Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- SUPPLEMENT
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PRINCIPAL AUTHORITIES
- Errata
- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy
- BOOK I A SKETCH OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAPTER I THE SUN
- CHAPTER II THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER III VULCAN
- CHAPTER IV MERCURY
- CHAPTER V VENUS
- CHAPTER VI THE EARTH
- CHAPTER VII THE MOON
- CHAPTER VIII MARS
- CHAPTER IX THE MINOR PLANETS
- CHAPTER X JUPITER
- CHAPTER XI SATURN
- CHAPTER XII URANUS
- CHAPTER XIII NEPTUNE
- BOOK II ECLIPSES AND THEIR ASSOCIATED PHENOMENA
- BOOK X METEORIC ASTRONOMY
- APPENDICES
- INDEX TO SUBJECTS
- INDEX TO NAMES
- Plate section
CHAPTER I - THE SUN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- SUPPLEMENT
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PRINCIPAL AUTHORITIES
- Errata
- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy
- BOOK I A SKETCH OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAPTER I THE SUN
- CHAPTER II THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER III VULCAN
- CHAPTER IV MERCURY
- CHAPTER V VENUS
- CHAPTER VI THE EARTH
- CHAPTER VII THE MOON
- CHAPTER VIII MARS
- CHAPTER IX THE MINOR PLANETS
- CHAPTER X JUPITER
- CHAPTER XI SATURN
- CHAPTER XII URANUS
- CHAPTER XIII NEPTUNE
- BOOK II ECLIPSES AND THEIR ASSOCIATED PHENOMENA
- BOOK X METEORIC ASTRONOMY
- APPENDICES
- INDEX TO SUBJECTS
- INDEX TO NAMES
- Plate section
Summary
The Sun as the centre of the system will first occupy our attention. The distance of the Earth from the Sun, which is usually employed by astronomers as a unit of measurement, has been ascertained with great accuracy, from the transit of Venus over the disc of the latter in 1769, to be 95,298,260 miles, a distance which every successive transit will render more and more exactly known. Having ascertained the true mean distance of the Earth from the Sun, it is not difficult to determine, by trigonometry, the true diameter of the latter body, its apparent diameter being known from observation; and as the most reliable results prove that the Sun, in the above position, subtends an angle of about 32', it follows that its true diameter is about 887,000 miles; the volume of this enormous globe, therefore, exceeds that of the Earth 1,400,000 times; in other words, it would take 1,400,000 Earths to make up a globe of the same size as the Sun. The Sun's mass, or attractive power, exceeds that of the Earth 355,000 times, and is 476 times greater than the masses of all the planets put together.
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- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy , pp. 3 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1861