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Astronomical Discovery

Astronomical Discovery

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Chapter 1 URANUS AND EROS

Word Count: 8606    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

view of

agination pictures him spending the whole night in watching the skies from a high tower through a long telescope, occasionally rewarded by the finding of something new, without much mental effort. I propose to compare with this romantic picture some of the a

s' l

n finds expression in

ke some watche

lanet swims

llusion into the words quoted, when we remember the whole circumstances under which they were written; but perhaps I may be forgiven if I compare them especially with the actual discovery of the planet Uranus, for the reason that this was by far the largest of the five-far larger than any other planet known except Jupiter and Saturn, while the others were far smaller-and that Keats is using throughout the po

net

ing into Chap

avell'd in the

ly states and

estern islan

in fealty to

de expanse ha

'd Homer ruled

er breathe it

apman speak out

ke some watche

lanet swims

Cortez when

the Pacific-a

h other with

on a peak

ts. In one respect his words are true to the life or the letter. If ever there was a "watcher of the skies," William Herschel was entitled to the name. It was his custom to watch them the whole night through, from the earliest possible mome

CAL TRANSA

ccount o

Hersche

Dr. Watson, jun.,

pril 2

l annou

rum, I perceived one that appeared visibly larger than the rest; being struck with its uncommon magnitude, I compared it to H Geminorum and

27. From experience I knew that the diameters of the fixed stars are not proportionally magnified with higher powers as the planets are; therefore I now put on the powers of 460 and 932, and found the diameter of the comet increased in proportion to the power, as it ought to be, on a supposition of its not being a fixed star, while the diameters of the stars to which I compared it were not

remely small angles, such as do not exceed a few seconds, true to 6, 8, or 10 thirds at most; and in the worst situations true to 20 or 30 thirds; I have therefore given the measures of the comet's diameter in seconds and thirds. And the

first a

all. Would any other observer have noticed the difference at all? Certainly several good observers had looked at the object before, and looked at it with the care necessary to record its position, without noting any peculiarity. Their observations were recovered subsequently and used to fix the orbit of the new planet more accurately. I shall remind you in the next chapter that Uranus had been observed in this way no less than seventeen times by first-rate observers without exciting their attention to anything remarkable. The first occasion was in 1690, nearly a century before Herschel's grand discovery, and these chance observations, which lay so long unnoticed as in some way erroneous, subsequently proved to be of the utmost value in fixing the orbit of the new planet. But there is even more striking testimony than t

been able to return several times to this star or comet; for absolutely it has been n

mming i

inary star, evade detection to the utmost of its power; so that the keenest eye, the most alert attention, the most determined following up of a mere hint, were all needed to unmask it.

s may happ

ut sensible effort or care on the part of the discoverer. But these may be fairly called exceptions; in the vast majority of cases hard work and a keen eye are necessary to make the discovery. The relative importance of these two factors of course varies in different cases; for the detection of Uranus perhaps the keen eye may be put in the first place, though we must not forget the diligent watching which gave it opportunity. Other cases of planetary discovery may be attri

illiam Herschel

ph Banks, B

lar System. A body so nearly related to us by its similar condition and situation in the unbounded expanse of the starry heavens, must often be the subject of conversation, not only of astr

ology: if in any future age it should be asked, when this last found planet was discovered? It would be a very satisfactory answer to say, 'In the reign of King George the Third.' As a philosopher then, the name Georgium Sidus presents itself to me, as an appellation which will conveniently convey the information of the time and country where and when it was brought to view. But as a subject of the best of kings, who is the liberal protector of every art and science

gium

c assuesc

. Ge

t to us) first began to shin

ethod of communicating that name to the literati of Europe, which I hope they will receive with pleasu

ersc

y on the Continent.Herschel. Lalande courteously proposed the name of Herschel for the new planet, in honour of the discoverer, and this name was used in France; but Bode, on the other hand, was in favour of retaining the old practice simply, and calling the new planet Uranus. All three names seem to have been used for many years. Only the other day I was interested to see an old pack of cards, used for playing a parlour game of Astronomy, in which the nam

finally

deal in the next chapter, which led to this official change; for in the v

turbations

same planet in the same work. But Le Verrier's paper on the same t

lanets had been found, as the practical result of a definite search, although the guiding principle was such as cannot command our admiration to quite the same extent as in the case of Neptune. To explain it I must say something of the relative sizes of the orbits in which planets move round the sun. These orbits are, as we know, ellipses; but they are very nearly circles, an

