Other Worlds eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 180 pages of information about Other Worlds.

Other Worlds eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 180 pages of information about Other Worlds.
The wonder of the great rings—­Saturn’s great distance and long year—­The least dense of all the planets—­It would float in water—­What kind of a world is it?—­Sir Humphry Davy’s imaginary inhabitants of Saturn—­Facts about the rings, which are a phenomenon unparalleled in the visible universe—­The surprising nature of the rings, as revealed by mathematics and the spectroscope—­The question of their origin and ultimate fate—­Dr. Dick’s idea of their habitability—­Swedenborg’s curious description of the appearance of the rings from Saturn—­Is Saturn a globe of vapor, or of dust?—­The nine satellites and “Roche’s limit”—­The play of spectacular shadows in the Saturnian system—­Uranus and Neptune—­Is there a yet undiscovered planet greater than Jupiter?

CHAPTER VIII

THE MOON, CHILD OF THE EARTH AND THE SUN 212

The moon a favorite subject for intellectual speculation—­Its nearness to the earth graphically illustrated—­Ideas of the ancients—­Galileo’s discoveries—­What first raised a serious question as to its habitability—­Singularity of the moon’s motions—­Appearance of its surface to the naked eye and with the telescope—­The “seas” and the wonderful mountains and craters—­A terrible abyss described—­Tycho’s mysterious rays—­Difference between lunar and terrestrial volcanoes—­Mountain-ringed valleys—­Gigantic cracks in the lunar globe—­Slight force of gravity of the moon and some interesting deductions—­The moon a world of giantism—­What kind of atmospheric gases can the moon contain—­The question of water and of former oceans—­The great volcanic cataclysm in the moon’s history—­Evidence of volcanic and other changes now occurring—­Is there vegetation on the moon?—­Lunar day and night—­The earth as seen from the moon—­Discoveries yet to be made

CHAPTER IX

HOW TO FIND THE PLANETS 256

It is easy to make acquaintance with the planets and to follow them among the stars—­The first step a knowledge of the constellations—­How this is to be acquired—­How to use the Nautical Almanac in connection with the charts in this book—­The visibility of Mercury and Venus—­The oppositions of Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn

INDEX 277

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
Chart of Mars Frontispiece

Diagram showing causes of day and night on portions of Mercury 35

Regions of day and night on Mercury 38

Venus’s atmosphere seen as a ring of light 56

View of Jupiter facing 168

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Other Worlds from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.