr. Anc, torn, i., p. 184; torn, ii., p. 260. The assertion that Hipparchus, in addition to the right ascen- sion and declination of the stars, also indicated their positions in his catalogue, according to longitude and latitude, as was done by Ptolemy, is wholly devoid of probability and in direct variance with the Alma- gest, book vii., cap. 4, where this reference to the ecHptic is noticed as something new, by which the knowledge of the motions of the fixed stars round the pole of the ecliptic may be facilitated. The table of stars with the longitudes attached, which Petrus Victorius fomid in a Medicean Codex, and published with the life of Aratus at Florence in 1567, is indeed ascribed by him to Hipparchus, but without any proof. It appears to be a mere rescript of Ptolemy's catalogue from an old manuscript of the Almagest, and does not give the latitudes. As Ptole- my w^as imperfectly acquainted with the amount of the retrogression of the equinoctial and solstitial points {Almag., vii., c. 2, p. 13, Halma), and assumed it about j^^ too slow, the catalogue which he determined for the beginning of the reign of Antoninus (Idelev, op. cii., s. xxxiv.) indicates the positions of the stars at a much earlier epoch (for the year 63 A.D.). (Regarding the improvements for reducing stars to the time of Hipparchus, see the observations and tables as given by Encke in Schumacher's Astron. Nachr.. No. 608, s. 113-126.) The earlier epoch to which Ptolemy unconsciously reduced the stars in his catalogue cor- responds tolerably well with the period to which we may refer the Pseudo-Eratosthenian Catasterisms, which, as I have already elsewhere observed, are more recent than the time of Hyginus, who lived in the Augustine age, but appear to be taken from him, and have no connec- tion with the poem of Hermes by the true Eratosthenes. (Eratostheni' ca, ed. Bernhardy, 1822, p. 114, 116, 129.) These Pseudo-Eratosthe- uiau Catasterisms contain, moreover, scarcfdy 700 individual stars dis- tributed among the mythical constellations. KAIM-Y UATAI,0(U;KS. Ill that of Tycho Brahe (IGOO), and that of Hevelius (IGGO). Durhirr the short intervals ol" repose which, amid tiunultuous revolutions and devastations of war, occurred between the ninth and lifteenth centuries, practical astronomy, under Arabs, Persians, and Mo La Caille, Tobias Mayer, Caj^noli, Piazzi, Zacli, Pond, Taylor, Groombritlge, Argehmdcr, Airy, Brisbane, and Riiuikcr. We here only allude to those works which enumerate a great and important part=^ of the stars of the seventh to the tenth magnitude which occupy the realms of space. Tho catalogue known under the name of Jerome de Lalandc's, but which is, however, solely based on oljservations made by his nephew, Francois de Lalande, and by Burckhardt between the years 1789 and 1800, has only recently been, duly appre- ciated. After having been carefully revised by Francis Baily, under the direction of the " British Association for the Ad- vancement of Science" (in 1817), it now contains 47,390 stars, many of which are of the ninth, and some even below that magnitude. Harding, the discoverer of Juno, catalogued above ^0,000 stars in twenty-seven maps. Bcssel's great work on the exploration of the celestial zones, which comprises 75,000 observations (made in the years 1825-1833 between — 15^ and -\-4.6'^ declination), has been continued from 1841 to 1844 with the most praiseworthy care, as fa,r as ^80^ decL, by Argelander at Bonn. Weissc of Cracow, under the auspices of the Academy of St. Petersburgh, has reduced 31,895 stars for the year 1825 (of which 19,738 belonged to the ninth magnitude) from Bessel's zones, between — 15° and + 15^ decl. ;t and Argelander's exploration of the northern heavens from +45"^ to +80° decl. contains about 22,000 well-determined positions of stars. * I hei'e compress into a note the numerical data taken from star cat- alogue.^, containing lesser masses and a smaller number of positions, with the names of the observers, and the number of positions attached: La Caille, in scarcely ten months, during the years 1751 and 1752, with instruments magnifying only eight times, observed 9766 southern stars, to the seventh magnitude inclusive, which were reduced to the year 1750 by Henderson ; Tobias Mayer, 998 stars to 1756 ; Flamstead, orig- inally only 2866, to which 564 were added by Baily'scare (Mem. of the Astr. Soc, vol. iv., p. 1291-64); Bradley, 3222, reduced by Bessel to the year 1755; Pond, 1112; Piazzi, 764G to 1800; Groombridge, 4243, mostly circumpolar stars, to 1810; Sir Thomas Brisbane, and RUmker, 7385 stars, observed in New Holland in the years 1822-1828 ; Airy, 2156 stars, reduced to the year 1845; Rtimker, 12,000 on the Hamburg hori- zon; Argelander (Cat. of Abo), 560; Taylor (Madras), 11,015. The British Association Catalogue of Stars (1845). drawn up under Baily's superintendence, contains 8377 stars from the first to 7^ magnitudes. For the southern stars we have the rich catalogues of Henderson, Fal- lows, Maclear, and Johnson at St. Helena. t Weisse, Posiliones medue sfellnrum fixariim in Zonis RegioTW7itani» 1 BesseHo inter — 15-* et -|-15^ decl. ohservafannn ad annum 1825 re duciee (1846): with an impoitant Preface by Struve. IIG COSMOS. I can not, I think, make mere honor able mention of the great work of the star maps of the Berhn Academy than by quoting the words used by Encke in reference to this un- dertaking, in his oration to the memory of Bessel : " With the completeness of catalogues is connected the hope that, by a careful comparison of the different aspects of the heav- ens with those stars which have been noted as fixed points, we may be enabled to discover all moving celestial bodies, whose change of position can scarcely, owing to the faint- ness of their light, be noted by the unaided eye, and that we may in this manner complete our knowledge of the so- lar system. While Harding's admirable atlas gives a per- fect representation of the starry heavens — as far as Lalande's Histoire Celeste, on which it is founded, was capable of af- fording such a picture — Bessel, in 1824, after the comple- tion of the first main section of his zones, sketched a plan for grounding on this basis a more special representation of the starry firmament, his object being not simply to exhibit what had been already observed, but likewise to enable as- tronomers, by the completeness of his tables, at once to rec- ognize every new celestial phenomenon. Although the star maps of the Berlin Academy of Sciences, sketched in ac- cordance with Bessel's plan, may not have wholly completed the first proposed cycle, they have nevertheless contributed m a remarkable degree to the discovery of new planets, since they have been the principal, if not the sole means, to which, at the present time (1850), we owe the recognition of seven new planetary bodies."* Of the twenty-four maps designed to represent that portion of the heavens which extends 15^ on either side of the equator, our Academy has already con- tributed sixteen. These contain, as far as possible, all stars down to the ninth magnitude, and many of the tenth. The present would seem a fitting place to refer to the average estimates which have been hazarded on the num- ber of stars throughout the whole heavens, visible to us by the aid of our colossal space-penetrating telescopes. Struve assumes for Herschefs twenty-feet reflector, which was em- ployed in making the celebrated star-gaus.e-'i or siveeps, that a magnifying power of ISO would give 0.800. 000 for the number of stars lying within the zones extendmo- 30^ on ei- ther side of the equator, and 20,374,000 for the whole heav- ens. Sir William Herschel conjectured that eighteen nAill- * Encke, Geddcktnissrede avf Bessel, s. 13. DISTRIBUTION OF THE FIXED STARS. 117 ions of stars in the Milky Way might be seen by his still more powerful forty-feet reflcctiiif^ telescope.* After a careful consideration of all the fixed stars, wheth- er visible to the naked eye or merely telescopic, whose po- sitions are determined, and which are recorded in catalogues, we turn to their distribution and grouping in the vault of neaven. As we have already observed, these stellar bodies, from the inconsiderable and exceedingly slow (real and apparent) change of position exhibited by some of them — partly owing to precession and to the diflerent influences of the progression of our solar system, and partly to their own proper motion — may be regarded as landmarks in the boundless regions of space, enabling the attentive observer to distinguish all bod- ies that miove among them with a greater velocity or in an opposite direction — consequently, all which are allied to tel- escopic comets and planets. The first and predominating interest excited by the contemplation of the heavens is di- rected to the fixed stars, owing to the multiplicity and over- M'helming mass of these cosmical bodies ; and it is by them that our highest feelings of admiration are called forth. The orbits of the planetary bodies appeal rather to inquiring reason, and, by presenting to it complicated problems, tend to promote the development of thought in relation to astron- omy. Amid the innumerable multitude of great and small stars, which seem scattered, as it were by chance, throughout the vault of heaven, even the rudest nations separate single (and almost invariably the same) groups, among which cer- tain bright stars catch the observer's eye, either by their proximity to each other, their juxtaposition, or, in some cases, by a kind of isolation. This fact has been confirmed by re- cent and careful examinations of several of the languages of so-called savage tribes. Such groups excite a vague sense of the mutual relation of parts, and have thus led to their receiving names, which, although varying among diflerent races, were generally derived from organic terrestrial ob- jects. Amid the forms with which fancy animated the waste and silent vault of heaven, the earliest groups thus distinguished were the seven-starred Pleiades, the seven stars of the Great Bear, subsequently (on account of the repetition of the same form) the constellation of the Lesser Bear, the * Compai-e Struve, Etude's iV Astr. Stellaire, 1847, p. 66 and 72 ; Cos- mos, vol. i., p. 150 ; and IMadlec Astr., 4te Aufl., $ 417. 118 COSMOS belt of Orion (Jacob's stafi'), Cassiopeia, the Swan, the Scor pion, the Southern Cross (owing to the striking difference in its direction before and after its culmination), the South- ern Crow^i, the Feet of the Centaur (the Twins, as it were, of the Southern hemisphere), &c. Wherever steppes, grassy plains, or sand)^ wastes present a far-extended horizon, those constellations Avhose rising or setting corresponds with the busy seasons and requirements of pastoral and agricultural life have become the subject of attentive consideration, and have gradually led to a symbol- izine: connection of ideas. Men thus became familiarized with the aspect of the heavens before the development of measuring astronomy. They soon perceived that besides the daily movement from east to west, which is common to all celestial bodies, the sun has a far slower proper motion in an opposite direction. The stars which shine in the even- ing sky sink lower every day, until at length they are wholly lost amid the rays of the setting sun ; while, on the other hand, those stars which were shining in the morning sky before the rising of the sun, recede further and further from it. In the ever-changing aspect of the starry heavens, suc- cessive constellations are always coming to view. A slight decree of attention suffices to show that these are the same which had before vanished in the west, and that the stars which are opposite to the sun, setting at its rise, and rising at its setting, had about half a year earlier been seen in its vicinity. From the time of Hesiod to Eudoxus, and from the latter to Aratus and Hipparchus, Hellenic literature abounds in metaphoric allusions to the disappearance of the stars amid the sun's rays, and their appearance in the morn- ing twilight — their heliacal setting and rising. An atten- tive observation of these phenomena yielded the earliest ele- ments of chronology, which were simply expressed in num- bers, while mythology, in accordance with the more cheerful or gloomy tone of national character, continued simultane- ously to rule the heavens with arbitrary despotism. The primitive Greek sphere (I here again, as in the his- tory of the physical contemplation of the universe,^ follow the investigations of my intellectual friend Letronne) had be- come gradually filled with constellations, without being in any degree considered with relation to the ecliptic. Thus Homer and Hesiod designate by name individual stars and * Cosmos, vol. ii,, p. 167. ZODIACAL SIGNS. 119 groups ; the former mentions the constellation of the Bear (" otherwise known as the Celestial Wain, and which alone never sinks into the bath of Oceanos"), Bootes, and the Dog of Orion ; the latter speaks .of tSirius and Arcturus, and both refer to the Pleiades, the Hyadcs, and Orion. *" Homer's twice repeated assertion that the constellation of the Bear alone never sinks into the ocean, merely allows us to infer that in his age the Greek sphere did not yet comprise the constella- tions of Draco, Cepheus, and Ursa Minor, wliich likewise do not set. The statement does not prove a want of acquaint- ance with the existence of the separate stars forming these three catasterisms, but simply an ignorance of their arrange nient into constellations. A long and frequently misunder- stood passage of Strabo (lib. i., p. 3, Casaub.) on Homer, II., xviii., 485—489, specially proves a fact — important to the question — that in the Greek sphere the stars were only grad- ually arranged in constellations. Homer has been imjustly accused of ignorance, says Strabo, as if he had known of only one instead of two Bears. It is probable that the lesser one had not yet been arranged in a separate group, and that the name did not reach the Hellenes until after the Phoenicians had specially designated this constellation, and made use of it for the purposes of navigation. All the scholia on Homer, Hyginus, and Diogenes Lacrtius ascribe its introduction to Thales. In the Pseudo-Eratosthenian work to which we have already referred, the lesser Bear is called ^olvlktj (or, as it were, the Phoenician guiding star). A century later (01. 71), Cleostratus of Tenedos enriched the sphere with the constellations of Sagittarius, To^orrjg, and Aries, KpLO^. The introduction of the Zodiac into the ancient Greek sphere coincides, according to Letronne, with this period of the domination of the Pisistratidae. Eudemus of Rhodes, one of the most distinguished pupils of Aristotle, and author of a "History of Astronomy," ascribes the introduction of this zo- diacal belt [t] rov ^(odLaicov dia^cDOLg, also (^wtJioc KVKXog) to CEnopides of Chios, a cotemporary of Anaxagoras.f The * Ideler, Unters. uber die Stcrnnamen, s. xi., 47, 139, 144, 243 • Le- tronne, Sur VOrigine du Zodlaqve Grec, 1340, p. 25. t Letronue, op. cit., p. 25 ; and Carteron, Analyse des Rechercnes de M. Letronne sur les Representations Zodiacales, 1843, p. 119. "It is very doubtful whether Eudoxus (01. 103) ever made use of the word ^(jdiCKOf. We first meet with it in Euchd, and in the Commentary of Hipparchus on Aratus (01. 160). The name echptic, £KAet7rri/c6f, is also very recent." Compare ]\Iartin in the Commentary to TheonU Smyrnai Platonici Liber de Aslronomia, 1849, p. 50, ')0. 120 COSMOS.. idea of the relation of the planets and fixed stars to the suri's course^ the division of the ecliptic into twelve equal parts (Dodecatoraeria), originated with the ancient Chaldeans, and very probably came to the Greeks, at the beginning of the fifth, or even in the sixth century before our era, direct from Chaldea, and not from the Valley of the Nile.* The Greeks merely separated from the constellations named in their prim- itive sphere those which were nearest to the ecliptic, and could be used as signs of the zodiac. If the Greeks had bor- roM'-ed from another nation any tiling more than the idea and number of the divisions (Dodecatomeria) of a zodiac — if they had borrowed the zodiac itself, with its signs — they would not at first have contented themselves with only eleven con- stellations. The Scorpion would not have been divided into two groups ; nor would zodiacal constellations have been in- troduced (some of which, like Taurus, Leo, Pisces, and Virgo, extend over a space of 35° to 48°, while others, as Cancer, Aries, and Capricornus, occupy only from 19° to 23°), which are inconveniently grouped to the north and south of the ecliptic, either at great distances from each other, or, like Tau- rus and Aries, Aquarius and Capricornus, so closely crowded together as almost to encroach on each other. These cir- cumstances prove that catasterisms previously formed were converted into signs of the zodiac. The sign of Libra, according to Letronne's conjecture, was introduced at the tim.3 of, and perhaps by, Hipparchus. It is never mentioned by Eudoxus, Archimedes, Autolycus, or even by Hipparchus in the few fragments of his writings which have been transmitted to us (excepting indeed in one * Letronne, Orig. dn Zod., p. 25 ; and Analyse Crit. des Repris. Zod., 1846, p. 15. Ideler and Lepsius also consider it probable " that the knowledge of the Chaldean zodiac, as well in reference to its divi- sions as to the names of the latter, had reached the Greeks in the sev- enth century before our era, although the adoption of the separate signs of the zodiac in Greek astronomical literature was gradual and of a sub- sequent d«ite." (Lepsius, Chronologic der u^gypter, 1849, s. 65 and 124.) Ideler is inclined to believe that the Orientals had names, but not constellations for the Dodecatomeria, and Lepsius regards it as a natural assumption " that tlie Greeks, at the period when their sphere was for the most part unfilled, should have added to their own the Chaldean constellations, from which the twelve divisions were named." But are we not led on this supposition to inquire why the Greeks had at first only eleven signs instead of introducing all the twelve belong- ing to the Chaldean Dodecatomeria ? If they introduced the tv/elve signs, they are hardly likely to hava removed one in order to replace it at a subsec en* period . ZODIACAL SIGNS. 121 passajre, probably falsified by a copyist).* Tlie earliest no- tice of this new constellation occnrs in Gcmnius and Varro scarcely half a century before our era ; and as the Romans, from the time of Augustus to Antoninus, became more strong- ly imbued with a_ predilection for astrological inquiry, those constellations which " lay in the celestial path of the sun" acquired an exaggerated and fanciful importance The Egyp- tian zodiacal constellations found at Dendera, Esneh, the Propylon of Panopolis, and on some mummy-cases, belong to the tirst half of this period of the Roman dominion, as was maintained by Visconti and Testa, at a time when the nec- essary materials for the decision of the question had not been collected, and the wildest hypothesis still prevailed regard- ing the signification of these symbolical zodiacal signs, and their dependence on the precession of the equinoxes. The great antiquity which, from passages in Manu's Book of Laws, Yalmiki's Ramayana and Amarasinha's Dictionary, Augustus William von Schlegel attributed to the zodiacal (circles found in India, has been rendered very doubtful by Adolph Holtzmami's ingenious investigations.! ■* On the passage referred to in the text, and interpolated by a copy ist of liipparchus, see Letronnc, Oris^. du Zod., 1840, p. 20. As early as 1812, when I was much disposed to believe that the Greeks had been long acquainted with the sign of Libra, I directed attention in an elaborate memoir (on all the passages in Greek and Roman writers of antiquity, in which the Balance occurs as a sign of the zodiac) to that passage in Hipparchus {Comment, in Aratum, lib. iii., cap. 2) which re- fers to the -dripLov held by the Centaur (in his fore-foot), as well as to the remarkable passage of Ptolemy, lib. ix., cap. 7 (Halma, t. ii., p. 170). In the latter the Southern Balance is named with the affix Kara 'Ka7<.datovc, and is opposed to the pincers of the Scorpion in an observ'- ation, which was undoubtedly not made at Babylon, but by some of the astrological Chaldeans, dispersed throughout Syria and Alexandria. ( Vnes des Cordilleres et Monumeiis des Peuples Indigenes de V Amirique, t. ii., p. 380.) Buttman maintained, what is very improbable, that the XriT^al originally signified the two scales of the Balance, and were sub- sequently by some misconception converted into the pincers of a scor- pion. (Compare Ideler, Utitersuchtingen uber die astronomischen Beo- hachtungen der AUcn., s. 374, and Ueber die Sternnameii, s. 174-177, with Carteron, Reckerches de M. Leironne, p. 113.) It is a remarkable circumstance connected with the analogy between many of the names of the twenty-seven " houses of the moon," and the Dodecatomeria of the zodiac, that we also meet with the sign of the Balance among tho Indian Nakschatras (Moon-houses), which are undoubtedly of very great antiquity. {Vues des Cordilleres, t. ii., p. 6-12.) + Compai'e A. W. von Schlegel, Ueber Sternbilder des Thierkreises im alien Indien, in the Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes. bd. i., Heft 3, 1837, and his Commenlatio de Zodiari Antiquitaie et Origine, 1839, with Adolph Holtzmnnn, Ueber den GriechischeJi Urspruno- tl>s In Vo' III— F 122 COSMOS. The artifical grouping of the stars into constellations, which arose incidentally during the lapse of ages — the fre- quently inconvenient extent and indefinite outline — the coni- phcated designations of individual stars in the different con- stellations— the various alphabets w^hich have been required to distinguish them, as in Argo — together with the tasteless blending of mythical personages with the sober prose of philo- sophical instruments, chemical furnaces, and pendulum clocks, in the southern hemisphere, have led to many propositions 'for mapping the heavens in new divisions, without the aid of imaginary figures. This undertaking appears least haz- ardous in respect to the southern hemisphere, where Scorpio, Sagittarius, Centaurus, Argo, and Eridanus alone possess any poetic interest."