istances of th

howing "Bo

me

Distan

, t

of

"Bode

ally fo

us, but

tice by

y 4 4

7 4

th 10 4

5 4 +

) 4 +

52 4 +

95 4 +

192 4 +

he end of the arrangement, the question arose whether the gap above noticed was real, or whether there was perhaps another planet which had hitherto escaped notice, revolving in an orbit represented by this blank term. This question had indeed been asked even before the discovery of Uranus, by Bode, a young astronomer of Berlin; and for fifteen years he kept steadily in view this idea of finding a planet to fill the vacant interval. The search would be a very arduous one, involving a careful scrutiny, not perhaps of the whole heavens, but of a considerable portion of it along the Zodiac; too great for one would-be discoverer single-handed;Search for it. but in September 1800 Bode succeeded in organising a band of six German astronomers (including himself) for the purpose of conducting this search. They divided the Zodiac into twenty-four zones, and were assigning the zones to the different observers, when they were startled by the news that the missing planet had been accidentally found by Piazzi in the constellation Taurus. The discovery was made somewhat dramatically on the first evening of the nineteenth century (January 1, 1801).Accidental discovery. Piazzi was not looking

's fo

lled his future reputation by publishing a dissertation proving conclusively that the number of the planets could not be greater than seven, and pour

net los

t some notion of it may be obtained, by those unacquainted with mathematics, from a rough analogy. If we are given a portion of a circle, we can, with the help of a pair of compasses, complete the circle: we can find the centre from which the arc is struck, either by geometrical methods, or by a few experimental trials, and then fill in the rest of the circumference. If the arc given is large we can do this with certainty and accuracy; but if the arc is small it is difficult to make quite sure of the centre, and our drawi

ws how to

an Gauss, who set himself to make the best of the observation available, and produced his classical work, the Theoria Motus, which is the standard work for such calculations to the present day. May we look for

om the Pre

ria

eoria

anet Which Had Been Detected On January 1st of That Year at the Observatory Of Palermo; and Shortly Afterwards the Actual Observations Which Had Been Made Between January 1st And February 11th by the Renowned Philosopher Piazzi Were Published. Nowhere in All The Annals of Astronomy Do We Find Such an Important Occasion; and Scarcely Is It Possible To Imagine a More Important Opportunity for Pointing Out, As Emphatically As Possible, the Importance Of That Problem, As at the Moment When Every Hope of Re-discovering, Among the Innumerable Little Stars of Heaven, That Mite of a Planet Which Had Been Lost To Sight for Nearly a Year, Depended Entirely on an Approximate Knowledge Of Its Orbit, Which Must Be Deduced From Those Scanty Observations. Could I Ever Have

is any reason for repenting of my delay. For the methods which I had repeatedly applied from the beginning admitted of so many and such important variations, that scarcely a vestige of resemblance remains between the method by which formerly I had arrived at the orbit of Ceres and the practice which I deal with in this work. Although indeed it would be alien to my intention to write a complete history about all these researches which I have gradually brought to even greater perfection, yet on many occasions, especially whenever I was confronted by some particularly serious problem, I thought that the first meth

been an arduous search, which led to a curious consequence.Another planet found. Olbers had made himself so familiar with all the small stars along the track which was being searched for the missing body, that he was at once struck by the appearance of a stranger near the spot where he had just identified Ceres. At first he thought this must be some star

s of many

ad exploded. Hence the search might be most profitably conducted in the neighbourhood of the spot where the two first fragments (which had been named Ceres and Pallas) had already been found. We now have good reason to believe that this view is a mistaken one, but nevertheless it was apparently confirmed by the discovery of two more bodies of the same kind, which were called Juno and Vesta; the second of these being found by Olbers himself after three years' patien

nets, 180

e. Discove

s Piaz

as Olb

Hardi

a Olbe

ea Henc

Henck

s Hin

ra Hi

s Grah

a De Gas

ope De Gas

oria Hi

a De Gas

ore any further addition was made;Hencke's long search. and it was not until the end of 1845 that Astraea was found by an ex-postmaster of the Prussian town of Driessen, by name Hencke, who, in spite of the general disbelief in the existence of any more planets, set himself diligently to search for them, and toiled for fifteen long years before at length reaping his reward. Others then resumed the search; Hind, the observer of an

of Messrs. M

C. A

A. G

HE NINTH MINOR

fifteen years of search before success to recognise what vast stores of patience and diligence were required in carrying out the search.The photographic method. But of late years photography has effected a great revolution in this respect. It is no longer necessary to do more than set what Sir Robert Ball has called a "star-trap," or rather planet-trap. If a photograph be taken of a region of the heavens, by the methods familiar to astronomers, so that each star makes a round do

