Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- ADDENDA
- CHAPTER I THE TASK OF SIDEREAL ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER II THE METHODS OF SIDEREAL RESEARCH
- CHAPTER III SIRIAN AND SOLAR STARS
- CHAPTER IV STARS WITH BANDED SPECTRA
- CHAPTER V GASEOUS STARS AND NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER VI SIDEREAL EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VII TEMPORARY STARS
- CHAPTER VIII VARIABLE STARS OF LONG PERIOD
- CHAPTER IX VARIABLE STARS OF SHORT PERIOD
- CHAPTER X THE COLOURS OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XI DOUBLE STARS
- CHAPTER XII VARIABLE DOUBLE STARS
- CHAPTER XIII STELLAR ORBITS
- CHAPTER XIV MULTIPLE STARS
- CHAPTER XV THE PLEIADES
- CHAPTER XVI STAR CLUSTERS
- CHAPTER XVII THE FORMS OF NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XVIII THE GREAT NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XIX THE NATURE AND CHANGES OF NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XX THE DISTANCES OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XXI TRANSLATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XXII THE PROPER MOTIONS OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XXIII THE MILKY WAY
- CHAPTER XXIV STATUS OF THE NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XXV THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE HEAVENS
- APPENDIX.—TABLES OF STELLAR DATA
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XX - THE DISTANCES OF THE STARS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- ADDENDA
- CHAPTER I THE TASK OF SIDEREAL ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER II THE METHODS OF SIDEREAL RESEARCH
- CHAPTER III SIRIAN AND SOLAR STARS
- CHAPTER IV STARS WITH BANDED SPECTRA
- CHAPTER V GASEOUS STARS AND NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER VI SIDEREAL EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VII TEMPORARY STARS
- CHAPTER VIII VARIABLE STARS OF LONG PERIOD
- CHAPTER IX VARIABLE STARS OF SHORT PERIOD
- CHAPTER X THE COLOURS OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XI DOUBLE STARS
- CHAPTER XII VARIABLE DOUBLE STARS
- CHAPTER XIII STELLAR ORBITS
- CHAPTER XIV MULTIPLE STARS
- CHAPTER XV THE PLEIADES
- CHAPTER XVI STAR CLUSTERS
- CHAPTER XVII THE FORMS OF NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XVIII THE GREAT NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XIX THE NATURE AND CHANGES OF NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XX THE DISTANCES OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XXI TRANSLATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- CHAPTER XXII THE PROPER MOTIONS OF THE STARS
- CHAPTER XXIII THE MILKY WAY
- CHAPTER XXIV STATUS OF THE NEBULÆ
- CHAPTER XXV THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE HEAVENS
- APPENDIX.—TABLES OF STELLAR DATA
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
The most arduous among the problems of stellar astronomy was, singularly enough, the first to be attacked. It was attacked, indeed, before the possibility was even remotely discerned that stellar astronomy might come to be regarded as a substantive branch of science. In the hope, not of penetrating the inscrutable secrets of the remote sphere of the fixed stars, but of solving doubts about the motion of the earth, Copernicus, Tycho, and Galileo led the way in the long series of experiments on the apparent displacements of the stars resulting from our own annual travels round the sun. The interest of the question whether such displacements existed or not was for them of a wholly ‘parochial’ kind; it lay in the test they afforded as to the reality of the terrestrial revolutions. Should the stars be found to shift ever so little by the effect of perspective, then the heliocentric theory could no longer be gainsaid; if, on the contrary, they ignored sublunary circlings, the ‘pill’ (as Kepler termed it) to be swallowed by Copernicans was indeed a huge one. For the distances to which the fixed stars had, in that case, to be relegated, seemed in those times monstrous and incredible; and monstrous and incredible they would appear still, were we not forced by irrecusable evidence to believe in them.
From the beginning to the end (so far) of the history of these inquiries, it may be taken almost as an axiom that the largest ostensible parallaxes have been obtained by the worst means.
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- The System of the Stars , pp. 297 - 318Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1890