^ The heavens of the fixed stars {prbis inerrans of Apule- ius), and the inappropriate expression oi fixed stars {astra fixa of Manilius), reminds us, as we have already observed in the introduction to the Astrognosy,t of the connection, or, rather, confusion of the ideas of insertion, and of absolute im- mobility or fixity. When Aristotle calls the non-wandering celestial bodies [drrXavrj darpa) riveted {ev6e6eiiEva), when Ptolemy designates them as ingrafted (TTpoanecpvicdreg), these terms refer specially to the idea entertained by Anaximenes of the crystalline sphere of heaven. The apparent motion of all the fixed stars from east to west, while their relative distances remained unchanged, had given rise to this hypoth- esis. " The fixed stars [dnAavrj darpa) belong to the higher and more distant regions, in which they are riveted, like nails, dischen Thierkreises, 1841, s. 9, 16, 23. " The passages quoted from Amorakoscha and Ramayaiia," says the latter writer, "admit of un- doubted interpretation, and speak of the zodiac in the clearest terms; but if these works were composed before the knowledge of the Greek signs of the zodiac could have reached India, these passages ought to be carefully examined for the purpose of ascertaining whether they may not be comparatively modern interpolations." * Compare Buttman, in Berlin Astron. Jahrbuch fur 1822, s. 93, Gi- bers on the more recent constellations in Schumaclier's Jahrbuch fur 1840, s. 283-2.51, and Sir John Herschel, Revision and Rearrangement of the Constellatio7is, ivitk special reference to those of the Southern Hem- isphere, in the Memoirs of the Astr. Soc, vol. xii., p. 201-224 (with a very exact distribution of the southern stars frcnii the first to the fourth magnitude). On the occasion of Lalande's formal discussion with Bode on the introduction of his domestic cat and of a reaper (Messier !), Gi- bers complains that in order " to find space in the firmament for Kit>g Frederic's glory, Andromeda must lay her right arm in a different place from that which it had occupied for 3000 years !" t Vide supra, p. 26-28. and note. THE riXED STARS. 123 lo the crystalline heavens ; the planets {darpa nXav^fieva or 7T?MVT]Td), Avliich move in an opposite direction, belong to a lower and nearer region."*' As we find in Manilius, in the earliest ages of the Ctesars, that the term stclla fixa was substituted lor iujixa or affixa, it may be assumed that the schools of Rome attached thereto at first only the original signification of riveted ; but as the woxii fixiis also embraced the idea of immobility, and might even be regarded as sy- nonymous with immotus and immobilis, we may readily con- ceive that the national opinion, or, rather, usage of speech, should gradually have associated with Stella Jixa the idea of immobility, without reference to the fixed sphere to which it was attached. In this sense Seneca might term the world of the fixed stars jixmn et immobileni pojndmn. Although, according to Stoba3us, and the collector of the *' Views of the Philosophers," the designation " crystal vault of heaven" dates as far back as the early period of Anax- imenes, the first clearly-defined signification of the idea on which the term is based occurs in Empedocles. This phi- losopher regarded the heaven of the fixed stars as a solid mass, formed from the ether which had been rendered crys- talline and rigid by the action of fire.f According to his * According to Democritus and his disciple Metrodorus, Stob., Eclog. Phys., p. 582. t pint., De plac. Phil., ii., 11; Diog. Laert., viii., 77', Achilles Tat., ad. Arat., cap. 5, E,u7r , KpyaraTiTiurj roiirov (rov ovpavov) elvai (prjaiv, en Tov TTayeTuSovg av/.TieyEvra ; in like manner, we only meet with the expression crystal-like in Diog. Laert., viii., 77, and Galeiius, Hist. Phil., 12 (Sturz, Evipcdocles Agrigenl., t. i., p. 321). Lactantius, De Opijicio Dei, c. 17 : " An, si mihi quispiani dixerit teneiim esse coelam, aut vi- ireum, aut, ut Empedocles ait, a^rem glaciatum, statimue assentiat quia csehim ex qua materia sit, ignorem." " If any one were to tell me that the heavens nre made of brass, or of glass, or, as Empedocles asserts, of frozen air, I should incontinently asseut thereto, for I am ignorant of what substance the heavens are composed." We have no early Hel- lenic testimony of the use of this expression of a glass-like or vitreous heaven (ccclum vitreum), for only one celestial body, the sun, is called by Philoh\us a glass-like body, which throws upon us the rays it has received from the central fire. (The view of Empedocles, referred to in the text, of the reflection of the sun's light from the body of the moon (supposed to be consolidated in the same manner as hailstones), is frequently noticed by Plutarch, apud Evseb. Prmp. Evangel., 1, p. 24, D, and De Facie in Orhe Liince, cap. .5.) Where Uranos is described as ;\;aXKeof and aidrjpeog by Homer and Pindar, the expression refers only to the idea of steadfast, permanent, and imperishable, as in speak- ing of brazen hearts and brazen voices. Volcker i'lber Homerische Geo- graphie, 1830, s. 5. The earliest mention, before Pliny, of tlie word KpvaTa')\.7^QQ when applied to ice-like, transparent rock-crystal, occurs in Dionysius Periegetes, 781, iElian, xv., 8, and Strabo, xv.. p. 717 Ca- 124 COSMOS. theory, the moon is a body conglomerated (like hail) by the a"Ction of fire, and receives its light from the sun. The original saub. The opinion that the idea of the crystalline heavens being a gla- cial vault {aer glaciatns of Lactantius) arose among the ancients, from their knowledge of the decrease of temperature, with the increase of height in the strata of the atmosphere, as ascertained from ascending great heights and from the aspect of snow-covered mountains, is refuted by the circumstance that they regarded the fiery ether as lying beyond the confines of the actual atmosphere, and the stars as warm bodies. (Aristot., Meteor., 1, 3 ; De Coslo, 11, 7, p. 289.) In speaking of the music of the spheres (Aristot., De Ccelo, 11, p. 290), which, according to the views of the Pythagoreans, is not perceived by men, because it is continuous, whereas tones can only be heard when they are inter- rupted by silence, Aristotle singularly enough maintains that the move- ment of the spheres generates heat in the air below them, while they are themselves not heated. Their vibrations produce heat, but no sound. " The motion of the sphere of the fixed stars is the most rapid (Anstot., De Ccelo, ii., 10, p. 291) ; as ths sphere and the bodies attached to it are impelled in a circle, the subjacent space is heated by this movement, and hence heat is ditfused to the surface of the earth." {Meteorol., 1, 3, p. 340.) It has always struck me as a circumstance worthy of remark, that the Stagirite should constantly avoid the word crystal heaven; for the expression, "riveted stars'*^ (hdedefxiva uarpa), which he uses, in- dicates a general idea of solid spheres, without, however, specifying the nature of the substance. We do not meet with any allusion to the sub- ject in Cicero, but we find in his commentator, Macrobius {Cic. Som- nium Scipionis, 1, c. 20, p. 99, ed. Bip.), traces of freer ideas onthe dim- inution of temperature with the increase of height. According to him, eternal cold prevails in the outermost zones of heaven. " Ita enim noa solum terram sed ipsum quoque ca?lum, quod vere mundus vocatur, temperari a sole certissimum est, ut extremitates ejus, quae via solis longissime recesserunt, omiii careant beneficio caloris, et una fi'igoris perpetuitate torpescant." " For as it is most certain that not only the earth, but the heavens themselves, which are ti'uly called the universe, are rendered more temperate by the sun, so also their confines, which are most distant from the sun, are deprived of the benefits of heat, and languish in a state of perpetual cold." These confines of heaven (^ex- tremitates cceli), in which the Bishop of Hippo (Augustinus, ed. Anlv., 1700, i., p. 102, and iii., p. 99) placed a region of icy-cold water near Saturn the highest, and therefore the coldest, of all the planets, are within the actual atmosphere, for beyond the outer limits of this space lies, according to a somewhat earlier expression of Macrobius (1, c. 19, p. 93), the fiery ether which enigmatically enough does not prevent this eternal cold: " Stelhe supra coelum locatne, in ipso purissimo se there sunt, in quo omne quidquid est, lux naturalis et sua est, quae tota cum igno suo ita sphserse solis incumbit, ut cceli zonae, qua? procul a sole sunt, perpetuo frigore oppressse sint." " The stars above the heavens are situated in the pure ether, in which all things, whatever they may be, have a natural and proper light of their own" (the region of self-lumin- ous stars), " which so impends over the sphere of the sun with all its fire, that those zones of heaven which are far from the sun are oppress- ed by perpetual cold." My reason for entering so circumstantially into the physical and meteorological ideas of the Greeks and Romans is sim- ply because these subjects, except in the works of Ukert, Henri Martin, THE FIXKD STARS. 125 idea of transparency, congelation, and solidity would not, ac- cording to the physics of the ancients,"^ and their ideas of the solidification of fluids, have referred directly to cold and ice ; but the affinity between Kpvara^Xog, Kpvoq, and KpvaraivG), as well as this comparison with the most transparent of all bodies, gave rise to the more definite assertion that the vault of heaven consisted of ice or of glass. Thus we read in Lac- tantius : " Ccelum aiirem glaciatum esse" and " vitreum 003- lum." Empedocles undoubtedly did not refer to the glass of the Phcenicians, but to air, which was supposed to be con- densed into a transparent solid body by the action of the fiery ether. In this comparison with ice iKpvoTaXAog), the idea of transparency predominated ; no reference being here made to the origin of ice through cold, but simply to its conditions of transparent condensation. While poets used the term crystal, prose writers (as found in the note on the jDassage cited from Achilles Tatius, the commentator of Aratus) lim- ited themselves to the expression crystalline or crystal-like, KpvoTa?i?iOEi6f]g, In like manner, nayog (from mjyvvodaL, to become solid) signifies a piece of ice — its condensation be ing the sole point referred to. The idea of a crystalline vault of heaven was handed down to the Middle Ages by the fathers of the Church, who believed the firmament to consist of from seven to ten glassy strata, incasing one another like the difierent coatings of an onion. This supposition still keeps its ground in some of the monasteries of Southern Europe, where I was greatly sur- prised to hear a venerable prelate express an oj^inion in ref- erence to the fall of aerolites at Aigle, which at that time formed a subject of considerable interest, that the bodies we called meteoric stones with vitrified crusts were not portions of the fallen stone itself, but simply fragments of the crys- aud the admirable fragment of the Meteorologia Veterum of Julius Ide- ler, have hitherto beau very imperfectly, aud, for the most part, super ficially considered. * The ideas that fire has the power of making rigid ( Aristot., Probl., xiv., 11), and that the formation of ice itself may be promoted by heat, are deeply rooted in the physics of the ancients, and based on a fanci- ful theory of contranes {Anliperistasis) — on obscure conceptions of po- larity (of exciting op[)osite qualities or conditions). ( Vide supra, p. 14, and note.) The quantity of hail produced was considered to be proportional to the degree of heat of the atmospheric strata. (Aristot., Meteor., i., 12.) In the winter fishery on the shores of the Euxin^^, warm water was used to increase the ice formed in tlie neighborhood of an upright lube. (Alex. Aphrodis., Ibl, 8G, and Tlut., Deprimo Frio- do, c. 12.) 126 CO:5\lU,S. tal vault shattered by it in its fall. Kepler, from his con- siderations of comets which intersect the orbits of all the planets,* boasted, nearly two hundred and fifty years ago, that he had destroyed the seventy-seven concentric spheres of the celebrated Girolamo Fracastoro, as well as all tk more ancient retrograde epicycles. The ideas entertainett by such great thinkers as Eudoxus, Mensechmus, Aristotle, and Apollonius Pergseus, respecting the possible mechanism and motion of these solid, mutually intersecting spheres by which the planets were moved, and the question whether they regarded these systems of rings as mere ideal modes of representation, or intellectual fancies, by means of which diffi- cult problems of the planetary orbits might be solved or de- termined approximately, are subjects of which I have already treated in another place,! and which are not devoid of interest in our endeavors to distinguish the diflerent periods of devel- opment which have characterized the history of astronomy. Before we pass from the very ancient, but artificial zodi- acal grouping of the fixed stars, as regards their supposed insertion into solid spheres, to their natural and actual ar- rangement, and to the known laws of their relative distri- bution, it will be necessary more fully to consider some of the sensuous phenomena of the individual cosmical bodies — their extending rays, their apparent, spurious disk, and their differences of color. In the note referring to the imdsibility of Jupiter's satellites,^ I have already spoken of the influ- ence of the so-called tails of the stars, which vary in num- ber, position, and length in different individuals. Indistinct- ness of vision {la vue indistincte) arises from numerous or- ganic causes, depending on aberration of the sphericity of * Kepler expressly says, in liis (Stella Martis, fol. 9: " Solidos orbes rejeci." "I have rejected the idea of solid orbs;" and in the Stella Nova, 1606, cap. 2, p. 8: " Planetae in pure a^there, perinde atque aves in acre cursus suos conficiunt." " The planets perform their course in the pure ether as birds pass through the air." Compare also p. 122. He inclined, however, at an earlier period, to the idea of a solid icy vault of heaven congealed from the absence of solar heat: " Orbis ex aqua factus gela concreta propter solis abseiitiam." (Kepler, Epit. Astr. Copern., i., 2, p. 51.) "Two thousand years before Kepler, Empedocles maintained that the fixed stars were riveted to the crystal heavens, but that the planets were free and unrestrained" (rovg de tz/mv- 'i/rag aveladat}. (Plut., plac. Phil., ii., 13; Emped., 1, p. 335, Sturz ; Euseb., Pr(pp. Evang., xv., 30, col. 1688, p. 83.9.) It is difficult to con- ceive how, according to Plato in the Tim:Bus ( Tim., p. 40, B ; see Bohn's edition of Plato, vol. ii., p. 344; but not according to Aristotle), the fixed 6tars, riveted as they are to solid spheres, could rotate independently. + Cosmos, vol. ii., p 315, 316. t Vide supra, p. 51, anel note. VKLoril'V <•! I.ICHT. 127 tne eye, iliffVjction at the iiuirgiiis oi" the pupil, or at the eyelashes, and on the more or less widely-diffused irritabili- ty of the retina i'rom the excited- point.* I see very regu- * " Les principales causes de la vue iiidistincte soiit: abcnutioii dc sphericitc do I'oeil, diffraction siir les bords de la piipille, conimunica- tioii d'initabilito il des points voisius sur la retiue. La vue confuse est celle ou le foyer ne tonibe pas exactement sur la retine, mais tombe au-devant ou derriero la I'ctine. Les queues des etoiles sout I'effet de la vision iudistincte, autant qu'elle depend de la constitution du cristal- liii. D'uprcs un tres ancien ni<5nioire de Hassenfratz (1809) ' les queues au uouibre de 4 ou 8 qu'offrent les etoiles ou une bougie vue a 25 me- ti-es de distance, sout les caustiques du cristallin formees par I'intersec- tion des rayons refractes.' Ces caustiques se meuvent a rnesure que nous inclinous la tete. La propricte de la lunette de terminer I'image fait qu'elle concentre dans un petit espace la lumiere qui sans cela en aurait occupe un plus grand. Cela est vrai pour les etoiles fixes et pour les disqucs des plauetes. La lumiere des «'toiles qui n'ont pas de disque reels, conserve la me me inteusite, quel que soit le grossissement. Le fond de I'air duquel se detache i'etoile dans la lunette, devient plus noir par le grossissement qui dilate les molecules de Pair qu'embrasse le champ de la lunette. Les planetes a vrais disques deviennent elles- raemes plus pales par cet effet de dilatation. Quand la peinture focale est nette, quand les rayons partis d'nn point de Pobjet se sont concen- tres en nn seal point dans I'image, I'oculaire donne des resultats satis- faisants. Si au contraire les rayons emanes d'un point ne se reunissent pas au foyer en un seul point, s'ils y forment nn petit cercle, les images de deux points contigus de I'objet empietent necessairement I'une sur i'autre ; leurs I'ayons se confondent. Cette confusion la lentille ocu- laire ne saurait la faire disparaitre. L'office qu'elle remplit exclusive- raent, c'est de grossir ; elle grossit tout ce qui est dans I'image, les de- fauts comme le reste. Les etoiles n'ayant pas de diametres angulaires sensibles, ceux qu'elles conservent toujours, tiennent pour la plus grande partie au manque de perfection des instrumens (a la courbure moins reguliere donnee aux deux faces de la lentille objective) et a quelques defauts et aberrations de uotre ceil. Plus une oloile semble petite, tout etant egal quant au diametre de I'objectif, au grossissement em- ploye et a I'eclat de I'etoile observce, et plus la lunette a de perfection. Or le meilleur moyen de juger si les etoiles sont tres petites, si des points sont representes au foyer par des simples points, c'est evidem- ment de viser a des etoiles excessis'ement rapprochees cntr'elles et de voir si dans les etoiles doubles connues les images se confondent, si elles empietent I'une sur I'autre, ou bien si on les apenjoit bien nette- ment separees." " The principal causes of indistinct vision are, aberration of the sphe- ricity of the eye, diffraction at the margins of the pupil, and irritation transmitted to contiguous points of the retina. Indistinct vision exists where the focus does not fall exactly on the retina, but either somewhat before or behind it. The tails of the stars are the result of indistinct- ness of vision, as far as it depends on the constitution of the crystalline lens. According to a very old paper of Hassenfratz (1809), 'the four or eight tails which surround the stars or a candle seen at a distance of 2.5 metres [82 feet], are the caustics formed on the crystalline lens by the intersection of refracted ravs.' These caustics follow the move- 128 COSMOS. iarly eight rays at angles of 45° iii stars from the first to the third magnitude. As, according to Hassenfratz, these radi- ations are caustics intersecting one another on the crystal- line lens, they necessarily move according to the direction in which the head is inclined.* Some of my astronomical friends see three, or, at most, four rays above, and none be- low the star. It has always appeared extraordinary to me that the ancient Egyptians should invariably have given only five rays to the stars (at distances, therefore, of 72°) ; so that a star in hieroglyphics signifies, according to Hora- pollo, the number five.f The rays of the stars disappear when the image of the radiating star is seen through a very small aperture made ments of the head. The property of the telescope, in giving a definite outline to images, causes it to concentrate in a small space the light ^"hich would otherwise be more widely diffused. This obtains for the 6xed stars and for the disks of planets. The light of stars having no actual disks, iTiaintains the same intensity, whatever may be the mag- nifying power of the instrument. The aerial field from which the star is projected in the telescope is rendered more black by the magnifying property of the instrument, by which the molecules of air included in the field of view are expanded. Planets having actual disks become fainter from this effect of expansion. When the focal image is clearly defined, and when the rays emanating from one point of the object are concentrated into one point in the image, the ocular focus affords satis- factoiy results. But if, on the contrary, the rays emanating from one point do not reunite in the focus into one point, but form a small circle, the images of two contiguous points of the object will necessarily im- pinge upon each other, and their rays will be confused. This confusion can not be removed by the ocular, since the only part it performs is that of magnifying. It magnifies every thing comprised in the image, includin°^ its defects. As the stars have no sensible aneular diameteie, those which they present are principally owing to the imperfect con- struction of the instrument (to the different curvatures of the two sides of the object-glass), and to certain defects and aberrations pertaining to the eye itself. The smaller the star appears, the more perfect is the instrument, providing all relations are equal as to the diameter of the object-glass, the magnifying power employed, and the brightness of the star. Now the best means of judging whether the stars are very small, and whether the points are represented in the focus by simple points, is undoubtedly that of directing tlie instrument to stars situated very near each other, and of observing whether the images of known double stars are confused, and impinging on each other, or whether they can be seen separate and distinct." (Arago, MS. of 1834 and 1847.) * Hassenfratz, Svr les rayons divergens des Etoiles in Delametherie, Journal de Physique, tom. Ixix., 1809, p. 324. t Horapollinis Niloi Hieroglyphica, ed. Con. Leemans, 1835, cap. 13, p. 20. The learned editor notices, however, in I'efutation of Jomard's assertion (Descr. de VEgypte, tom. vli., p. 423), that a star, as the nu- merical hieroglyphic for 5, has not yet been discovered on any monu- ment or papyrus-rolT. (Horap., p. 194.) RAYS or TllK STARS. 