Astronomy in a Nutshell
9781465685155
213 pages
Library of Alexandria
Overview
Definition of Astronomy. Astronomy has to do with the earth, sun, moon, planets, comets, meteors, stars, and nebulæ; in other words, with the universe, or “the aggregate of existing things.” It is the most ancient of all sciences. The derivation of the name from two Greek words, aster, “star,” and nomos, “law,” indicates its nature. It deals with the law of the stars—the word “star” being understood, in its widest signification, as including every heavenly body of whatever kind. The earth itself is such a body. Since we happen to live on the earth, it becomes our standpoint in space, from which we look out at the others. But, if we lived on some other planet, we would see the earth as a distant body in the sky, just as we now see Jupiter or Mars. Astronomy teaches us that everything in the universe, from the sun and the moon to the most remote star or the most extraordinary nebula, is related to the earth. All are made of similar elementary substances and all obey similar physical laws. The same substance which is a solid upon the earth may be a gas or a vapour in the sun, but that does not alter its essential nature. Iron appears in the sun in the form of a hot vapour, but fundamentally it is the same substance which exists on the earth as a hard, tough, and heavy metal. Its different states depend upon the temperature to which it is subjected. The earth is a cool body, while the sun is an intensely hot one; consequently iron is solid on the earth and vaporous in the sun, just as in winter water is solid ice on the surface of a pond and steamy vapour over the boiler in the kitchen. Even on the earth we can make iron liquid in a blast furnace, and with the still greater temperatures obtainable in a laboratory we can turn it into vapour, thus reducing it to something like the state in which it regularly exists in the sun. This fact, that the entire universe is made up of similar substances, differing only in state according to the local circumstances affecting them, is the greatest thing that astronomy has to tell us. It may be regarded as the fundamental law of the stars. The Situation of the Earth in the Heavens. One of the greatest triumphs of human intelligence is the discovery of the real place which the earth occupies in the universe. This discovery has been made in spite of the most deceptive appearances. If we accepted the sole evidence of our eyes, as men once did, we could only conclude that the earth was the centre of the universe. In the daytime we see the sun apparently moving through the sky from east to west, as if it were travelling in a circle round the earth, overhead by day and underfoot at night. In the night-time, we see the stars apparently travelling round the earth in the same way as the sun. The fact is, that all of them are virtually motionless with regard to the earth, and their apparent movements through the sky are produced by the earth's rotation on its axis. The earth turns round on itself once every twenty-four hours, like a spinning ball. Imagine a fly on a rotating school globe; the whole room would appear to the fly to be revolving round it as the heavens appear to revolve round the earth. It would have to be a very intelligent insect to correct the deceptive evidence of its eyes. The actual facts, revealed by many centuries of observation and reasoning, are that the earth is a rotating globe, turning once on its axis every twenty-four hours and revolving once round the sun every three hundred and sixty-five days. The sun is also a globe, 1,300,000 times larger than the earth, but so hot that it glows with intense brilliance, while the substances of which it consists are kept in a gaseous or vaporous state. Besides the earth there are seven other principal globes, or planets, which revolve round the sun, at various distances and in various periods, and, in addition to these, there are hundreds of smaller bodies, called asteroids or small planets.