Number of Minor

Decade s

altogether 1

o 1860

o 1870

1880-

o 1890

0- " 180 an

901

02 "

03 "

al

t announcements turned out t

ty of

roposed to call No. 12 (discovered in 1850, in London, by Mr. Hind) "Victoria," there was an outcry by foreign astronomers that by a subterfuge the name of a reigning monarch was again being proposed for a planet, and considerable opposition was manifested, especially in America. But it became clear, as other discoveries were added, that the list of goddesses, or even humbler mythological people, would not be large enough to go round if we were so se

me. No

ia 389 I

ina 391

ymno 4

sa 443 Ph

usa 457 A

rda 462

fornia 4

nta 484 Pi

ina 503

Il

inor planet No. 250 has been named 'Bettina' by Baron Albert de Rothschild." I have not heard, however, that this precedent has been followed in other cases, and the ingenuity of discoverers was so much overtaxed towards the end of last century that the naming of their planets fell into arrears. Recently a Commission, which has been established to look after these small bodies generally, issued a notice that unless the naming was accomplished before a certain date it would be ruthlessly taken out of the hands of the negligent discoverers. The provisional letters.Perhaps we may notice, before passing on, the provisional system which was adopted to fill up the interval required for finding a suitable name, and required also for making sure that the planet was in fact a new one, and not merely an old one rediscovered. There was a system of numbering in existence as well as of na

ate between that of Mars and that of Jupiter, but the little planet which took the symbol DQ, and afterwards the name of Eros, was found to have a mean distance actually less than tha

it of

prospect two transits of Venus, in 1874 and 1882, and it was hoped that these would give opportunities of a special kind for the measurement of thi

g.

he difference in path, it is easy to invert the problem, and calculate the sun's distance from the knowledge of the observed difference in path. Accordingly, observers were to be scattered, not merely to two, but to many stations over the face of the earth, to observe the exact path taken by Venus in transit over the sun's disc as seen from their station; and especially to observe the exact times of beginning and ending of the transit; and, by comparison of their results, it was hoped to determine this very important quantity, the sun's distance. It was known from previous experience that there were certain difficulties in observing very exactly the beginning and

, and the times recorded by different observers were compared with the true time, which could, in this case of a model, be determined. In this way it was hoped that the habit of each observer, his "personal equation" as it is called, could be determined beforehand, and allowed for as a correction when he came to observe the actual transit.Failure. The result, however, was a great disappointment. The actual appearances were found to be totally different in character from those shown by the model; chiefly, perhaps, because it had been impossible to imitate with a model the effect of the atmosphere which surrounds the planet Ven

ions of Miles, as found

n 96 million miles (Gilliss and Gould, 1856) and 91

British observations of 1874), 92? million (Stone, from British observations of 1

e about 100,000 miles over this figure: but the observations of Victoria, Iris, and Sappho, w

transit of 1882 was observed, an energetic astronomer, Dr. David Gill, had alr

od for sun'

his is not so for the planets.Photography. We can photograph a planet and the stars surrounding it on the same plate, and then by careful measurement determine its exact position among the stars; and since this position differs slightly according to the situation of the observer on the earth's surface, by comparing two photographs taken at stations a known distance apart we can find the distance of the planet from the earth; and hence, as above remarked, the distance of the sun and all the other members of the solar system. Or, instead of taking photographs from two different stations, we can take from the same station two photographs at times separated by a known interval. For in that interval the station will have been carried by the earth's rotation some thousands of miles away from its former position, and becomes virtually a second station separated from the first by a distance which is known accurately when we know the elapsed time. Again, instead of taking photographs, and from them measuring the pos

os was important, for Mars was no longer the known planet capable

stified by finding that the results from these three different sets of observations agreed well among themselves, and differed slightly from that given by the observations of Mars.Eros. Hence it seems conclusively proved that one of these bodies is a better selection than Mars in any case, and the discovery of Eros, which offered the advantage of greater proximity in addition, was hailed as a new opportunity of a most welcome kind. It was seen by a little calculation that in the winter of 1900-1901 the planet would come very near the earth; not the nearest possible (for it was also realised that a still better opportunity had occurred in 1894, though it was lost because the planet had not yet been discovered), but still the nearest approach which would occur for some thirty years; and extensive, though somewhat hasty, preparations were made t

bour. This rule will not, perhaps, help us very much in choosing what to work at; indeed, it is no rule at all, for it leaves us the whole field of choice unlimited. But this negative result will recur again and again as we examine the lessons taught by discoveries: there seem to be no rules at all. Whenever we seem to be able to deduce one from an experience, some other experience wil

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