129 with a needle in a card, and I have myself frequently ob- served both Canopus and Sirius in this manner. The same thing occurs in telescopic vision through powerful instru- ments, when the stars appear either as intensely luminous points, or as exceedingly small disks. Although the fainter scintillation of the fixed stars in the tropics conveys a cer- tain impression of repose, a total absence of stellar radiation would, in my opinion, impart a desolate aspect to the firma- ment, as seen by the naked eye. Illusion of the senses, op- tical illusion, and indistinct vision, probably tend to augment the splendor of the luminous canopy of heaven. Arago long since proposed the question w^hy fixed stars of the first mag- nitude, notwithstanding their great intensity of light, can not be seen when rising above the horizon in the same man- ner as under similar circumstances we see the outer margin of the moon's disk.* Even the most perfect optical instruments, and those hav- ing the highest magnifying powers, give to the fixed stars spurious disks (diametres factices) ; " the greater aperture," according to Sir John Herschel, " even with the same mag- nifying power, giving the smaller disk."t Occultations of the stars by the moon's disk show that the period occupied in the immersion and emersion is so transient that it can not be estimated at a fraction of a second of time. The frequent occurrence of the so-called adhesion of the immersed star to the moon's disk is a phenomenon depending on inflection of light in no way connected with the question of the spurious diameter of the star. We have already seen that Sir Will- iam Herschel, with a magnifying power of 6500, found the diameter of Vega 0"'36. The image of Arcturus was so di- minished in a dense mist that the disk was below 0""2. It is worthy of notice that, in consequence of the illusion occa- sioned by stellar radiation, Kepler and Tycho, before the in- vention of the telescope, respectively ascribed to Sirius$ a diameter of 4' and of 2' 20". * I found an opinion prevalent among the sailors of the Spanish ships of the Pacific, that the age of the moon might be determined before the first quarter by looking at it through a piece of silk and counting the multiplied images. Here we have a phenomenon of diffraction ob- served through fine slits. t Outlines, $ 816. Arago has caused the spurious diameter of Alde- baran to increase from 4" to 15" in the instrument by diminishing the object-glass. X Delambre, Hist, de VAstr. Modeme, tom. i., p. 193 ; Arago, Annu- aire, 1842, p. 366. F 2 130 COSMOS. The alternating light and dark rings which surround the small spurious disks of the stars when magnified two or three hundred times, and which appear iridescent when seen through diaphragms of different form, are likewise the result of interference and diffraction, as we learn from the observ- ations of Arago and Airy. The smallest objects which can be distinctly seen in the telescope as lummous points, may be employed as a test of the perfection in construction and illuminating power of optical instruments, whether refractors or reflectors. Among these we may reckon multiple stars, such as £ Lyrse, and the fifth and sixth star discovered by Struve in 1826, and by Sir John Herschel in 1832, in the trapezium of the great nebula of Orion,* forming the quad- ruple star 6 of that constellation. A difference of color in the proper light of the fixed stars, as well as in the reflected light of the planets, was recog- nized at a very early period ; but our knowledge of this re- markable phenomenon has been greatly extended by the aid of telescopic vision, more especially since attention has been so especially directed to the double stars. We do not here allude to the change of color which, as already observed, ac- companies scintillation even in the whitest stars, and still less to the transient and generally red color exhibited by stellar light near the horizon (a phenomenon owing to the character of the atmospheric medium through which we see it), but to the white or colored stellar light radiated from each cosmical body, in consequence of its peculiar luminous process, and the different constitution of its surface. The Greek astronomers were acquainted with red stars only, while modern science has discovered, by the aid of the tele- * " Two excessively minute and very close companions, to perceive both of which is one of the severest tests which can be applied to a tel- escope." {Outlines, $ 837. Compare also Sir John Herschel, Observ- ations at the Cape, p. 29 ; and Arago, in the Annuaire pour 1834, p. 302-305.) Among the ditTerent planetary cosmical bodies by which the illuminating power of a strongly magnifying optical instrument may be tested, we may mention the first and fourth satellites of Uranus, re- discovered by Lassell and Otto Struve in 1847, the two innermost and the seventh satellite of Saturn (Mimas, Enceladus, and Bond's Hyperi- on), and Neptune's satellite discovered by Lassell. The power of pen- etrating into celestial space occasioned Bacon, in an eloquent passage in praise of Galileo, to whom he en-oneously ascribes the invention of telescopes, to compare these instruments to ships which carry men upon an unknown ocean : " Ut propriora exercere possint cum coelestibus commercia." ( Works of Francis Bacon, 1740, vol. i., Novum Orga- num, p. 3G1.) COLOR or THE STARS. 131 Eiope, ill the radiant fields of the starry heaven, as in the blossoms of the phancrogamia, and in the metallic oxyds, almost all the frradations of the prismatic spectrum between the extremes of relVangibility of the red and the violet ray. Ptolemy enumerates in his catalogue of the fixed stars six {yioKLppoL) fiery red stars, viz. :^ Arcturus, Aldcbaran, Pol- lux, Antares, a Ononis (in the right shoulder), and Sirius. Cleomcdes even compares Antares in Scorpio with the fiery red Mars,t which is called both irvppdg and rrvpoeidrjg. Of the six above-named stars, five still retain a red or red- dish lisrht. Pollux is still indicated as a reddish, but Castor as a greenish star.t Sirius therefore afibrds the only ex- ample of an historically proved change of color, for it has at present a perfectly white light. A great physical revolu- tion§ must therefore have occurred at the surface or in the photosphere of this fixed star (or remote sun, as Aristarchus * The expression vTTOKtp^og, which Ptolemy employs indiscriminate- ly to designate the six stars named in his catalogue, implies a slightly- marked transition from Jiery yellow to Jieri/ red; it therefore refers, Btrictly speaking, to b. fiery reddish color. He seems to attach the gen- eral predicate ^avdug, fiery yellow, to all the other fixed stars. {Almag., viii., 3d ed., Halma, torn, ii., p. 94.) Ktppof is, according to Galen (Meth. Med., 12), a pale fiery red inclining to yellow. Gellius com- pares the word with melinus, which, according to Servius, has the same meaning as " gilvus" and " fulvus." As Sirius is said by Seneca {Nat. QucEst., i., 1) to be redder than Mars, and belongs to the stars called in the Almagest VTzoKippoi, there can be no doubt that the word implies the predominance, or, at all events, a certain proportion of red rays. The assertion that the affix iTocKt?.og, which Aratus, v. 327, attaches to Sirius, has been translated by Cicero as " rutilus," is erroneoa'^. Cicero says, indeed, v. 348: " Namque pedes subter rutilo cum lumine claret, Fervidus ille Canis stellar um luce retulgens ;" but '* rutilo cum lumine" is not a translation of ttolkc^.o^, but the mere addition of a free translation. (From letters addressed to me by Pro- fessor Franz.) " If," as Arago observes {Annuaire, 1842, p. 351), " the Roman orator, in using the term rutilus, purposely departs from the strict rendering of the Greek of Aratus, we must suppose that he rec- ognized the reddish character of the light of Sirius." t Cleom., Cycl. Theor,, i., ii., p. 59. X Madler, Astr., 1849, s. 391. $ Sir John Herschel, in the Edinh. Review, vol. 87, 1848, p. 189, and in Schum., Astr. Nachr., 1839, No. 372: " It seems much more likely that in Sirius a red color should be the effect of a medium interfered, than that in the short space of 2000 years so vast a body should have actually undergone such a material change in its physical constitution. It may be supposed owing to the existence of some sort of cosmical cloudiness, subject to internal movements, depending on causes of which we are ignorant," (Compare Arago, in the Annuaire pour 1842, p. 350- 353.) i 32 COSMOS. of Samos called the fixed itars) before the process could have been disturbed by means of which the less refrangible red rays had obtained the preponderance, thi'ough the abstraction or absorption of other complementary rays, either in the pho- tosphere of the star itself, or in the moving cosmical clouds by which it is surrounded. It is to be wished that the epoch of the disappearance of the red color of Sirius had been re- corded by a definite reference to the time, as this subject has excited a vivid interest in the minds of astronomers since the great advance made in modern optics. At the time of Tycho Brahe the light of Sirius was undoubtedly already white, for when the new star which appeared in Cassiopeia in 1572, was observed in the month of March, 1573, to change from its previous dazzling white color to a reddish hue, and again became white in January, 1574, the red ap- pearance of the star was compared to the color of Mars and Aldebaran, but not to that of Sirius. M. Sedillot, or other philologists conversant with Arabic and Persian astronomy, may perhaps some day succeed in discovering evidence of the earlier color of Sirius, in the periods intervening from El-Batani (Albategnius) and El-Fergani (Alfraganus) to Ab- durrahman Sufi and Ebn-Junis (that is, from 880 to 1007), and from Ebn-Junis to Nassir-Eddin and Ulugh Beg (from 1007 to 1437). El-Fergani (properly Mohammed Ebn-Kethir El-Fergani), who conducted astronomical observations in the middle of the tenth century at Rakka (Aracte) on the Euphrates, in- dicates as red stars [stellcB riiffce of the old Latin translation of 1590) Aldebaran, and, singularly enough,^ Capella, which is now yellow, and has scarcely a tinge of red, but he does not mention Sirius. If at this period Sirius had been no longer red, it would certainly be a striking fact that El-Fer * In Muhamedis Alfragani Chronologica et Astronomica Elementa, ed. Jacobus Christmarmus, 1590, cap. 22, p. 97, we read, " Stella ruffk iu Tauro Aldebaran ; stella ruiFa in Geminis quae appellatiir Hajok, hoc est Capi'a." Alhajoc, Aijuh are, however, the ordinary names for Ca- pella AurigjTP, in the Arabic and Latin Almagest. Argelander justly ob- serves, in reference to this subject, that Ptolemy, iu the astrological work (Terpd6t6/\of cvvTa^iq), the genuine character of which is testi- fied by the style as well as by ancient evidence, has associated planets with stars according to similai'ity of color, and has thus connected Mar tis Stella, Qucb nrit sicut congruit igneo ipsius colori, with Aurigse stella or Capella. (Compare Ptol., Qnadripart. Constnict., libri iv., Basil, 1551, p. 383.) Riccioli {Ahnageslum Novum, ed. 1650, tom. i., pars i. lib. 6, cap. 2, p. 394) also reckons Capella, together with Antares, Aide b^ran, and Arctunis, among red stars. siiiius. 133 gani, who invariably follows Ptolemy, sliould not here indi- cate the change of color in so celebrated a star. Negative proofs are, however, not often conckisivc, and, indeed, El- Fergani makes no reference in the same passage to the color of Betclgeux {a Orionis), which is now red, as it was in the age of Ptolemy. It has long been acknowledged that, of all the brightest luminous fixed stars of heaven, 8irius takes the first and most important place, no less in a chronological point of view than through its historical association with the earliest development of human civilization in the valley of the Nile. The era of Sothis — the heliacal rismg of Sothis (Sirius) — on which Biot has written an admirable treatise, indicates, according to the most recent investigations of Lepsius,* the complete arrange- ments of the Egyptian calendar into those ancient epochs, in- cluding nearly 3300 years before our era, " when not only the summer solstice, and, consequently, the begimiing of the rise of the Nile, but also the heliacal rising of Sothis, fell on the day of the first water-month (or the first Pachon)." I will collect in a note the most recent, and hitherto unpublished, etymological researches on Sothis or Sirius from the Coptic, Zend, Sanscrit, and Greek, which may, perhaps, be accept- able to those who, from love for the history of astronomy, seek in lanofuaojes and their affinities monuments of the earlier conditions of knowledge.! * See Chroiiolcgie der u.'^gypter, by Richard Lepsius, bd. i., 1849, s. 190-19.5, 213. The complete arrangement of the Egyptian calendar is referred to the earlier part of the year 3285 before our era, i. e., about a century and a half after the building of the great pyramid of Cheops- Chufu, and 940 years before the period generally assigned to the Deluge. (Compare Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 114, 115, note.) In the calculations based on the circumstance of Colonel Vyse having found that the inclination of tlie narrow subterranean passage leading into the interior of the pyr- amid veiy nearly corresponded to the angle 2G° 15', which in the time of Cheops (Chufu) was attained by the star a Draconis, which indicated the pole, at its inferior culmination at Gizeh, the date of the building of the pyramid is not assumed at 3430 B.C., as given in Cosmos according to Letronne, but at 3970 B.C. (Outlines of Astr., ^ 319.) This difterence of 540 years tends to strengthen the assumption that a Drac. v/as re- garded as the pole star, as in 3970 it was still at a distance of 3'^ 44' from the pole. t I have extracted the following observations from letters addressed to me by Professor Lepsius (February, 1850). "The Egyptian name of Sirius is Sothis, designated as a female star ; hence ?; 'ZuOi^ is identi- fied in Greek with the goddess Sote (more frequently Sit in hieroglyph- ics), and in the temple of the great Ramses at Thebes with Isis-Sothis (Lepsius, Chron. der jTlgijpter, bd. i., s. 119, 136). The signification of the root is found in Coptic, and is allied with a numerous family of words, 134 COSMOS. Besides Sirius, Vega, Deneb, Regulus, and Spica are at the present time decidedly white ; and among the small double the members of which, although they apparently differ very widely from each other, admit of being arranged somewhat in the following order. By the three-fold transference of the verbal signification, we obtain from the original meaning, to throw out — projicere {sagittavi, telurn) — first, semi7iare, to so70 ; next, extendere, to ejctend or spread (as spun threads) ; and, lastly, what is here most important, to radiate light and to shine (as stars and fire). From this series of ideas we may deduce the names of the divinities, Satis (the female archer); Sothis, the radiating, and Seth, the fieiy. We may also hieroglyphically explain sit or seti, the arrows as well as the ray ; seta, to spin ; setu, scattered seeds. Sethis is especially the brightly radiating, the star regulating the seasons of the year and periods of time. The small triangle, always represented yellow, which is a symbolical sign for Sothis, is used to designate the radiating sun when arranged in numerous triple rows issuing in a down- ward direction from the sun's disk. Seth is the fiery scorching god, in contradistinction to the warming, fmctifying water of the Nile, the god- dess Satis who inundates the soil. She is also the goddess of the cat- aracts, because the overflowing of the Nile began with the appearance of Sothis in the heavens at the summer solstice. In Vettius Valens the star itself is called 2^0 instead of Sothis ; but neither the name nor the subject admits of our identifying Thoth with Seth or Sothis, as Ideler has done. {Handhich der Chronolo^ie, bd. i., s. 126.)" (Lepsius, bd. i., s. 136.) I will close these observations taken from the eai'ly Egyptian periods with some Hellenic, Zend, and Sansci-it et^^mologies : " Sei'p, the sun," says Professor Franz, "is an old root, differing only in pronunciation from ■&ep, ■&ipo^, heat, summer, in which we meet with the same change in the vowel sound as in relpo^ and repog or ripag. The con-eclness of these assigned relations of the radicals aelp and ■&Ep, -^epog, is proved not only by the employment of ^epelraTog in Aratus, v. 149 (Ideler, Stemnamen, s. 241), but also by the later use of the forms aelpoc, aei- ptog, and aetpcvog, hot, burning, derived from aeip. It is worthy of no- tice that GELpd or 'QeLptvu inuTia is used the same as T&eptva indria, light summer clothing. The fonii aeipLog seems, however, to have had a wider application, for it constitutes the ordinaiy term appended to all stars in- fluencing the summer heat: hence, according to the version of the poet Archilochus, the sun was aelptog daTj]p, while Ibycus calls the stars gen- erally aeipm, luminous. It can not be doubted that it is the sun to which Archilochus refers in the words iTQ7SAovg p.£v avTov aeiptoc Karavavel o^vg k7J^duTTuv. According to Hesychius and Suidas, Iislpiog does indeed signify both the smi and the Dog-star; but I fully coincide with M. Mar- tin, the new editor of Theon of Smyrna, in believing that the passage of Hesiod {Opera et Dies, v. 417) refers to the sun, as maintained by Tzetzes and Proclus, and not to the Dog-star. From the adjective asl- pLog, which has established itself as tb.e ' epiiheton perpetuunC of the Dog-star, we derive the verb aetpiov, which may be translated ' to sparkle.' Aratus, v. 331, says of Sirius, o^ea aeipcdei, • it sparkles sti-ong- ly.' When standing alone, the word Ielotjv, the Siren, has a totally dif- ferent etymology ; and your conjecture, that it has merely an accidental similarity of sound with the brightly shining star Sirius, is perfectly well foujided. The opinion of those who, according to Theon Smyniseus (Liber de Astronomia, 18iO. p. 202). derive "SeLpyv from ntipuueiv (a Till-; (N)i,()U or I'lii: staus. 135 stars, Struve enumerates about 300 iu which both stars are white.*' Procyon, Atair, the Pole Star, and more especially (3 UrsfP Min. have a more or less decided yellow lifrht. We have already eiuunerated among the larger red or reddish stars Betelgeux, Arcturus, Aldebaran, Antares, and Pollux. Rum- ker finds y Crucis of a fine red color, and my old friend. Cap- tain Berard, who is an admirable observer, wrote from Mada- gascar in 1817 that he had for some years seen a Cnicis grow- ing red. The star ?/ Argus, which has been rendered cele- brated by Sir John Herschel's observations, and to which I shall soon refer more circumstantially, is undergoing a change in color as well as in intensity of hglit. In the year 1843, Mr. Mackay noticed at Calcutta that this star was similar in color to Arcturus, and was therefore reddish yellow ;t but in letters from Santiago de Chili, in Feb., 1850, Lieutenant Gil- liss speaks of it as being of a darker color than Mars. Sir John Herschel, at the conclusion of his Observations at the Cai^e, gives a list of seventy-six ruby-colored small stars, of the seventh to the ninth magnitude, some of which appear in the telescope like drops of blood. The majority of the vari- able stars are also described as red and reddish, | the excep- moreover unaccredited form of aeipidv), is likewise entirely eiToneous. While the motion of heat and light is implied by the expression aeiptog, the radical of the word 'LeipTjv represents the flowing tones of this phe nomenon of nature. It appears to me probable tliat Setp^v is connect- ed with elpecv (Plato, Crati/L, 398, D, to yap elpeiv XiyeLv kari), in which the original sharp aspiration passed into a hissing sound." (From let ters of Prof. Franz to me, January, 1850.) The Greek Se/p, the sun, easily admits, according to Bopp. " of be- ing associated with the Sanscrit word srmr, which does not indeed sig- nify the sun itself, but the heavens (as something shining). The ordi- nary Sanscnt denomination for the sun is surya, a contraction of svdrya, which is not used. The root svar signifies in general to shhie. The Zend designation for the sun is hvare, with the h instead of the s. The Greek -d^ep, ■&£po^, and d^spuog comes from the Sanscrit word gharma (Nom. gkarmas), warmth, heat." The acute editor of the Rigveda, Max Miiller, obsei-ves, that " the special Indian astronomical name of the Dog-star, Lubdhaka, which sig- nifies a hunter, when considered in reference to the neighboring con- stellation Orion, seems to indicate an ancient Ajian community of ideas regarding these groups of stars." He is, moreover, principally inclined " to derive "Eeipto^ from the Veda word sira (whence the adjective sair- ya) and the root sri, to go, to wander ; so that the sun and the binght- est of the stars, Sirius, were originally called wandering stars." (Com- pare also Yott, Efymologische Forschungen, 1833, s. 130.) * Stnive, Stel/anim compositarum Mensurcc MicrometriccB, 1837, p. Ixxiv. et Ixxxiii. t Sir John Herschel, Observations at the Capr, p. 34. t Madler's Asfro7iomic, s. 430. 