Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 471 pages of information about Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men.

Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 471 pages of information about Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men.
both planets would return to the same condition at each successive conjunction.  But in consequence of the ellipticity of the orbits, the retarding effect of the disturbing force is manifestly no longer exactly compensated by the accelerative effect, and hence at the close of each synodic revolution, there remains a minute outstanding alteration in the movement of each planet.  A similar effect will he produced at each of the three points of conjunction; and as the perturbations which thus ensue do not generally compensate each other, there will remain a minute outstanding perturbation as the result of every three conjunctions.  The effect produced being of the same kind (whether tending to accelerate or retard the movement of the planet) for every such triple conjunction, it is plain that the action of the disturbing forces would ultimately lead to a serious derangement of the movements of both planets.  All this is founded on the supposition that the mean motions of the two planets are to each other as two to five; but in reality, this relation does not exactly hold.  In fact while Jupiter requires 21,663 days to accomplish five revolutions, Saturn effects two revolutions in 21,518 days.  Hence when Jupiter, after completing his fifth revolution, arrives at P, Saturn will have advanced a little beyond P’, and the conjunction of the two planets will occur at P, P’ when they have both described around S an additional arc of about 8 deg..  In the same way it may be shown that the two succeeding conjunctions will take place at the points q, q’, r, r’ respectively 8 deg. in advance of Q, Q’, R, R’.  Thus we see that the points of conjunction will travel with extreme slowness in the same direction as that in which the planets revolve.  Now since the angular distance between P and R is 120 deg., and since in a period of three synodic revolutions or 21,758 days, the line of conjunction travels through an arc of 8 deg., it follows that in 892 years the conjunction of the two planets will have advanced from P, P’ to R, R’.  In reality, the time of travelling from P, P’ to R, R’ is somewhat longer from the indirect effects of planetary perturbation, amounting to 920 years.  In an equal period of time the conjunction of the two planets will advance from Q, Q’ to R, R’ and from R, R’ to P, P’.  During the half of this period the perturbative effect resulting from every triple conjunction will lie constantly in one direction, and during the other half it will lie in the contrary direction; that is to say, during a period of 460 years the mean motion of the disturbed planet will be continually accelerated, and, in like manner, during an equal period it will be continually retarded.  In the case of Jupiter disturbed by Saturn, the inequality in longitude amounts at its maximum to 21’; in the converse case of Saturn disturbed by Jupiter, the inequality is more considerable in consequence of the greater mass of the disturbing planet, amounting at its maximum to 49’.  In accordance with
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Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.