136 sosMos. tions being Algol in Caput Medusae, (3 L}Tse and e Auriga, which have a pure tcliite hght. Mira Ceti, in which a pe- riodical change of light was first recognized, has a strong red- dish light ;* but the variability observed in Algol and [i Lyrse proves that this red color is not a necessary condition of a change of light, since many red stars are not variable. The faintest stars in which colors can be distinguished belong, ac- cording to Struve, to the ninth and tenth magnitudes. Blue stars were first mentioned by Mariotte,t 1686, in his Traite des Couleurs. The light of a Lyra? is bluish ; and a smaller stellar mass of 3^ minutes in diameter in the southern hem- isphere consists, according to Dunlop, of blue stars alone. Among the double stars there are many in which the princi- pal star is white, and the companion blue ; and some in which both stars have a blue light| (as d Serp. and 59 Androm.). Occasionally, as in the stellar swarm near k of the Southern Cross, which was mistaken by Lacaille for a nebulous spot, more than a hundred variously-colored red, green, blue, and bluish-green stars are so closely thronged together that they appear in a powerful telescope ' ' hke a superb piece of fancy jewelry."^ The ancients believed they could recognize a remarkable symmetry in the arrangement of certain stars of the first magnitude. Thus their attention was especially directed to the four so-called regal stars, which are situated at oppo- site points of the sphere, Aldebaran and Antares, Regulus and Fomalhaut. We find this reo;ular arranofement, of which I have already elsewhere treated, || specially referred to in a late Roman writer, Julius Firmicus Maternus,1[ who belonged to the age of Constantino. The difierences of right ascension in these regal stars, stellce regales, are llh. 57m. and 12h, 49m. The importance formerly attached to this subject is probably owing to opinions transmitted from the East, which gained a footing in the Roman empire un- der the Caesars, together with a strong national predilection for astrology. The leg, or north star of the Great Bear (the celebrated star of the Bull's leg in the astronomical repre- * Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 330. t Arago, Annuaire pour 1842, p. 348. \. Struve, Stell(S comp., p. Ixxxii. $ Sir John Herschel, Observations at the Cape, p. 17, 102. {" Nebulce and Chisters, No. 343.5.") II Humboldt, Vues des Cordilleres et Monumens des Peuphs Indigenes de V Am4rique, torn, ii., p. 55. H Julii Firmici Materni Astron.,Yihr\ viii., Basil, 155], lib. vi., cap. i., p. 150. SOUTHERN STARS. 137 sentations of Dendera, and in the Eg^yptitn Book of the Dead), is perhaps the star indicated in an obscure passa^^e of Job (ch. ix., vcr. 9), in which Arcturiis, Orion, and the Plei- ades arc contrasted with "the chambers of the south," and in which the four quarters of the heavens in hke manner are indicated by these four groups.*' While a large and splendid portion of the southern heav- ens beyond stars having 53° S. Decl. were unknown in an- cient times, and even in the earlier part of the Middle Ages, the knowledge of the southern hemisphere was gradually completed about a century before the invention and appli- cation of the telescope. At the time of Ptolemy there were visible on the horizon of Alexandria, the Altar, the feet of the Centaur, the Southern Cross, then included in the Cen- taur, and, according to Pliny, also called Ccesaris Thronus, in honor of Augustus,! and Canopus (Canobus) in Argo, which is called Ftolemceon by the scholiast to Germanicus.$ * Lepsius, Chronol. der ^gypter, bd. i., s. 143. In the Hebrew- text mention is made oi Asch, the giant (Orion?), the many stars (the Pleiades, Gemut ?), and "the Chambers of the South." The Septua- gint gives : 6 noiuv 'EAemcJa Kal ^Eoirepov Kal 'ApKTovpov koI Ta/xua VOTOV. The early English translators, like the Germans and Dutch, under- stood the first gi'oup refeiTed to in the verse to signify the stars in the Great Bear. Thus we find in Coverdale's version, " He maketh the vvaynes of heaven, the Orions, the vii. stars, and the secret places of the south." — Adam Clarke's Commentary on the Old Testament. — (Tr.) t Ideler, Sternnamen, s. 295. X Martianus Capella changes Ptolemceon into Ptolemmns; both names were devised by tlie flatterers at the court of tlie Egyi)tian sovereigns. Amerigo Vespucci thought he had seen three Canopi, one of which was quite dark {fosco), Canopus iiigens et nigeroit\\e Latin translation; most probably one of the black coal-sacks. (Humboldt, Examen Crit. de la Geogr., torn, v., p. 227, 229.) In the above-named Elem. Chronol. et ^s^ron. by El-Fergani (p. 100), it is stated that the Chi-istian pilgrims used to call the Sohel of the Arabs (Canopus) the star of St. Catharine, because they had the gratification of observing it, and admiring it as a guiding star when they journeyed from Gaza to Mount Sinai. In a fine episode to the Ramayana, the oldest heroic poem of Indian antiquity, the stars in the vicinity of the South Pole are declared for a singular reason to have been more recently created than the northern. When Brahminical Indians were emigrating from the northw^est to the coun tries around the Ganges, from the 30th degi-ee of north latitude to the lands of the tropics, where tliey subjected the original inhabitants to their dominion, they saw unknown stars rising above the horizon as they advanced toward Ceylon. In accordance with ancient practice, they combined these stars into new constellations. A bold fiction rep- resented the later-seen stars as having been subsequently created by the miraculous power of Visvamitra, who threatened " the ancient gods that he would overcome the northern hemisphere with his more richly- 1 3rs COSMOS. In the catalogue of the Almagest, Achernar, a star of the first magnitude, the last in Eridanus (Achir el-nahr, in Arabic), is also given, although it was 9^ below the hori- zon. A report of the existence of this star must therefore have reached Ptolemy through the medium of those who had made voyages to the southern parts of the Red Sea, or be- tween Ocelis and the Malabar emporium, Muziris.* Though improvements in the art of navigation led Diego Cam, to- gether with Martin Behaim, along the western coasts of Af- rica, as early as 1484, and carried Bartholomew Diaz in 1487, and G-ama in 1497 (on his way to the East Indies), far beyond the equator, into the Antarctic Seas, as far as 35° south lat., the first special notice of the large stars and nebulous spots, the first description of the " Magellanic clouds" and the "coal-sacks," and even the fame of " the wonders of the heavens not seen in the Mediterranean," be- long to the epoch of Vicente Yaiiez Pinzon, Amerigo Ves- pucci, and Andrea Corsali, between 1500 and 1515. The distances of the stars of the southern hemisphere Avere meas- ured at the close of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. f Laws of relative density in the distribution of the fixed stars in the vault of heaven first began to be recognized w^hen Sir William Herschel, in the year 1785, conceived the happy idea of counting the number of stars which passed starred southern hemisphere." (A. W. von Schlegel, in the Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes, bd. i., s. 240.) While this Indian myth figuratively depicts the astonishment excited in wandering na- tions by the aspect of a new heaven (as the celebrated Spanish poet, Garcilaso de la Vega, says of travelers, " they change at once their coun- try and stars," mudan de pays y de estrellas), we are powerfully re- minded of the impression that must have been excited, even in the rudest nations, when, at a certain part of the earth's surface, they ob- served large, hitherto unseen stars appear in the honzon, as those in the feet of the Centaur, in the Southern Cross, in Eridanus or in Argo, while those with which they had been long familiar at home wholly disappeared. The fixed stars advance toward us, and again recede, owing to the precession of the equinoxes. We have aa-eady mentioned that the Southern Cross was 7° above the horizon, in the countries ai'ound the Baltic, 2900 years before our era; at a time, therefore, when the great pyramids had already existed five hundred years. (Compare Cosmos, vol. i., p. 149, and vol. ii., p. 282.) " Canopus, on the other hand, can never have been visible at Berlin, as its distance from the south pole of the ecliptic amounts to only 14°. It would have required a distance of 1° more to bring it within the limits of visibility for our horizon." * Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 571, 572. t Olbers, in Schumacher's Jahrb. filr 1840, s. 249, and Cosmos, vol. i., p. 51. J)lSTIfIUi:T10N OF STAKrf. 131) at difiereiit heights and in various directions over tlie field of view, of 15' in diameter, of his twenty-feet reflecting tel- escope. Frequent reference has already been made in the present Avork to his laborious process of "gauging the heav- ens." The field of view each time embraced only -_-i-^^.-th of the Avhole heavens ; and it would therefore require, ac- cording to Struve, eighty-three years to gauge the whole sphere by a similar process.* In investigations of the par- tial distribution of stars, we must specially consider the class of magnitude to which they photometrically belong. If we limit our attention to the bright stars of the first three or four classes of magnitudes, we shall find them distributed on the whole with tolerable uniformity,! although in the south- ern hemisphere, from e Orionis to a Crucis, they are locally crowded together in a splendid zone in the direction of a great circle. The various opinions expressed by diflerent travelers on the relative beauty of the northern and south- ern hemispheres, frequently, I believe, depends wholly on the circumstance that some of these observers have visited the southern regions at a period of the year when the finest por- tion of tne constellations culminate in the daytime. It fol- lows, from the gaugings of the two Herschels in the north- ern and southern hemispheres, that the fixed stars from the fifth and sixth to the tenth and fifteenth magnitudes (par- ticularly, therefore, telescopic stars) increase regularly in density as we approach the galactic circle (6 ya?ia^iag kv- KXoq) ; and that there are therefore poles rich in stars, and others poor in stars, the latter being at right angles to the principal axis of the Milky Way. The density of the stellar light is at its minimum at the poles of the galactic circle ; and it increases in all directions, at first slowly, and then rap- idly, in proportion to the increased galactic polar distance. By an ingenious and ca-reful consideration of the results of the gauges already made, Struve found that on the average there are 29-4 times (nearly 30 times) as many stars in the center of the Milky Way as in regions surrounding the ga- lactic poles. In northern galactic polar distances of 0^, 30°, GC^, 75°, and 90°, the relative numbers of the stars in a tel- escopic field of vision of 15' diameter are 4'15, 6-52, 17"68, 30-30, and 122-00. Notwithstanding the great similarity in the law of increase in the abundance of the stars, we again find in the comparison of these zones an absolute pre- * Eiifdes (VJsir. Stelhiire, note 74, p. 31. t Outlines of Astr., § 785 140 COSMOS. ponderance* on tlie side of the more beautiful southern heavens. A^Tien in 1843 I requested Captain Schwinck (of the En- gineers) to communicate to me the distribution according to right ascension of the 12,148 stars (from the first to the sev- enth inclusive), which, at Bessel's suggestion, he had noted in his Mappa Ccdestis, he found in four groups — Right Ascension, 50° to 140° 3147 stars. 140° 230° 2627 " 230° 320° 3523 " 320° 50° 2851 " These groups correspond with the more exact results of the Etudes Stellaires, according to which the maxima of stars of the first to the ninth magnitude occur in the right ascen- sion 6h. 40m. and. 18h. 40m., and the minima in the right ascension of Ih. 30m. and 13h. 30m. f It is essential that, in reference to the conjectural struc- ture of the universe and to the position or depth of these strata of conglomerate matter, we should distinguish among the countless number of stars with which the heavens are studded, those which are scattered sporadically, and those which occur in separate, indepei^dent, and crowded groups. The latter are the so-called stellar clusters or sivarms, which frequently contain thousands of telescopic stars in recogniza- ble relations to each other, and which appear to the unaided eye as round nebulas, shining like comets. These are, the aebulous stars of Eratosthenes^ and Ptolemy, the nebulosce of the Alphonsine Tables in 1463, and the same of which Galileo said in the Nuncius Sidereus, " Sicut areolae spar- sim per sethera sub fulgent." These clusters of stars are either scattered separately throughout the heavens, or closely and irregularly crowded together, in strata, as it were, m the Milky Way, and in the Magellanic clouds. The greatest accumulation of globular clusters, and the most important in reference to the config- uration of the galactic circle, occurs in a region of the south- ern heavens^ between Corona Australis, Sagittarius, the * Op. cit., § 795, 79G ; Struve, Etudes d'Astr. StelL, p. 66, 73 (and note 75). t Struve, p. 59. Schwinck finds in his maps, R. A. 0O-90°, 2858 stars; R. A. 90°-180O, 3011 stars; R. A. 180'^^-270^, 2688 stars; R. A '270^-360°, 3591 stars; sum total, 12,148 stars to the seventh magnitude X On the nebula in the right hand of Perseus (near the hilt of his sword), see Eratosth., Catast., c. 22, p. 51, Schaubach. ^ John Herschel's Observations at the Cape, $ 105, p. 13G. CLUSTERS OF STARS. 141 tail of Scorjno, and the Altar (U. A. IGh. 45m.-19h.). All clusters in and near the Milky Way are not, however, round and globular ; there are many of irregular outline, with but few stars and not a very dense center. In many globular clusters the stars arc uniform in magnitude, in others they vary. In some few cases they exhibit a fine reddish cen- tral star* (R. A. 2h. 10m. ; N. Decl. 56° 21'). It is a dif- ficult problem in dynamics to understand how such island- worlds, with their multitude of suns, can rotate free and un disturbed. Nebulous spots and clusters of stars appear sub- ject to different laws in their local distribution, although the former are now very generally assumed to consist of very small and still more remote stars. The recojrnition of these laws must specially modify the conjectures entertained of what has been boldly termed the " structure of the heav- ens." It is, moreover, worthy of notice, that, with an in- strument of equal aperture and magnifying power, round nebulous spots are more easily resolved into clusters of stars than oval ones.f I will content myself with naming the following among the isolated systems of clusters and swarms of stars. The Pleiades : doubtless known to the rudest nations from the earliest times ; the inarinef's stars — Pleias, aixb tov ttXeIv (from nXelv, to sail), according to the etymology of the old scholiast of Aratus, who is probably more correct than those modern writers who would derive the name from 7T?ieo^, plenty. The navigation of the Mediterranean lasted from May to the beginning of November, from the early rising to the early setting of the Pbiades. Pra3sepe in Cancer : according to Pliny, nubecula quani p7'cBsepia vacant inter Asellos, a vecpeXiov of the Pseudo- Eratosthenes. The cluster of stars on the sword-hilt of Perseus, frequent- ly mentioned by Greek astronomers. Coma Berenices, like the three former, visible to the naked eye. A cluster of stars near Arcturus (No. 1663), telescopic: R. A. 13h. 34m. 12s., N. Decl. 29^ 14' ; more than a thousand stars from the tenth to the twelfth magnitude. Cluster of stars between rj and <^ Herculis, visible to the naked eye in clear nights. A magnificent object in the tel- escope (No. 1968), with a singular radiating margin ; R. A. * Outlines, $ 864-869, p. .591-596; Madler's Astr., s. 764, t Observations at the Cape, $ 29, p. 19. 142 COSMOS. 16h. 3om. 37s., N. Decl. 36° 47' ; first described by Halley ill 1714. A cluster of stars near cj Centauri ; described by Halley as early as 1677 ; appearing to the naked eye as a round cometic object, almost as bright as a star of the fourth or fifth magni- tude ; in powerful instruments it appears composed of count- less stars of the thirteenth to the fifteenth magnitude, crowd- ed together and most dense toward the center; E,. A. 13h. 16m. 38s., S. Decl. 46° 35' ; No. 3504 in Sir John Herschel's catalogue of the clusters of the southern hemisphere, 15' in diameter. {Obsei'vations at the Cape, p. 21, 105; Outlines of Astr., p. 595.) Cluster of stars near k of the Southern Cross (No. 3435), composed of many-colored small stars from the tw^elfth to the sixteenth magnitude, distributed over an area of jVth of a square degree ; a nebulous star, according to Lacaille, but so completely resolved by Sir John Herschel that no nebulous mass remained ; the central star deep red. [Observations at the Cape, p. 17, 102, pi. i., fig. 2.) Cluster of stars, 47 Toucani, Bode ; No. 2322 of Sir John Herschel's catalogue, one of the most remarkable objects in the southern heavens. I was myself deceived by it for sev- eral evenings, imagining it to be a comet, when, on my ar- rival at Peru, I saw it in 12° south lat. rise high above the horizon. The visibility of this cluster to the naked eye is in- creased by the circumstance that, although in the vicinity of the lesser Magellanic cloud, it is situated in a part of the heavens containing no stars, and is from 15' to 20/ in diam- eter. It is of a pale rose color in the interior, concentrically inclosed by a white margin composed of small stars (four- teenth to sixteenth magnitude) of about the same magnitude, and presenting all the characteristics of the globular form.^ A cluster of stars in Andromeda's girdle, near v of this con- stellation. The resolution of this celebrated nebula into small stars, upward of 1500 of which have been i-ecognized, apper- tains to the most remarkable discoveries in the observing as- tronomy of the present day. The merit of this discovery is due to Mr. George Bond, assistant astroiiomerf at the Observatory * '' A stupendous oVjject — a most magnificent globular cluster," says Sir John Herschel, " completely insulated, upon a ground of the sky per- fectly black throughout the whole breadth of the sweep.'' — Observations at the Cape, p. 18 and .01, PI. iii., fig. 1 ; Outlines, $ 895, p. 615. t Bond, in the Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, new series, vol. iii., p. 75. CLUSTERS OF STARS. 1 13 of CamLridfTc, United States (March, 1848), and testifies to the admirable illuminating power of the refractor of that Ob- servatory, which has an object-glass fifteen inches in diam- eter ; since even a reflector with a spccukiin of eighteen inch- es in diameter did not reveal " a trace of the presence of a star."^ Although it is probable that the cluster in Adrom- eda was, at the close of the tenth century, already recorded as a nebula of oval form, it is more certain that Simon Ma- rius (Mayer of Guntzenhausen), the same who first observed the change of color in scintillation,! perceived it on the 15th of December, 1G12 ; and that he was the first who described it circumstantially as a new starless and wonderful cosmical body unknown to Tycho Brahe. Half a century later, Bouil- laud, the author of" AUronomia Philolaica, occupied himself with the same subject. This cluster of stars, which is 2^° in length and more than 1° in breath, is specially distinguish- ed by two remarkable very narrow black streaks, parallel to each other, and to the longer axis of the cluster, which, ac- cording to Bond's investigations, traverse the whole length like fissures. This configuration vividly reminds us of the singular longitudinal fissure in an unresolved nebula of the southern hemisphere, Ko. 3501, which has been described and figured by Sir John Herschel. {Observations, at the Cape, p. 20, 105, pi. iv., fig. 2.) Notwithstanding the important discoveries for which we are indebted to Lord Rosse and his colossal telescope, I have not included the great nebula in Orion's belt in this selection of remarkable clusters of stars, as it appeared to me more ap- propriate to consider those portions of it which have been re- solved in the section on NebulcB. The greatest accumulation of clusters of stars, although by no means of nebulse, occurs in the Milky WayJ ( Galaxias^ * Outlines, ^ 874, p. 601. t Delanibre, Hist, de V Aslr. Modeme, t. i., p. 697. t We are indebted for the first and only complete description of the Milky Way, in both hemispheres, to Sir John Herschel, in his Results of Astronomical Observations, made during the Years 1834-1838, at the Cape of Good Hope, $ 316—33.5, and still more recently in the Outlines of Astronomy, $ 787-799. Throughout the whole of that section of the Cosmos which treats of the directions, ramifications, and various con- tents of the. Milky Way, I have exclusively followed the above-named astronomer and physicist. (Compare also Struve, Etudes d'Astr. Stel- laire, p. 35-79; Madler, Ast., 1849, § 213; Cosmos, vol. i., p. 103, 150.) I need scarcely here remark that in my description of the Milky Way, in order not to confuse certainties with uncertainties, 1 have not refer* red to what I had myself observed with instruments of a very inferior 144 COSMOS. the celestial river of the Arabs=*), which forms almost a great circle of the sphere, and is inclined to the equator at an an- gle of 63°. The poles of the Milky Way are situated in Right Ascension 12h. 47m., N. Decl. 27° ; and R. A. Oh. 47m., S. Decl. 27° ; the south galactic pole therefore lies near Coma Berenices, and the northern between Phoenix and Cetus. "V\liile all planetar}^ local relations are referred to the eclip- tic— the great circle in which the plane of the sun's path in- tersects the sphere — we may as conveniently refer many of the local relations of the fixed stars, as, for instance, that of their accumulation or grouping, to the nearly complete circle of the Milky Way. Considered in this light, the latter is to the sidereal world what the ecliptic is to the planetary world of our solar system. The Milky Way cuts the equator in Monoceros, between Procyon and Sirius, R. A. 6h. 54m. (for 1800), and in the left hand of Antinous, R. A. 19h. 15m. The Milky Way, therefore, divides the celestial sphere into two somewhat unequal halves, whose areas are nearly as 8 to 9. In the smaller portion lies the vernal solstice. The Milky Way varies considerably in breadth in different parts of its course.! At its narrowest, and, at the same time, most brilliant portion, between the prow of Argo and the Cross, and nearest to the Antarctic pole, its width is scarcely 3° or 4° ; at other parts it is 16°, and in its divided portion, be- tween Ophiuchus and Antinous, as much as 22°.| William Herschel has observed that, judging from his star-gaugings, the Milky Way would appear in many regions to have 6° or 7° greater width than we should be disposed to ascribe to it from the extent of stellar brightness visible to the naked eye."^ Huygens, who examined the Milky AVay with his twenty- three feet refractor, declared, as early as the year 1656, that the milky whiteness of the whole Galactic zone was not to illuminating power, in reference to the very great inequality of the light of the whole zone, during my long residence in the southern hem- isphere, and which I have recorded in my journals. * The comparison of the ramified Milky Way with a celestial river led the Arabs to designate parts of the constellation of Sagittarius, whose bow falls in a region rich in stai-s, as the cattle going to drink, and to associate with them the ostrich, which has so little need of water. (Ide- ler, Untersuchu7igen i'lber den Ursprting und die Bedentung der Sternna- men, ^ 78, 183, and 187 ; Niebuhr, Beschreibung von Arahien, s. 112.) t Outlines, p. 529; Schubert, Ast., th. iii., s, 71. X Struve. Etudes d^Astr. Stellaire, p. 41. § Cosmos, vol. i.. ]i. 1.50. MILKY WAY. 145 be ascribed to irresolvable nebulosity. A more careful ap- plication ot're(lectin- ulae, No. 3686, see p. 114. Vol. III.- T 146 COSMOS. Herschel, a twenty-feet instrument penetrates 900, and a forty-feet one 2800 distances of Sirius), the Milky Way ap- pears as diversified in its sidereal contents as it is irregular and indefinite in its outlines and limits when seen by. the unaided eye. While in some parts the Milky Way exhibits, throughout a large space, the greatest uniformity in the light and apparent magnitudes of the stars, in others the most brilliant patches of closely-crowded luminous points are in- terrupted by granular or reticular darker* intervals contain- ing but few stars ; and in some of these intervals in the in- terior of the Galaxy not the smallest star (of the 18m. or 20m.) is to be discovered. It almost seems as though, in these regions, we actually saw through the whole starry stratum of the Milky Way. In gauging with a field of view of 15' diameter, fields presenting on an average forty or fifty stars are almost immediately succeeded by others exhibiting from 400 to 500. Stars of the higher magnitudes often oc- cur in the midst of the most minute telescopic stars, while aU the intermediate classes are absent. Perhaps those stars which Ave regard as belonging to the lowest order of mag:- COO O nitudes do not always appear as such, solely on account of their enormous distance, but also because they actually have a smaller volume and less considerable development of light. In order rightly to comprehend the contrast presented by the greater brilliancy, abundance, or paucity of stars, it will be necessary to compare regions most widely separated from each other. The maximum of the accumulation and the greatest luster of stars are to be found between the prow of Argo and Sagittarius, or, to speak more exactly, between the Altar, the tail of the Scorpion, the hand and bow of Sagit- tarius, and the right foot of Ophiuchus. "No region of the heavens is fuller of objects, beautiful and remarkable in themselves, and rendered still more so by their mode of as- sociation" and grouping.! Next in brightness to this por- * *' Intervals absolutely dark ayid completely void of any star of the smallest telescopic magnitude." — Outlines, p. 536. t " No region of the heavens is fuller of objects, beautiful and re- markable in themselves, and rendered still more so by their mode of fi.ssociation, and by the peculiar features assumed by the IMilky Way, which are without a parallel in any other part of its course." — Observ- ati-o7is at the Cape, p. 386. This vivid description of Sir John Herschel entirely coincides with the impressions I have myself experienced. Capt. Jacob, of the Bombay Engineers, in speaking of the intensity of light in the Milky Way, in the vicinity of the Southern Cross, remarks with .'Striking truth, " Such is the general blaze of starlight near the Cross from that part of the sky. that a [>erson is iinmediaioly made MILKY WAY. 147 tioii of the southern heavens is the pleasing and richly-star- red legion of our northern hemisphere in Aquila and Cyg- nus, where the Milky Way branches ofl' in dillerent direc- tions. While the Milky Way is the narrowest under the foot of the Cross, the region of minimum brightness (where there is the greatest paucity of stars in the Galactic zone) is in the iisighborhood of Monoceros and Perseus. The magnificent eflulgence of the Milky Way in the south- ern hemisphere is still further increased by the circumstance that between the star 7/ Argils, which has become so cele- brated in consequence of its variability, and a Crucis, under the parallels of 59^ and 60^ south lat., it is intersected at an angle of 20^ by the remarkable zone of very large and probably very proximate stars, to which belong the constella- tions Orion, Canis Major, Scorpio, Centaurus, and the South- ern Cross. The direction of this remarkable zone is indi- cated by a great circle passing through e Orionis and the foot of the Cross. The picturesque efiect of the Milky Way, if I may use the expression, is increased in both hemispheres by its various ramifications. It remains undivided for about two fifths of its length. According to Sir John Herschel's observations, the branches separate in the great bifurcation at a Centauri,^ and not at j3 Cent., as given in our maps of the stars, or, as was asserted by Ptolemy,! in the constella- tion of the Altar ; they reunite again in Cygnus. In order to obtain a general insight into the whole course and direction of the Milky Way Avith its subdivisions, we will briefly consider its parts, following the order of their Right Ascension. Passing through y and e Cassiopeia?, the Milky Way sends forth toward e Persei a southern branch, which loses itself in the direction of the Pleiades and Hyades. The main stream, which is here very" faint, passes on through Auriga, over the three remarkable stars e, ^, r/, the Hsedi of that constellation, preceding Capell i between the feet of Gem- ini and the horns of the Bull (where it intersects the eclip- aware of its having nsen above the horizon, though he should not be at the time looking at the heavens, by the increase of general illumination of the atmosphere, resembling the effect of the young moon." (See Piazzi Smyth, On the Orbit of a Centauri, in the Transact, of the Royal Sac. of Edinlnirgh, vol. xvi., p. 44,5.) * Outlines, § 789. 791 ; Observations at the Cape, $ 32.'). t Almay S. Decl., where, after separating in a fan-like shape (20"^ in breadth), it again breaks off, so that there is a wdde gap in the Milky Way in the hne from y to /I Argus. It begins again in a similar fan-like expansion, but contracts at the hind feet of the Cen- taur and before its entrance into the Southern Cross, where it is at its narrowest part, and is only 3° or 4° in width. Soon after this the Milky Way agam expands into a bright and broad mass, which incloses /3 Centauri as well as a and ^3 Crucis, and in the midst of which lies the black pear- shaped coal-sack, to which I shall more specially refer in the seventh section. In this remarkable region, somewhat below the coal-sack, the Milky Way approaches nearest to the South Pole. The above-mentioned bifurcation, which begins at a Cen- tauri, extended, according to older views, to the constellation Cygnus. Passing from a Centauri, a narrow branch runs northward in the direction of the constellation Lupus, where it seems gradually lost ; a division next shows itself at y Normee. The northern branch forms irregular outlines till it reaches the region of the foot of Ophiuchus, where it wholly disappears ; the most southern branch then becomes the main stream, and passes through the Altar and the tail of the Scorpion, in the direction of the bow of Sagittarius, where it intersects the ecliptic in 276° long. It next runs in an irregular patchy and winding stream through Aquila, Sagitta, and Vulpecula up to Cygnus ; between e, a, and y, of which constellation a broad dark vacuity appears, which, as Sir John Herschel says, is not unlike the southern coal- sack, and serves as a kind of center for the divergence of three great streams.* One of these, which is very vivid and conspicuous, may be traced running backward, as it were, through /3 Cygni and <; Aquilse, without, however, blending with the stream already noticed, which extends to the foot of Ophiuchus. A considerable offset or protuberant append- age is also thrown off by the northern stream from the head * Outlines, p. 531. The strikingly dark spot between a and y Cas- siopeiae is also ascribed to the contrast with the brightness by which it is surrounded. See Struve, Etudes StelL, note 58. MILKY WAY. 149 of Cepheus, and therefore near Cassiopeia (from which con- stellation -w'e began our description of the Milky Way), to- ward Ursa Minor and the pole. From the extraordinary advancement which the applica- tion of large telescopes has gradually cflected in our knowl edge of the sidereal contents and of the differences in the concentration of light observable in individual portions of the Milky Way, views of merely optical projection have been re- placed by others referring rather to physical conformation. Thomas Wright, of Durham,^ Kant, Lambert, and at first also tSir William Herschel, were disposed to consider the form of the Wilky Way, and the apparent accumulation of the stars within this zone, as a consequence of the flattened form and unequal dimensions of the world-island (starry stratum) in which our solar system is included. The hy- pothesis of the uniform magnitude and distribution of the fixed stars has recently been attacked on many sides. The bold and gifted investigator of the heavens, Wm. Herschel, in his last works,! expressed himself strongly in favor of the assumption of an annulus of stars ; a view which he had contested in the talented treatise he composed in 1784. The most recent observations have favored the hypothesis of a system of separate concentric rings. The thickness of these rings seems very unequal ; and the different strata, whose combined stronger or fainter light we receive, are undoubt- edly situated at very difierent altitudes, i. e., at very unequal distances from us ; but the relative brightness of the sep- arate stars which we estimate as of the tenth to the six- teenth magnitude, can not be regarded as affording sufficient data to enable us in a satisfactory manner to deduce numer- ically from them, the radius of their spheres of distances. J In many parts of the Milky Way, the space-penetrating power of instruments is sufficient to resolve whole star- clouds, and to show the separate luminous points projected on the dark, starless ground of the heavens. We here act- * De Morgan has given an extract of the extremely rare work of Thomas Wright of Durham {Theory of the Universe, London, 1750), p. 211 in the Phitos. Magazine, ser. iii., No. 32. Thomas Wright, to whose researches the attention of astronomers has been so permanently di- rected since the beginning of the present centiuy, through the ingen- ious speculations of Kant and William Herschel, observed only with a reflector of one foot focal length. t Pfatf, in Will. Herschel' s summtl. Schriften, bd. i. (182G), s. 78-81 ; Struve, Etudes StelL, p. 35-44. X Encke, in Schumacher's Astr. Nachr., No. 622, 184V * 3 41-346. 150 rosMOH. ually look through as into free space " It leads us," says Sir John Herschel, " irresistibly to the conclusion that in these regions Ave ^ee, fairly through the starry stratum."* In other regions we see, as it were, through openings and fissures, remote world-islands, or outbranching portions of the annular system ; in other parts, again, the Milky Way has hitherto heen fathomless, even with the forty-feet telescope. f Investigations on the different intensity of light in the Milky Way, as well as on the magnitudes of the stars, which regu- larly increase in number from the galactic poles to the circle itself (an increase especially observable for 30° on either side of the Milky Way in stars below the eleventh magnitude, $ and therefore in |-^ths of all the stars), have led the most recent investigator of the southern hemisphere to remarkable views and probable results in reference to the form of the galactic aimular system, and what has been boldly called the su7i's place in the world-island to which this annular system belongs. The place assigned to the sun is eccentric, and probably near a point where the stratum bifurcates or spreads itself out into two sheets, § in one of those desert re- gions lying nearer to the Southern Cross than to the oppo- site node of the Milky Way. 11 " The depth at which our system is plunged in the sidereal stratum constituting the galaxy, reckoning from the southern surface or limit of that * Outlines, p. 536, 537, where we find the following words on the same subject : " In such cases it is equally impossible not to perceive that we are looking through a sheet of stars nearly of a size, and cf no great thickness compared with the distance which separates them from us." t Struve, Etudes StelL, p. 63. Sometimes the largest instruments reach a portion of the heavens, in which the exi.stence of a stairy stra- tum, shining at a remote distance, is only announced by "a uniform dotting or stippling of the field of view." See, in Observations at the Cape, p. 390, the section " On some indications of very remote tele- scopic branches of the Milky Way, or of an independent sidereal sys- tem or systems beai'ing a resemblance to such branches." X Observations at the Cape, ^314. ^ Sir William Herschel, in the Philos. Transact, for 1785, p. 21 ; Sir John Herschel, Observations at the Cape, $ 293. Compare also Struve, Descr. de V Observatoire de Poulkova, 1845, p. 267-271. II "I think," says Sir .John Herschel, "it is impossible to view this splendid zone from a Centauri to the Cross without an impression amounting almost to conviction that the Milky Way is not a mere stra- tum, but annular; or, at least, that our system is pUiced within one of the poorer or almost vacant parts of its general mass, and that eccen- trically, so as to be much nearer to the region about the Cross than to that diametrically opposite to it." (Mary Somerville, On the Connec- Hon of the Physical Sciences, 1846, p. 419.) NEW STARS. 151 btratuin, is about equal to that distance which, on a general average, corresponds to the hght of a star of the ninth oi tenth magnitude, and certainly does not exceed that corre sponding to the eleventh."^ Where, from the peculiar nature of individual problems, measurements and the direct evi- dence of the senses fail, we see but dimly those results which intellectual contemplation, urged forward by an intuitive im- pulse, is ever striving to attain. IV. NEW STARS AND STARS THAT HAVE VANISHED.— VARIABLE STARS, WHOSE RECURRING PERIODS HAVE BEEN DflTERMINED.— VARIA- TIONS IN THE INTENSITY OF THE LIGHT OF STARS WHOSE PERI- ODICITY IS AS YET UNINVESTIGATED. New Stars. — The appearance of hitherto unseen stars in the vault of heaven, especially the sudden appearance of strongly-scintillating stars of the first magnitude, is an oc- currence in the realms of space which has* ever excited as- tonishment. This astonishment is the greater, in proportion as such an event as the sudden manifestation of what was before invisible, but v/hich nevertheless is supposed to have previously existed, is one of the very rarest phenomena in nature. While, in the three centuries from 1500 to 1800, as many as forty-two comets, visible to the naked eye, have appeared to the inhabitants of the northern hemisphere — on an average, fourteen in every hundred years — only eight new stars have been observed throughout the same period. The rarity of the latter becomes still more striking when we extend our consideration to yet longer periods. From the completion of the Alphonsine Tables, an important epoch in the history of astronomy, down to the time of William Herschel — that is, from 1252 to 1800 — the number of visi- ble comets is estimated at about sixty-three, while that of new stars does not amount to more than nine. Consequent- ly, for the period during which, in the civilized countries of Europe, we may depend on possessing a tolerably correct enumeration of both, the proportion of new stars to comets visible to the naked eye is as one to seven. We shall pres- ently show that if from the tailless comets w^e separate the new stars which, according to the records of Ma-tuan-lin, * ObservafioHs at the Cape, ^ fil5. 152 COSMOS. have been olDserved in China, and go back to the middle o.' the second century before the Christian era, that for about 2000 years scarcely more than twenty or twenty-two of such phenomena can be adduced with certainty. Before I proceed to general considerations, it seems not inappropriate to quote the narrative of an eye-witness, and, by dwelling on a particular instance, to depict the vividness of the impression produced by the sight of a new star. " On my return to the Danish islands from my travels in Germa- ny," says Tycho Brahe, "I resided for some time with my uncle, Steno Bille (ut aulicse vitse fastidium lenirem), in the old and pleasantly situated monastery of Herritzwadt ; and here I made it a practice not to leave my chemical labora- tory until the evening. Raising my eyes, as usual, during one of my walks, to the well-known vault of heaven, I ob- served, with indescribable astonishment, near the zenith, in Cassiopeia, a radiant fixed star, of a magnitude never be- fore seen. In my amazement, I doubted the evidence of my senses. However, to convince myself that it was no illusion, and to have the testimony of others, I summoned my assist- ants from the laboratory, and inquired of them, and of all the country people that passed by, if they also observed the star that had thus suddenly burst forth. I subsequently heard that, in Germany, wagoners and other common peo- ple first called the attention of astronomers to this great phe- nomenon in the heavens — a circumstance which, as in the case of non-predicted comets, furnished fresh occasion for the usual raillery at the expense of the learned. " This new star," Tycho Brahe continues, " I found to be v/ithout a tail, not surrounded by any nebula, and perfectly like all other fixed stars, with the exception that it scintil- lated more strongly than stars of the first magnitude. Its brightness was greater than that of Sirius, a Lyree, or Jupi- ter. For splendor, it was only comparable to Venus when nearest to the earth (that is, when only a quarter of her disk is illuminated). Those gifted with keen sight could, when the air was clear, discern the new star in the daytime, and even at noon. At night, when the sky was overcast, so that all other stars were hidden, it was often visible through the clouds, if they were not very dense (nubes non admo- dum densas). Its distances from the nearest stars of Cassi- opeia, which, throughout the whole of the following year, I measured with great care, convinced me of its perfect immo- bility. Already, in December, 1572, its brilUancy began to N*JVV STARS. lf>3 diminisli, and the star gradually rescr.ibled Jupiter ; but by January, lo73, it had become less bright than that planet. Successive photometric estimates gave the following results : for February and March, equality with stars of the hrst mag- nitude (stellarum affixarum primi honoris — for Tycho Brahe seems to have disliked using Manilius's expression of stella3 fixa?) ; for April and May, with stars of the second magni- tude ; for July and August, Avith those of the third ; for Oc- tober and November, those of the fourth magnitude. To- ward the month of November, the new star was not bright- er than the eleventh in the lower part of Cassiopeia's chair. The transition to the fifth and sixth magnitude took place between December, 1573, and February, 1571. In the fol- lowing month the new star disappeared, and, after having shone seventeen months, was no longer discernible to the naked eye." (The telescope was not invented until thirty seven years afterward.) The gradual diminution of the star's luminosity was, more- over, invariably regular ; it was not (as is the case in the present day with tj Argus, though indeed that is not to be called a new star) interrupted by several periods of rekind- ling or by increased intensity of light. Its color also changed wdth its brightness (a fact which subsequently gave rise to many erroneous conclusions as to the velocity of colored rays in their passage tlirough space). At its first appearance, as long as it had the brilliancy of Yenus and Jupiter, it was for two months white, and then it passed through yellow into red. In the spring of 1573, Tycho Brahe compared it to Mars ; afterward he thought that it nearly resembled Be- telgeux, the star in the right shoulder of Orion. Its color, for the most part, w^as like the red tint of Aldebaran. In the spring of 1573, and especially in May, its white color re- turned (albedinem quandam sublividam induebat, qualis Sa- tumi Stellas subesse videtur). So it remained in January, 1574 ; being, up to the time of its entire disappearance in the month of March, 1574, of the fifth magnitude, and white, but of a duller whiteness, and exhibiting a remarkably strong scintillation in proportion to its faintness. The circumstantial minuteness of these statements^ is of * De admiranda Nova Stella, anno 1572, exorta in Tychonis Brahe Astro7Lomi(B instauratte Progymnasmata, 1603, p. 298-304, and 578. In the text I have closely followed the account which Tycho Brahe him- self gives. The very doubtful statement (which is, however, repeated in several astronomical treatises) that his attention was first called to 154 COSMOS. itself a proof of the interest which this natural phenomenon could not fail to awaken, by calling forth many important questions, in an epoch so brilliant in the history of astronomy. For (notwithstanding the general rarity of the appearance of new stars) similar phenomena, accidentally crowded togeth- er within the short space of thirty-two years, were thrice re- peated Avithin the observation of European astronomers, and consequently served to heighten the excitement. The im- portance of star catalogues, for ascertaining the date of the sudden appearance of any star, was more and more recog- nized ; the periodicity^^ (their reappearance after many cen- turies) was discussed ; and Tycho Brahe himself boldly ad- vanced a theory of the process by which stars might be formed and molded out of cosmical vapor, which presents many points of resemblance to that of the great William Herschel. He was of opinion that the vapory celestial mat- ter, which becomes luminous as it condenses, conglomerates into fixed stars : " Coeli materiam tenuissimam, ubique nostro visui et planetarum circuitibus perviam, in unum globum con- densatam, stellam effingere." This celestial matter, which is universally dispersed through space, has already attained to a certain degree of condensation in the Milky Way, which glimmers with a soft silvery brightness. Accordingly, the place of the new star, as well as of those which became sud- denly visible in 945 and 1264, was on the very edge of the Milky Way (quo factum est quod nova Stella in ipso galaxies margine constiterit). Indeed, some went so far as to believe that they could discern the very spot (the opening or hiatus) whence the nebulous celestial matter had been drawn from the Milky Way.f All this reminds one of the theories of the phenomenon of the new star by a concourse of country people, need not, therefore, be here noticed. * Cardanus, in his controversy with Tycho Brahe, went back to the star of the Magi, which, as he pretended, was identical with the star of 1572. Ideler, arguing from his own calculations of the conjunctions of Saturn with Jupiter, and from similar conjectui'es advanced by Kep- ler on the appearance of the new star in Ophiucus in 1604, supposes that the star of the Magi, through a confusion of aorrjp with aarpov, which is so frequent, was not a single great star, but a remarkable con- juftction of stars — the close approximation of two bn'ghlly-shining plan- ets at a distance of less than a diameter of the moon. — Tycho7iis Pro- gymnasmata, p. 324-330 ; contrast with Ideler, Handhuch der Mathe- matischen und Techiiischen ChronoJogie, bd. ii., s. 399-407. t Progymn., p. 324-330. Tycho Biahe, in his theory of the forma- tion of new stars from the Cosmical vapor of the Milky Way, builds much on the remarkable passages of Aristotle on the connection of the TKMPOHARY HTARrt. 155 transition of the cosmical vapor into clusters of stars, of an agglomerative force, of a concentration to a central nucleus, and of liypolheses of a gradual formation of solid bodies out of a vaporous fluid — views w^hicli were generally received in the beginning of the nineteenth century, but which at pres- ent, owinsf to the ever-changing fluctuations in the world of thought, are in many respects exposed to new doubts. Among newly-appeared temporary stars, the following (though with variable degrees of certainty) may be reckoned. I have arranged them according to the order in which they respectively appeared. (a) 134 B.C in Scorpio. {b) 123 A.D in Ophiuchus. (c) 173 " in Centaurus (^) 369 " ? (e) 386 " in Sagittarius. (/) 389 " in Aquila. {g) 393 " in Scorpio. (h) 827 " in Scorpio. (i) 945 " between Cepheus and Cassiopeia. (/j) 1012 ♦' in Aries. (I) 1203 " in Scorpio. (7n) 1230 " in Ophiuchus. [n) 1264 " between Cepheus and Cassiopeia. [o) 1572 " in Cassiopeia. p) 1578 " (q) 1584 " in Scorpio. (r) 1600 " in Cygnus. (s) 1604 " in Ophiuchus. (t) 1609 " (u) 1670 *' in Vulpes. (v) 1848 " in Ophiuchus. EXPLANATORY REMARKS. (a) This star first appeared in July, 134 years before our era. We have taken it from the Chinese Records of Ma-tuan-lin, for the transla- tion of which we are indebted to the learned linguist Edward Biot {Connaissance des Temps pour Van 1846, p. 61). Its place was between j8 and p of Scorpio. Among the extraordinary foreign-looking stars of these records, called also guest-stars {itoiles hotes, " Ke-sing," strangers of a singular aspect), which are distinguished by the observers from comets with tails, fixed new stars and advancing tailless comets are cer- tainly sometimes mixed up. But in the record of their motion (Ke-aing tails of comets (the vapory radiation from their nuclei) with tlie galaxy to which I have already itlliiiled. (^Cosmos, vol. i., p. 103.) i' 156 COSMOS. of 1092. 1181, and 1458), and in tlie absence of any s.ch record, as also in the occasional addition, '' the Ke-sing dissolved" (disappeared), there is contained, if not an infallible, yet a very important critei'ion. Besides, we must bear in mind that the light of the nucleus of all comets, wheth- er with or without tails, is dull, never scintillates, and exhibits only a mild radiance, while the luminous intensity of what the Chinese call extraoi'dinary (stranger) stars has been compared to that of Venus — a circumstance totally at variance with the nature of comets in general, and especially of those without tails. The star which appeared in 134 B.C., under the old Han dynasty, may, as Su* John Herschel remarks, have been the new star of Hipparchus, which, according to the state- ment of Pliny, induced him to commence his catalogue of the stars. Delambre twice calls this statement a fiction, " une historiette." {Hist, de VAstr. Anc, torn, i., p. 290; and HisL de V Astr. Mod., torn, i., p. 186.) Since, according to the express statement of Ptolemy {Almag., vii., p. 2, 13, Halma), the catalogue of Hipparchus belongs to the year 128 B.C., and Hipparchus (as I have already remarked elsewhere) carried on his observations in Rhodes (and perhaps also in Alexandria) from 162 to 127 B.C., there is nothing iiTeconcilable with this conjecture. It is very probable that the great Nicean astronomer had pursued his observations for a considerable period before he conceived the idea of forming a reg- ular catalogue. The words of Pliny, " suo aevo genita," apply to the whole term of his life. After the appearance of Tycho Brahe's star in 1572, it was much disputed whether the star of Hipparchus ought to be classed among new stars, or comets without tails. Tycho Brahe himself was of the former opinion {Progymn., p. 319-325). The words " ejus- que motu addubitatiouem adductus" may undoubtedly lead to the sup- position of a faint, or altogether tailless comet ; but Pliny's rhetorical style admitted of such vagueness of expression. {h) A Chinese observation. It appeared in December, A.D. 123, between a Herculis and a Ophiuchi. Ed. Biot, fi-om Ma-tuan-lin. (It is also asserted that a new star appeared in the reign of Hadrian, about A.D. 130.) (c) A singular and very large star. This also is taken from Ma-^an- lin, as well as the three following ones. It appeai-ed on the 10th of December, 173, between a and /3 Centauri and at tlie end of eight months disappeared, after exhibiting the five colors one after another. " Successivemenf^ is the term employed by Ed. Biot in his translation. Such an expression would almost tend to suggest a series of colors similar to those in the above-described star of Tycho Brahe ; but Sir John Herschel more correctly takes it to mean a colored scintillation {Outlines, p. 563), and Arago interprets in the same way a nearly similar expression employed by Kepler when speaking of the new star (1604) in Ophiuchus. ( Annuaire pour 1842, p. 347.) {d) This star vt-as seen from March to August, 369. (e) Between A and

\v AVill- iam Herschel, Sir John Herschel, and Struve), about (UJUO have been discovered in the two hemispheres. To the ear- liest described double stars=^ belong ^ Ursa) maj. (7th Sep- tember, 1700, by Gottfried Kirch), a Centauri (1709, by Feu- illee), y Virginis (1718), a Geminorum (1719), 61 Cygni (1753) (Mdiich, with the two preceding, was observed by Bradley, both in relation to distance and angle of direction), p Ophiuchi and ^ Cancri. The number of the double stars recorded has gi'aduaUy increased from the time of Flamstead, Avho employed a micrometer, down to the star-catalogue of Tobias Mayer, which appeared in 1756. Two acutely spec- ulative thinkers, endowed with great powers of combination, Lambert {Fhototnetria, 1760 ; Kosmologische Bncfe ilber die Einricliticng cles Weltbaucs, 1761) and John Miehell, 1767, though they did not themselves observe double stars, were the first to difluse correct views upon the relations of their attraction in partial binary systems. Lambert, like Kepler, hazarded the conjecture that the remote suns (fixed stars) are, like our own sun, surrounded with dark bodies, planets, and comets ; but of the fixed stars proximate to each other,! he believed, however much, on the other hand, he may appear inclined to admit the existence of dark central bodies, " that within a not very long period they completed a revolution round their common center of gravity." Miehell, $ who was not acquainted with the ideas of Kant and Lam- bert, was the first who applied the calculus of probabilities to small groups of stars, which he did with great ingenuity, especially to multiple stars, both binary and quaternary. He showed that it was 500,000 chances to 1 that the colloca- tion of the six principal stars in the Pleiades did not result from accident, but that, on the contrary, they owed their grouping to some internal and reciprocal relation. He was so thoroughly convinced of the existence of luminous stars revolving round each other, that he ingeniously proposed to employ these partial star-systems to the solution of certain astronomical problems. § * Matller, Astr., s. A77 . t Arago, in the Annua ire pour 1842, p. 400. + All Inquiry into the probable parallax and magnitude of the fixed stars, from the quantity of light which they afford us, and the paiticu- lar circumstances of their situation, by the Rev. John Miehell; in the Philos. Transact , vol. Ivii., p. 234-261. $ John Miehell, ibid., p. 238. " If it should hereafter be found that any of the stars have others revolving about them (for no satellites bv 202 COSMOS, Christian Mayer, the Manheim astronomer, has the great merit of having first (1778) made the fixed stars a special object of research, by the sure method of actual observations. The unfortunate choice of the term satellites of the fixed stai'S, and the relations which he supposed to exist among the stars between 2° 30' arid 2" 55' distant from Arcturus, exposed liim to bitter attacks from his cotemporaries, and among these to the censure of the eminent mathematician, ISTicolaus Fuss. That dark planetary bodies should become visible by reflected light, at such an immense distance, was certainly improbable. No value was set upon the results of his carefully-conducted observations, because his theory of the phenomena was rejected ; and yet Christian Mayer, in his rejoinder to the attack of Father Maximilian Hell, Di- rector of the Imperial Observatory at Vienna, expressly as- serts " that the smaller stars, which are so near the larger, are either illuminated, naturally dark planets, or that both of these cosmical bodies — the principal star and its compan- ion— are self-luminous suns revolving round each other." a borrowed light could possibly he visible), we should then have the means of discovering " Throughout the whole discussion he de- nies that one of the two revolving stars can be a dark planet shining with a reflected light, because both of them, notwithstanding their dis- tance, are visible to us. Calling the larger of the two the "central star," he compares the density of both with the density of our sun, and merely uses the word '' satellite" relatively to the idea of revolution or of reciprocal motion; he speaks of the "greatest apj)arent elongation of those stars that revolve about others as satellites." He further says, at p. 243 and 249 : " We may conclude with the highest probability (the odds against the contraiy opinion being many million millions to one) that stars form a kind of system by mutual gravitation. It is high- ly probable in particular, and next to a certainty in general, that sitch double stars as appear to consist of two or more stars placed near to- gether are under the influence of some general law, such, perhaps, as gravity " (Consult also Arago, in the Anyiuaire pour 1834, p. 308, and Ann. 1842, p. 400.) No great reliance can be placed on the indi- vidual numerical results of the calculus of probabilities given by Michell, as the hypotheses that there are 230 stars in the heavens which, in in- tensity of light, are equal to /3 Capricorni, Kid 1500 equal to the six gi'eater stars of the Pleiades, are manifestly incorrect. The ijigenious cosmological treatise of John Michell ends with a veiy bold attempt to explain the scintillation of the fixed stars by a kind of " pulsation in material effluxes of light" — an elucidation not more happy than that which Simon Marias, one of the discoverers of Jupiter's satellites (see Cosmos, vol. ii., p. 320) has given at the end of his Mundus Jovialis (1614). But Michell has the merit of having called attention to the fact (p. 263) that the scintillation of stars is always accompanied by a change of color. " Besides their brightness, there is in the scintillation of the fixed stars a change of coloi-." (Vide svpra.) DOUBLE STARS. 203 The importance of Christian Mayer's labors has, long after his death, been thankfully and publicly acknowledged by Struve and Miidler. In his two treatises, Vcrthcidigung ncucr Bcobachtungcn von Fixstcm-trabaJiten (1778), and Disscriatio dc novh in Codo siderco Phcenomenis (1779), eighty double stars are described as observed by him, of which sixty-seven are less than 32" distant from each other. Most of these were first discovered by Christian Mayer him- self, by means of the excellent eight-feet telescope of the Man iieim Mural (Quadrant ; " many even now constitute very ditiicult objects of observation, which none but very power- ful instruments are capable of representing, such as p and 71 Herculis, e 5 Lyrce, and w Piscium." Mayer, it is true (as was the practice long after his time), only measured dis- tances in right ascension and declination by meridian instru- ments, and pointed out, from his own observations, as well as from those of earher astronomers, changes of position ; but from the numerical value of these, he omitted to deduct what (in particular cases) was due to the proper motion of the stars.* These feeble but praiseworthy beginnings were followed by Sir William Herschel's colossal work on the multiple stars, which comprises a period of more than twenty-five years ; for although Herschel's first catalogue of double stars was published four years after Christian Mayer's treatise on the same subject, yet the observations of the former go back as far as 1779— indeed, even to 1776, if we take into consider- ation the investigations on the trapezium in the great nebula of Orion. Almost all we at present know of the manifold formation of the double stars has its origin in Sir William Herschel's work. In the catalogues of 1782, 1783, and 1804, he has not only set down and determined the position and distance of 846 double stars,! for the most part first dis- covered by himself, but, what is far more important than any augmentation of number, he applied his sagacity and power of observation to all those points which have any bearing on their orbits, their conjectured periodic times, their brightness, contrasts of colors, and classification according to the amount * Struve, in the Recueil des Actes de la Stance piibliqne de V Acad. Imp. des Sciences de St. Petersbourg, le 29 D^c, 1832, p. 48-50. Miid- ler, Astr., s. 478. t Philos. Transact, for the Year 1782, p. 40-126; for 1783. p. 112- 124; tor 1804, p. 87. Regarding the observations on which Sir Will- iam Herscbel founded his views respecting the 84G double stars, see Miidler, in iic\\\\n\i\chcv''s Jahrbuch fiir 1839, s. .59, and his Untc rsuchvii' gen uber die Fixstcrn-S ysteme. tli. i.. 1847, s. 7. 204 COSMOS. of their mutual distances. Full of imagination, yet always proceeding with great caution, it was not till the year 1794, while distinguishing between optically and physically double Btars, that he threw out his preliminary suggestions as to the nature of the relation of the larger star to its smaller com- panion. Nine years afterward, he first explained his views of the whole system of these phenomena, in the 93d volume of the Philosoj)hical Transactions. The idea of partial star-systems, in which several suns revolve round a common center of gravity, was then firmly established. The stupen- dous influence of attractive forces, which in our solar system extends to JNTeptune, a distance 30 times that of the earth (or 2488 millions of geographical miles), and which com- pelled the great comet of 1680 to return in its orbit, at the distance of 28 of Xeptune's semi-diameters (853 mean dis- tances of the earth, or 70,800 millions of geographical miles), is also manifested in the motion of the double star 61 Cygni, which, with a parallax of 0"'3744, is distant from the sun 18,240 semi-diameters of Neptune's orbit {i. e., 550,900 earth's mean distances, or 45,576,000 millions of geograph- ical miles). But although Sir William Herschel so clearly discerned the causes and general connection of the phenome- na, still, in the first few years of the nineteenth century, the angles of position derived from his own observations, owing to a want of due care in the use of the earlier catalogues, were confined to epochs too near together to admit of perfect certainty in determining the several numerical relations of the periodic times, or the elements of their orbits. Sir John Herschel himself alludes to the doubts regarding the accu- racy of the assigned periods of revolution of a Geminorum (334 years instead of 520, according to Madler),=* of y Vir- ginis (708 instead of 169), and of y Leonis (1424 of Struve's great catalogue), a splendid golden and reddish-green double star (1200 years). After "William Herschel, the elder Struve (from 1813 to 1842) and Sir John Herschel (from 1819 to 1838), availing themselves of the great improvements in astronomical in- struments, and especially in micrometrical applications, have, v/ith praiseworthy diligence, laid the proper and special foun- * Madler, ibid., th. i., s. 255. Foz' Castor we have two old observa- tions of Bradley, 1719 and 1759 (the former taken in conjunction with Pond, the latter with Maakelyue), and two of the elder Herschel, taken in the years 1779 and 1803. For the period of revolution of y Virginia, see Madler, Fixstern-f?ysL, th. ii., s. 234-10, 1848. DOUBLE STARS 205 dation of this important branch of astronomy. In 1820, Struve published his first Dorpat Tabic of double stars, 790 in number. This was followed in 1824 by a second, con- taining 3112 double stars, down to the ninth magnitude, in distances under 32", of which ordy about one sixth had been before observed. To accomplish this work, nearly 120,000 fixed stars were examined by means of the great Fraun- liofer refractor. Struve's third table of multiple stars ap- peared in the year 1837, and forms the important work Stel- lanim comjyositarum Mcnsurce Miwometriccc.^ It contains 2787 double stars, several imperfectly observed objects being carefully excluded. Sir John Herschel's unwearied diligence, during his four years' residence in Feldhauscn, at the Cape of Good Hope, which, by contributing to an accurate topograpliical knowl- edge of the southern hemisphere, constitutes an epoch in astronomy,! has been the means of enriching this number by the addition of more than 2100 double stars (which, with few exceptions, had never before been observed). All these African observations were taken by a twenty-feet reflecting telescope ; they were reduced for the year 1830, and are included in the six catalogues which contain 3346 double stars, and were transmitted by Sir John Herschel to the As- tronomical Society for the sixth and ninth parts of their val- uable Memoirs.X In these European catalogues are laid down the 380 double stars which the above celebrated as- ironomer had observed in 1825, conjointly with Sir James South. We trace in this historical sketch the gradual advance made by the science of astronomy toward a thorough knowl- edge of _^;ar?mZ, and especially oi binary systems. The num- ber of double stars (those both optically and physically double) may at present be estimated with some certainty at about 6000, if we include in our calculation those observed by Bes- sel with the excellent Fraunhofer heliometer, by Argelan- der§ at Abo (1827-1835), by Encke and G-alle at Berlin * Stnive, Mensurce Microm., p. 40 and i234-248. On the whole, 2G41-^14G, i. e., 2787 double stars have been observed. (JMiidLer, in Schum., Jahrb., 1839, s. 64.) t Sir Johu Herschel, Astron. Ohserv. at the Cape of Good Hope, p. 165-303. _ _ X Ihid.,^. IQ7 ixml 2^2. $ Arselander, in order carefiilly to investigate their [)roper motion, examined a great number of fixed stars. See his essay, entitled ''DLX. StcUarum jixarnm positiones medics, ineunfe anno 1830, ex ohserv. Abacs habitis {HelsingforsicB, ISS.'S)." Madler {Asi?\, s. 62.5) estimates the 206 COSMOS. (1836 and 1839), by Preuss and Otto Struve in Pulkowa (since the catalogue of 1837), by Miidler in Dorpat, and by Mitchell in Cincinnati (Ohio), Math a seventeen-feet Munich refractor. How many of these 6000 stars, which appear to the naked eye as if close together, may stand in an imme- diate relation of attraction to each other, forming systems of their own, and revolving in closed orbits — or, in other words, how many are so-called 2^hysical (^revolving) double stars — is an important problem, and difficult of solution. More re- volving companions are gradually but constantly being dis- covered. Extreme slowness of motion, or the direction of the plane of the orbit as presented to the eye, being such as to render the position of the revolving star unfavorable for ob- servation, may long cause us to class 'plmj?,ically double stars among those which are only optically so ; that is, stars of which the proximity is merely apparent. But a distinctly- ascertained appreciable motion is not the only criterion. The perfectly uniform motion in the realms of space {i. e., a com- mon progressive movement, like that of our solar system, in- cluding the earth and moon, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, with their satellites), which in the case of a con- siderable number of multiple stars has been proved by Arge- lander and Bessel, bears evidence that the principal stars and their comj)anions stand in undoubted relation to each other in separate partial systems. Miidler has made the in- teresting remark, that whereas, previous to 1836, among 2640 double stars that had been catalogued, there were only 58 in which a diiference of position had been observed luith^ certainty, and 105 in which it might be regarded as more or less 'probable ; at present, the proportion of physically double stars to optically double stars has changed so greatly in favor of the former, that among the 6000 double stars, according to a table published in 1849, 650 are known in which a change of relative position can be inconlc^tably proved.* The earliest comparison gave one sixteeulh, the number of multiple stars in the northern hemisphere, discovered at Pulkowa since 1837, at not less than 600. * The number of fi.x:ed stars in which proper motion has been un- doubtedly discovered (though it may be conjectured in the case of all) is slightly greater than the number of double stars in which change of position ha.?, been observed. (Madler, Astr., s. 394, 490, and 520-540.) Results obtained by the application of the Calculus of Probabilities, ac- cording as the several reciprocal distances of the double stars are be- tween 0" and 1", 2" and 8", or 10" and 32", are given by Struve, in his Mens. Microm., p. xciv. Distances le?s than 0"-8 have been taken, and DOUHLi: riTAItS. 207 most recent gives one ninth, as the proportion of the cosmic- ill bodies which, by an observed motion both of" the primary star and the companion, are maniicstiy proved to be piiys- ically doiibki stars. Very little has as yet been numerically determined re garding the relative distribution of the binary star-systems throughout space, not only in the celestial regions, but even on the apparent vault of heaven. In the northern hemi- sphere, the double stars most frequently occur in the direc- tion of certain constellations (Andromeda, Bootes, the Great Bear, the Lynx, and Orion). For the southern hemisphere Sir John Herschel has obtained the unexpected result, " that in the extra-tropical regions of this hemisphere the number of multiple stars is far smaller than that in the correspond- ing portion of the northern." And yet these beautiful south- ern regions have been explored, under the most favorable circumstances, by one of the most experienced of observers, w^ith a brilliant twenty-feet reflecting telescope, which sep- arated stars of the eighth magnitude at distances even of three quarters of a second.* The frequent occurrence of contrasted colors constitutes an extremely remarkable peculiarity of multiple stars. Struve, in his great workf published in 1837, gave the following re- sults with regard to the colors presented by six hundred of the brighter double stars. In 375 of these, the color of both principal star and companion was the same and equally in- tense. In 101, a mere difi'erence of intensity could be dis- cerned. The stars with perfectly different colors were 120 in number, or one fifth of the whole ; and in the remaining four hfths the principal and companion stars were uniform in color. In nearly 07ie half of these six hundred, the princi- pal star and its companion were white. Among those of different colors, combinations of yellow with blue (as in i Cancri), and of orange with green (as in the ternary star y Andromedse),! are of frequent occurrence. Arago was the first to call attention to the fact that the diversity of color in the binary systems principally, or at least in very many cases, has reference to the complementary col- experiments with very complicated systems have confirmed the astron- omer in the hope that these estimates are mostly correct within 0''"1 (Struve, uher Doppelsterne nach Dorpater Beob., s. 29.) * Sir John Herschel, Ohservatiojis at the Cape, p. 166. t Strave, Menaurce Microm., p. Ixxvii. to Ixxxiv. t Sir John Herschel, Outlines of Asfr.. p. 579. 208 COSMDS. ors — the subjective colors, which, when united, form white.* It is a well known optical phenomenon that a faint white light appears green when a strong red light is brought near it, and that a white light becomes blue when the strongrer surrounding light is yellowish. Arago, however, with liis usual caution, has reminded us of the fact that even though the green or blue tint of the companion star is sometimes the result of contrast, still, on the whole, it is impossible to deny the actual existence of green or blue stars. f There are in- * Two glasses, which exhibit complementary colors when placed one upon the other, ai'e used to exhibit white images of the sun. During my long residence at the Observatoiy at Paris, my friend very success- fully availed himself of this contrivance, instead of using shade glasses to observe the sun's disk. The colors to be chosen are red and green, yellow and blue, or green and violet. " Lorsqu'une lumiere forte se trouve aupres d'une lumiere faible, la derniere prend la teinte comple- mentaire de la premiere. C'est la le contraste; mais comme le rou^e u'est presque jamais pur, on peut tout aussi bien dire que le rouge est complementaire du bleu. Les couleurs voisines du spectre solan-e se substituent." " When a strong light is brought into contact with a feeble one, the latter assumes the complementary color of the former. This is the effect of contrast ; but as red is scarcely ever pure, it may as correctly be said that red is the complementary of blue : the colors nearest to the solar spectrum reciprocally change." (Arago, MS. of 1847.) t Arago, in the Connaisance des Temps pour Van ]828, p. 299-300; and in the Annuaire pour 1834, p. 246-250; pour 1842, p. 347-350: "Les exceptions que je cite, prouvent que j'avais bien raison en 1825 de n'introduire la notion physique du contraste dans la question des etoi- les doubles qu'avec la plus graude reserve. Le bleu est la couleur re- elle de certaines etoiles. II resulte des observations recueillies jusqu'ici que le firmament est non seulement parseme de soleils rouges etjaunes^ comme le savaient les anciens, ma isencore de soleils Meus et verts. C'est au tems et a des observations futures a nous apprendre si les etoi- les vertes et bleues ne sont pas des soleils deja en voie de decroissance ; si les differentes nuances de ces astres u'indiquent pas que la combustion s'y opere a differens degres ; si la teinte, avec exces de rayons les plus refrangibles, que presente souveut la petite etoile, ne tiendrait pas a la force absorbante d'une atmosphere que developperait Taction de x'etoile, ordinairement beaucoup plus brillante, qu'elle accompagne." " The exceptions I have named proved that in 1825 I was quite right in the cautious reservations wuth which I introduced the physical notion of contrast in connection with double stars. Blue is the real color of cer tain stars. The result of the observations hitherto made proves that the firmament is studded not only with red and yellow suns (as was known long ago to the ancients), but also with blue and green suns. Timii and future observations must determine whether red and blue stars ai*e not suns, the brightness of which is already on the wane; whether the vai'ied appearances of these orbs do not indicate the de- gree of combustion at work within them ; whether the color and the excess of the most refrangible rays ofleri presented by the smaller of two stars be not owing to the absorbing force of an atmosphere devel DOUn..E STAllS. 209 stances in which a briUiant white star (1527 Lconis, 1768 Can. ven.) is accompanied by a small blue star ; others, where in a double star (6 Serp.) both the principal and its companion are blue.=^ In order to determine whether the contrast of colors is merely subjective, he proposes (when the distance allows) to cover the principal star in the telescope by a thread or diaphragm. Commonly it is only the smaller star that is blue : this, however, is not the case in the double star 23 Orionis (GOG in Struve's Catalogue, p. Ixxx.), where the prin- cipal star is bluish, and the companion pure white. If, in the multiple stars, the difierently colored suns are frequently surrounded by planets invisible to us, the latter, being difTer- ently illuminated, must have their white, blue, red, and green days.f As the 'periodical vai'iahilityX of the stars is, as we have already pointed out, by no means necessarily connected with their red or reddish color, so also coloring in general, or a contrasting difference of the tones of color between the prin- cipal star and its companion, is far from being peculiar to the multiple stars. Circumstances which we find to be fre- quent are not, on that account, necessary conditions of the phenomena, whether relating to a periodical change of light, or to the revolution in partial systems round a common cen- ter of gravity. A careful examination of the bright double stars (aiid color can be determined even in those of the ninth magnitude) teaches that, besides white, all the colors of the solar spectrum are to be found in the double stars, but that the principal star, whenever it is not white, approximates in general to the red extreme (that of the least refrangible rays), but the companion to the violet extreme (the limit of the most refrangible rays). The reddish stars are twice as fre- quent as the blue and bluish ; the white are about 2\ times as numerous as the red and reddish. It is moreover remark- able that a great difference of color is usually associated with oped by the action of the accompanying star, which is generally much the more brilliant of the two." (Arago, in the Annuaire pour 1834, p. 295-301.) * Struve, Ueber Doppelsterne nach Dorpater Bcobachtungen, 1837, s. 33-36, and Mensurce Microm., p. Ixxxiii., enumerates sixty-thi-ee double stars in which both the principal and companion are blue or bluish, and in which, therefore, the colors can not be the effect of contrast. When we are forced to compare together the colors of double stars, as report- ed by several astronomers, it is particularly striking to observe how fre- quently the companion of a red or orange-colored star is reported by some observers as blue, and by others as green. t Arago, Annuaire pour 1834, p. 302. t Vide supra, p. 130-136. 210 eosMog. a corresponding difference in brightness. In two cases — in ^ Bootis and 7 Leonis — which, from their great brightness, can easily be measured by powerful telescopes, even in the daytime, the former consists of two white stars of the third and fourth magnitudes, and the latter of a principal star of the second, and of a companion of the 3- 5th magnitude. This is usually called the brightest double star of the north- ern hemisphere, whereas a Centauri* and a Crucis, in the southern hemisphere, surpass all the other double stars in brilHancy. As in ^Bootis, so also in a Centauri and y Leonis, we observe the rare combination of two great stars with only a slightly different intensity of light. No unanimity of opinion yet prevails respecting the vari- able brightness in multiple stars, and especially in that of companions. We have already! several times made mention of the somewhat irregular variabilitv of luster in the orange- colored principal star in a Herculis, Moreover, the fluctua- tion in the brightness of the nearly equal yellowish stars (of the third magnitude) constituting the double star y Virginis and Anon. 2718, observed by Struve (1831-1&33), probably indicates a very slow rotation of both suns upon their axes.$ Whether any actual change of color has ever taken place in double stars (as, for instance, in y Leonis and y Delphini) ; whether their white light becomes colored, and, on the other hand, whether the colored light of the isolated Sirius has be- come white, still remain undecided questions. § Where the disputed differences refer only to faint tones of color, w^e should take into consideration the powder of vision of the observer, and, if refractors have not been employed, the frequently red- dening influence of the metallic speculum. Among the multiple systems we may cite as ternaries, ^ Librae, ^ Cancri, 12 Lyncis, 11 Monoc. ; as quaternaries, 102 and 2681 of Struve's Catalogue, a Andromedse, e Lyrse : in Q Orionis, the famous trapezium of the greater nebula of * " This superb double star (a Cent.) is beyond all comparison the most striking object of the kind in the heavens, and consists of two in- dividuals, both of a high ruddy or orange color, though that of the smaller is of a somewhat more somber and brownish cast." (Sir John Herschel, Observations at the Cape of Good Hope, p, 300.) And, ac- cording to the important observations taken by Captain Jacob, of the Bombay Engineers, between the years 1846 and 1848, the principal sta- is estimated of the first magnitude, and the satelUte from the 2'5th to the third magnitude. {Transact. oft1u Royal Soc. of Edinh., vol. xv' 1849. p. 4.51.) t Vide supra, p. 165, 166, and note. X Struve, Uehcr Doppelst. nach Dorp Beob., s. 33. ^ Ibid., s. 36 DOUBLE STARS, 211 Orion, we have a combination of six — probably a system sub- ject to peculiar physical attraction, since the five smaller stars (6-3m. ; 7m. ; bm. ; 11 -Sm. ; and 12m.) follow the prop- er motion of the principal star, 4-7m. No change in their relative positions has yet been observed.* In the ternary combinations of ^ Librai and ^ Cancri, the periodical move- ment of the two companions has been recognized with great certainty. The latter system consists of three stars of the third magnitude, differing very little in brightness, and the nearer companion appears to have a motion ten times more rapid than the remoter one. Tho number of the double stars, the elements of whose orbits it has been found possible to determine, is at present stated at from fourteen to sixteen.! Of these, ^ Herculis has twice completed its orbit since the epoch of its first dis- covery, and during this period has twice (1802 and 1831) presented the phenomenon of the apparent occultation of one fixed star by another. For the earliest measurements of the orbits of double stars, we are indebted to the industry of Savary (^ Ursae Maj.), Encke (70 Ophiuchi), and Sir John Herschel. These have been subsequently followed by Bes- sel, Struve, Miidler, Hind, Smyth, and Captain Jacob. Sa- vary's and Encke's methods require four complete observa- tions, taken at sufficient intervals from each other. The shortest periods of revolution are thirty, forty-two, fifty-eight, and seventy-seven years ; consequently, intermediate be- tween the periods of Saturn and Uranus ; the longest that have been determined with any degree of certainty exceed five hundred years, that is to say, are nearly equal to three times the period of Le Verrier's Neptune. The eccentricity of the elliptical orbits of the double stars, according to the investigations hitherto made, is extremely considerable, re- sembling that of comets, increasing from 0-62 (cr Coronce) up to 0-95 {a Centauri). The least eccentric interior comet — that of Faye — has an eccentricity of 0-55, or less than that of the orbits of the two double stars just mentioned. Ac- cording to Mtidler's and Hind's calculations, i] Coronse and Castor exhibit much less eccentricity, which in the former is 0*29, and in the latter 0*22 or 0-24. In these double stars the two suns describe eUipses which come very near to those of * Madler, Astr., s. 517. Sir John Hersche], Outl, p. 5fi8. t Conipaie Miidler, Untersuck. i'lbcr die Fixstcrn-Systeyne, th. i., 8. 225-275; ih. ii., s. 23.5-240; aiul his Astr., s. 511 Sir John Herschel, Outl., p. 573. 212 COSMOS. two of the smaller principal planets in our solar system, the- eccentricity of the orbit of Pallas being 0*24, and that of Juno, 0*25. If, with Encke, we consider one of the two stars in a bi- nary system, the brighter, to be at rest, and on this supposi- tion refer to it the motion of the companion, then it follows from the observations hitherto made that the companion de- scribes round the principal star a conic section, of which the latter is the focus ; namely, an elHpse in which the radius vector of the revolving cosmical body passes over equal su- perficial areas in equal times. Accurate measurements of the angles of position and of distances, adapted to the determ- ination of orbits, have already shown, in a considerable num- ber of double stars, that the companion revolves round the principal star considered as stationary'", impelled by the same gravitating forces which prevail in our own solar system. This firm conviction, which has only been thoroughly attain- ed within the last quarter of a century, marks a great epoch in the history of the development of higher cosmical knowl- edge. Cosmical bodies, to which long use has still preserved the name oi fixed stars, although they are neither riveted to the vault of heaven nor motionless, have been observed to occult each other. The knowledge of the existence of partial systems of independent motion tends the more to en- large our view, by showing that these movements are them- selves subordinate to more general movements animating the regions of space. DOUBLE STARS. Elements of the Orbits of Double Stars. 213 Name. Semi-Major Axis. Eccentricity. Period of Kevolution in ywars. Calculator. (1) f UrsaeMaj 3"-857 04164 58-262 Savary, 1830. 3"-278 2"-295 0-3777 04037 60 720 61-300 John Herschel. Tables of 1849. Mjidler, 1847. (2) p Ophiuchi 4"-328 0 4300 73-862 Encke, 1832. (3) CHerculis r'-208 04320 30-22 Madler, 1847. (4) Castor 8''086 5"-692 0-7582 0-2194 252-66 519-77 John Herschel. Tables of 1849. Madler, 1847. 6"-300 0-2405 632-27 Hind, 1849. (5) y Virginis 3''-580 3"-863 0-8795 0-8806 182-12 169-44 John Herschel. Tables of 1849. Madler, 1847. (6> a Centauri 15''-500 0-9500 77 00 Captain Jacob, 1848. INDEX TO VOL. III. Achromatic telescopes, 63. Adalbert, Prince, of Prussia, his observa- tions on the undulation of the stars, 59. Alcor, a star of the constellation Ursa Ma- jor, employed by the Persians as a test of vision, 49, 50, 200. Alcyone, one of the Pleiades, imagined the center of gravity of the solar sys- tem by Madler, 198. Alphonsine Tables, date of their construc- tion, 151. Anaxagoras of Clazomenas, his theory of the world-arranging intelligence, 11 ; origin of the modern theories of rota- tory motion, 12. Andromeda's girdle, nebula in, 142. Arago, M., lettei's and communications of, to M. Humboldt, 46, 49, 67, 68, 73, 96, 207-209 ; on the effect of telescopes on the visibility of the stars, 69 ; on the velocity of light, 80, 84; on photometry, 92, 96 ; his cyanometer, 97. Aratus, a fragment of the work of Hip- parchus preserved in, 109. Archimedes, his " Arenarius," 30. Arcturus, true diameter of, 89. Argelander, his view of the number of the fixed stars, 105, 106 ; his additions to Bessel's Catalogue, 115 ; on period- ically variable stars, 166. 1) Argus, changes in color and brilliancy of, 135, 178,179. Aristotle, his distinct apprehension of the unity of nature, 13-15; his defective solution of the problem, 15; doubts the infinity of space, 29, 30 ; his idea of the generation of heat by the movement of me spheres, 124. Astrognosy, the domain of the fixed stars, 26-28. Astronomy, the observation of groups of fixed stars, the first step in, 118 ; very bright single stars, the first named, 89. Atmosphere, limits of the, 40, 41 ; eflects of an untransparent, 104. Augustine, St., cosmical views of, 124. Autolycus of Pitane, era of, 89, 90. Auzout's object-glasses, 62. Bacon. Lord, the earliest views on the ve- locity of light found in his "NovuiB Organ um," 79. BailyT Francis, his revision of De Lalande's Catalogue, 115. Bayer's lettering of the stars of any con- stellation not an evidence of their rel- ative brightness, 98. Berard, Captain, on the change of color of the star y Crucis, 135. Berlin Academy, star maps of the, lltJ. Bcssel, on repulsive force, 34, 35 ; his star maps have been the principal means of the recognition of seven new planets, 116 ; calculation .of the orbits oi double stars by, 211. Binary stars, 199. Blue stars, 136 ; less frequent than red, 209. Blue and green suns, the probable cause of their color, 208. Bond, of the Cambridge Observatory, United States, his resolution of the neb- ula in Andromeda's girdle into small stars, 142. Brewster, Sir David, on the dark lines of the prismatic spectra, 44. British Association, their edition of La- lande's Catalogue, 115. Bruno, Giordano, his cosmical views, 17 ; his martyrdom, 17. Busch, Dr., his estimate of the velocity of light incorrect, 82. Catalogues, astronomical, their great im- portance, 113, 114; future discoveries of planetary bodies mainly dependent on their completeness, 114 ; list of, 114, 115 ; Halley's, Flamstead's, and others, 114 ; Lalande's, Harding's, Bessel's, 115 Catasterisms of Eratosthenes, 89, 90. a Cehtauri, Piazzi Smyth on, 146, 147, 185 ; the nearest of the fixed stars that have yet been measured, 191, 192. Central body for the whole sidereal heav- ens, existence of, doubtful, 197. Chinese record of extraordinary stars (of Ma-tuan-lin), 109,155-159; deserving of confidence, 162. Clusters of stars, or stellar swarms, 140 ; list of th*? principal, 141-143. Coal-sacks, a portion of the Milky Way in the southern hemisphere so called, 137. Colored rings aflx)rd a direct measure of the intensity of light. 96. Colored stars, 130 ; evidence of change of color in some, 131, 132; Sir John Herschel's hypothesis, 131 ; difference of color usually accompanied by differ- ence of brightness, 209. Comets, information regarding celestial space, derived from observation on, 31, 39 ; number of visible ones, 151. Concentric rings of stars, a view favored by recent observation, 149. Constellations, arrangement of stars into, very gradual, 119. Contrasted colors of double stars, 207. Cosmical contemplation, extension of, in the Middle Ages. 16. 216 INDEX. Cosmical vapor, question as to condensa- tion ot 37 ; Tvcho Brahe's and Sir Will- iam llerschel's theories, 154. "Cosmos," a pseudo-Aiistotelian work, 16. Crystal vault of heaven, date of the desig- nation, 123 ; its signification according to Empedocles, 1& ; the idea favored by the Fathers of the Church, 125. Cyanometer, Arago's, 97. Dark cosmical bodies, question of, 164, 187. Delambre on the velocity of light, 82. Descartes, his cosmical views, 19, 20; sup- presses his work from deference to tlie Inquisition, 20. Dioptric tubes, the precursors of the tele- scope, 43. Direct and reflected light, 45. Distribution of the fixed stars, according to right ascension, 140. Dorpat Table (Struve's) of multiple stars, 205. Double stars, the name too indiscrimin- ately applied, 199, 200 ; distribution into optical and physical. 200 ; pointed out by Galileo as useful in determining the parallax, 200 ; vast increase in their ob- served number, 201, 203 ; those earliest described, 201 ; number in waich a change of position has been proved, 206 ; greater number of double stars in the northern than in the southern hem- isphere, 207 ; occurrence of contrasted colors, 207 ; calculation of their orbits, 211 ; table of the elements, 213. Earth-animal, Kepler and Fludd's fancies regarding the, 19. Edda-Songs, allusion to, 8. * Egypt, zodiacal constellations of, their date, 121. Egyptian calendar, period of the complete arrangement of the, 133. Ehrenberg on the incalculable number of animal organisms, 30. Electrical light, velocity of transmission of, 86. Electricity, transmission o^ through the earth, 88. Elements, Indian origin of the hypothesis of four or five, 11. Emanations from the head of some com- ets, 39. Encke, his accurate calculation of the equivalent of an equatorial degree, 81 ; on the star-maps of the Berlin Academy, 116 ; an early calculator of the orbits of double stars, 2( 1 ; his theory of their motion, 212. Encke's comet, considerations on space, derived from periods of revolution of, 27; a resisting medium proved from observation on, 39. Ether, different meanings of, in the East and the West, 31, 32. Ether (Akd'sa, in Sanscrit), one of the In- dian five elements, 31. Ether, the, fiery, 35. Euler's comparative estimate of the light of the sun and moon^ 95. Fixed stars, the term eiToneous, 27, 122 ; scintillation of the, 73 ; variations in its intensity, 76 ; our sun one of the fainter fixed stars, 95; photometric arrange- ment of, 99 ; their number, 105 ; num- ber visible at Berlin with the naked eye, 107; at Alexandria, 107; Struve and Herschel's estimates, 116; gi-ouping of the, 117 ; distribution of the, 140 ; prop- er motion of the, 182 ; parallax, 188 ; number of, in which proper motion has been discovered, gi-eater than of those in which change of position has been observed, 206, 207. Fizeau. M., his experiments on the veloc- ity of light, 80, 83. Formula for computing variation of hght of a star, by Argelander, 168, 169. Galactic circle, average number of stars in, and beyond the, 139. GaUleo indicates the means of discover- ing the parallax, 188. Galle, Dr., on Jupiter's satellites, 50 ; on the photometric arrangement of the fixed stars, 99. Garnet star, the, a star in Cepheus, so called by William Herschel, 166. Gascoigne applies micrometer threads to the telescope, 42. Gauging the heavens, by Sir William Her- schel, 138, 139 ; length of time neces- sary to complete the process, 139. Gauss, on the point of translation in space of the whole solar system, 196. GOliss, Lieutenant, on the change of color of the star tj Argus, 135. Gravitation, not an essential property of bodies, but the result of some higher and still unknown power, 22, 23. Greek sphere, date of the, 119, 121. Green and blue suns, 208. Groups of fixed stars, recognized even by the rudest nations, 117 ; usually the same groups, as the Pleiades, the Great Bear, the Southern Cross, &c., 117, 118. Halley asserted the motion of Sinus and other fixed stars, 26, 27. Hasscnfratz, his description of the raya of stars as caustics on the crystalline lens, 52, 127. Heat, radiating, 35. Hepidannus, monk of Saint Gall, a new star recorded by, 157, 162. Herschel, Sir William, on the vivifying action of the sun's rays, 34 ; his estimate of the number of the fixed stars, 116, 117 ; his " gauging the heavens," and its result, 138, 139. Herschel, Sir John, on the transmission of light, 30 ; on the influence of the sun' rays, 34 ; compares the sun to a pe; petual northern light, 34; on the a' mosphere, 37 ; on the blackness of thi ground of the. heavens, 39 ; on starr seen in daylight, 57; on photometry. INDEX. 217 93 ; photometric arrangement of the fixed stars, 99 ; on the number of stars actually registered, lOG ; on the cause of the red color of Sirius, 131, 132; on tlie Milky Way, 145 ; on the sun's place, 150; on the determined periods ot vari- able stars, IGU ; number of double stars the elements of whose orbits have been determined, 211. Hieroglyphical signification of a star, ac- cording to Ilorapollo, 128. Hind's discovery of a new reddish-yellow star of the fifth magnitude, in Ophiu- chus, 160 ; has since sunk to the eleventh magnitude, 160 ; calculation of the or- bits of double stars by, 211. Hipparchus, on the number of the Plei- ades, 48 ; his catalogue contains the earliest determination of the classes of magnitude of the stars, 90 ; a fragment of his work preserved to us in Aratus, 109. Iloltzmann, on the Indian zodiacs, 121. Homer, not an authority on tlie state of Greek asti'onomy in his day, 119, 123. Humboldt, Alexander von, works of, quoted in various notes : Ansichten der Natur, 79. Asie Centrale, 111, 112. Essai sur la Geogr. des Plantes, 58. Examen Critique de I'Histoire de la G6ographie, 49, 112, 137. Lettre a. M. Schumacher, 93. Re^ueil d'Observations Astrono- miques, 43, 47, 93. Relation Historique du Voyage aux Regions Equinoxialee, 56, 58, 79, 93. Vue des Cordilleres et Monumens des Peuples Indigenes de I'Amer- ique, 121, 136. Humboldt, Wilhelm von, quoted, 25. Huygeos, Christian, his ambitious but un- satisfactory Cosmotheoros, 20 ; exam- ined the Milky Way, 144. Huygens, Constantin, his improvements in the telescope, 62. Hvergelmir, the caldron-spring of the Ed- da-Songs, 8. Indian fiction regarding the stars of the Southern hemisphere, 138. Indian theory of the five elements {Pajit- schatd), 31. Indian zodiacs, their high antiquity doubt- ful. 121. Jacob, Capt., on the intensity of light in the Milky Way, 146; calculation of the orbits of double stars, by, 211. Joannes Philoponus, on gra\'itation, 18. Jupiter's satellites, estimate of the magni- tudes of, 50 ; case in which they were visible by the nalced eye, 52 ; occulta- tious of, observed by dayUght, 62. Kepler, his approach to the mathematical apphcation of the theory of gravitation, 18; rejects the idea of solid orbs, 126. Lalande, his Catalogue, revised by Baily, 115. Vol III— K Laescll's tclcscspc, di8co\-crie8 made by means of, 65. Lcpsius, on the Egyptian name (Sothis) of Sirius, 134. Leslie's photometer, defects of, 96. Libra, the constellation, date of ita intro- duction into the Greek sphere, 120. Light, always refracted, 44 ; prismatic spectra difier in number of dark lines according to their source, 44, 45 ; polar- ization of, 45 ; velocity of, 79 ; ratio of solar, lunar, and stellar, 95 ; variation of, in stars of ascertained and unascer- tained periodicity, 168, 177. Light of the sun and moon, Euler's and Michelo's estimates of the comparative, 95. Limited transparency of the celestial re- gions, 36. Macrobius, " Spha>ra aplanes" of, 27. MiLdler, on Jupiter's satellites, 52 ; on the determined periods of variable stars, 166; on future polar stars, 181 ; on non- luminous stars, 187 ; on the center of gravity of the solar system, 198. Magellanic clouds, known to the Arabs, 91. Magnitude of the stars, classes of, 90, 91. Malus, his discoveries regarding light, 45. " Mappa coelestis" of Schwinck, 140. Ma-tuan-lin, a Chinese astronomical rec- ord of, 109. Mayer, Christian, the first special observer of the fixed stars, 202. Melville Island, temperature of, 36. Michell, John, 95 ; applies the calculus of probabilities to small groups of stars, 201 ; little reliance to be placed in its individual numerical results, 202. Michelo's comparative estimate of the light of the sun and moon, 95. Milky Way, average number of stars in, and beyond tlie, according to Struve, 139 ; intensity of its light in the vicinity of the Southern Cross, 147 ; its course and direction, 147; most 'rf the new stars have appeared in As neighbor- hood, 162. Morin proposes the application of the tel- escope to the discovery of the stars in daylight, 41, 66. Motion, proper, of the fixed stars, 182; variability of, 185, 186. Multiple stars, 130, 199 ; variable bright- ness of, difference of opinion regarding, 210. Nebulae, probably closely crowded stellar swarms, 37. Neptune, the planet, its orbit used as a measure of distance of 61 Cygni, 204. New stars, 151 ; their small number, 151 ; Tycho Brahe's description of one, 152 ; its disappearance, 153 ; speculations as to their origin, 161 ; most have appear- ed near the Millvy Waj', 162. Newton, embraces by his theory of gravi- tation the whole uranological portion of the Cosmos, 21. Non-luminous stars, pj-oblematical exist- ence of, 187. 218 INDEX. Numerical results exceeding the grasp : of the comprehension, furnished alike by the minutest organisnas and the so- | called fixed stars, 30 ; encouraging vie'"V8 on the subject, 31. I i Optical and physical double stars, 200 ; i often confounded, 200. Orbits of double stars, calculation of the, 211; their great eccentricity, 211 ; hy- pothesis, that the brighter of the two stars is at rest, and its companion re- volves about it, probably correct, and a great epoch in cosmical knowledge, 212. Orion, the sis stars of the trapezium of ; the nebula of, probably subject to pe- | culiar physical attraction, 210, 211. Pantschata or Pantschatra, the Indian the- ory of the five elements, 31. | Parallax, means of discovering the, point- ed out by Galileo, 188 ; number of par- allaxes hitherto discovered, 190 ; detail of nine of the best ascertained, 190. \ Penetrating power of the telescope, 145, 146. Periodically changeable stars, 164. Periods within periods of variable stars, ! 168 ; Argelander on, 168. I Peru, climate of, unfavorable to astronom- ical observations, 103. [ Peters on parallax, 192. \ Photometric relations of self luminous bodies, 89 ; scale, 99. ' Photometry yet in its infancy, 94 ; first | numerical scale of, 94 ; Arago's meth- od, 96. Plato on ultimate principles, 12, 13. Pleiades, one of the, invisible to the naked eye of ordinary visual power, 48 ; de- scribed, 141. Pliny estimates the number of stars vis- ible in Italy at only 1600. 108. Poisson, his view of the consolidation of the eartli's strata, 36, 37. Polarization of light, 4.5, 47. Poles of greatest cold, 36. Pouillet's estimate of the temperature of space, 36. Prismatic spectra, 44 ; difference of the dark lines of, 45. Ptolemy, his classification of the stars, 90 ; southern constellations known to, 137. Pulkowa, number of multiple stars dis- covered at, 205, 206. Pythagoreans, mathematical symbolism 'of the, 12. Quaternary systems of stars, 210. Radiating heat, 35. Ratio of various colors among the mul- tiple and double stars, 209. Rays of stars, 52, 126-128 ; number of, in- dicate distances, 128 ; disappear when the star is viewed Uirough a very small aperture, 138, 129. Red stars, 131 ; variable stars mostly red, 165 Reflecting sextants applied to the determ- ination of tlie intensity of stellar light, 92. Reflecting and refracting telescopes, 63. Regal stars of the ancients, 136. Resisting medium, proved by observa- tions on Encke's and other comets, 39. Right ascension, distribution of stars ac- cording to, by Schwinck, 140. Rings, colored, measurement of the in- tensity of light by, 96. Rings, concentric, of stars, the hypothesis of, favored by the most recent observa- tions, 149. Rosse's, Lord, his great telescope, 65 ; its services to astronomy, 66. Ruby-colored stars, 135. Saint Gall, the monk of, observed a new star distant from the Milky Way, 162. Saussure assert.-? that stars may be seen in daylight on the Alps, 57 ; the asser- tion not supported by other travelers' experience, 58. Savary, on the application of the aberra- tion of light to the determination of the parallaxes, 194 ; an early calculator of the orbits of double stars, 211. Schlegel, A. VV. von, probably mistaken as to the high antiquity of the Indian zodiacs, 121. Schwinck, distribution of the fixed stars in his " Mappa coelestis," 140. Scintillation of the stars, 73 ; variations in its intensity, 76 ; mentioned in the Chinese records, 77 : little observed in tropical regions, 77, 78 ; always accom- panied by a change of color, 202. Seidel, his attempt to determine the quan- tities of light of certain stars of the first magnitude, 93. Self-luminous cosmical bodies, or sun.9, 199. Seneca, on discovering new planets, 28. Simplicius, the Eclectic, contrasts the cen- tripetal and centrifugal forces, 12; his vague view of gravitation, 18. Sirius, its absolute intensity of light, 95 ; historically proved to have changed its color, 131 ; its association with the ear- liest development of civilization in the valley of the Nile, 133 ; etymological re- seaixhes concerning, 133, 134. Smyth, Capt. W. H, calculations of the orbits of double stars by, 211. Smyth, Piazzi, on the Milky Way, 146, 147; on a Centauri, 185. Sotliis, the Egyptian name of Sirius, 133. 134. South, Sir James, observation of 380 dou- ble stars by, in conjimction with Sir John Herschel, COo. Southern constellations known to Ptol- emy, 137. Southern Cross, formerly visible on the shores of the Baltic, 138. Southern hcmisi)hore, in parts remark- ably deficient in constellations, 112; dis- tances of its stars, first measured about the end of the sixteenth c(;ntury, 138. INDEX. 2m Space, conjectures regarding, 29 ; com- IKired to the nij'tliic period of history, iiit ; t'alhicy of attempts ntraeasurenieiit of, 30 ; portions between cosmical bod- ies not void, '31; its probable low tem- perature, '3o. Spectra, the prismatic, 44; difference of the dark lines of, according to their sources, 45. " Sphtera aplanes" of Macrobius, 27. Spurious diameter of stars, 130. Star of the Magi, Ideler's explanation of the, 154. Star of St. Catharine, 137. Star systems, partial, in which several suns revolve about a common center of gravity, 204. Stars, division into wandering and non- wandering, dates at least from the early Greek period, 27 ; magnitude and visi- bility of the, 48 ; seen through shafts of chimneys, 57 ; undulation of the, 58, 59 ; observation of, by daylight, 6(j ; scintillation of the, 73 ; variations in its intensity, 76 ; the brightest the earliest named, 89; rays of, 52, 127, 128 ; color of, 130 ; distribution of, 140 ; concentric rings of, 149 ; variable, 161 ; vanished, 163 ; periodically changeable, 164 ; non- luminous, of doubtful existence, 187 ; ratio of colored ctars, 209. Steinheil's experiments on the velocity of the transmission of electricity, 87 ; his photometer, 93. Stellar clusters or swarms, 140. Struve on the velocity of light, 82 ; hie estimate of the number of the fixed stars, 117; on the Milky Way, 139; his Dorpat Tables, 205 ; on the contrasted colors of multiple stars, 207 ; calcula- tion of the orbits of double stars by, 211. Sun, the, described as "a perpetual north- ern light" by Sir William Herschel, 34 ; in intensity of light merely one of the fainter fixed stars, 95 ; its place prob- ably in a comparatively desert region of the starry stratum, and eccentric, 150. Suns, self-luminous cosmical bodies, 199. Table of photometric arrangement of 190 fixed stars, 100 ; of 17 stars of first mag- nitude, 102 ; of the variable stars, by Argelander, 172, and explanatory re- marks, 172-177 ; of ascertained paral- laxes, 193 ; of the elements of the or- bits of double stars, 213. Telescope, the principle of, known to the Arabs, and probably to the Greeks and Romans, 42, 43 ; discoveries by its means, 61 ; successive improvements of the, 62; enormous focal length of some, 63 ; Lord Rosse's, 65 ; Bacon's comparison of, to discovery ships, 130 ; penetrating power of the, 145, 146. Telesio, Bernardino, of Cosenza, his views of the phenomena of inert matter, 16. Temperature, low, of celestial space, 35 ; uncertainty of results vet obtained, 36 ; its influence on the climate of the earth, 37. Temporary stars, list of, 155 ; notes to, 155-160. Tenwry stars, 210. Timur Ulugh lieg, improvements in prac- tical astronomy in the time of, 91. Translation in space of the whole solar system, 195 ; first hinted by Bradley, 195 ; verilii^il by actual observation by William Herschel, J 96; Argelander. Struve, and Gauss's views, 196. Trapezium in the great nebula of Orion, investigated by Sir Wm. Herschel, 203. Tycho Brahe, his vivid description of the appearance of a new star, 152 ; his the- ory oi" the formation of such, 154. "Ultimate mechanical cause" of all mo- tion, unknown, 24, 25. Undulation of the stars, 58, 59. Undulations of rays of light, various lengths of, 84. Unity of nature distinctly taught by Aris- totle, 13-15. Uranological and telluric domain of the Cosmos, 26. Uranus observed as a star by Flamstead and others, 114. Vanished stars, 163 ; statements about such to be received with great caution. 163. Variable brightness of multiple and dou- ble stars, 209. Variable stars, 160-161 ; mostly of a red color, 165; irregularity of their periods, 167 ; table of, 172. Velocity of light, 79 ; methods of determ- ining, 80 ; applied to the determination of the parallax, 195. Visibility of objects, 55 ; how modified, 56. Vision, natural and telescopic, 41 ; aver- age natural, 47, 48 ; remarkable in- stances of acute natural, 52, 55. Wheatstone's experiments with revolv- ing mirrors, 45 ; velocity of electrical light determined by, 86. White Ox, name given to the nebula now known as one of the Magellanic clouds, 91. Wollaston's photometric researches, 95. Wright, of Durham, his view of the origin of the form of the Milky Way, 149. Yggdrasil, the World-tree of the Edda- Songs, 8. Zodiac, period of its introduction into the Greek sphere, 119; its origin among the Chaldeans, 120 ; the Greeks borrowed from them only the idea of the division, and filled its signs with their own rutas- terisms, 120; great antiquity of the In- dian very doubtful, 121. Zodiacal light, Sir John Herschel on the, 40. THE END. WILLIAMS COLLEGE 3 0001 038243061 SCHOW Q158 .H9 V. 3 Humboldt, Alexander von, 1769-1859 DATE DUE r ■> \m i '■> i -) > ■r,' , - 1 :Y ^••- l);iil: / J ^rrfirfrrjr?: \Uii\\-\l\\\i\Mitfii(i[\\\