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Friday, December 11, 2009

PURPLE PATCH: Side-lights on astronomy -Simon Newcomb

 Astronomy is more intimately connected than any other science with the history 
of mankind. While chemistry, physics, and we might say all sciences which 
pertain to things on the earth, are comparatively modern, we find that 
contemplative men engaged in the study of the celestial motions even before the 
commencement of authentic history. The earliest navigators of whom we know must 
have been aware that the earth was round. This fact was certainly understood by 
the ancient Greeks and Egyptians, as well as it is at the present day. True, 
they did not know that the earth revolved on its axis, but thought that the 
heavens and all that in them is performed a daily revolution around our globe, 
which was, therefore, the centre of the universe. It was the cynosure, or 
constellation of the Little Bear, by which the sailors used to guide their 
ships before the discovery of the mariner's compass. Thus we see both a 
practical and contemplative side to astronomy through all history. The world 
owes two debts to that science: one for its practical uses, and the other for 
the ideas it has afforded us of the immensity of creation. 

The practical uses of astronomy are of two kinds: one relates to geography; the 
other to times, seasons, and chronology. Every navigator who sails long out of 
sight of land must be something of an astronomer. His compass tells him where 
are east, west, north, and south, but it gives him no information as to where 
on the wide ocean he may be, or whither the currents may be carrying him. Even 
with the swiftest modern steamers it is not safe to trust to the compass in 
crossing the Atlantic. A number of years ago the steamer City of Washington set 
out on her usual voyage from Liverpool to New York. By rare bad luck the 
weather was stormy or cloudy during her whole passage, so that the captain 
could not get a sight on the sun, and therefore had to trust to his compass and 
his log-line, the former telling him in what direction he had steamed, and the 
latter how fast he was going each hour. The result was that the ship ran ashore 
on the coast of Nova Scotia, when the captain thought he was approaching 
Nantucket. 

Not only the navigator but the surveyor in the western wilds must depend on 
astronomical observations to learn his exact position on the earth's surface, 
or the latitude and longitude of the camp which he occupies. He is able to do 
this because the earth is round, and the direction of the plumb-line not 
exactly the same at any two places. Let us suppose that the earth stood still, 
so as not to revolve on its axis at all. Then we should always see the stars at 
rest and the star which was in the zenith of any place, say a farm-house in New 
York, at any time, would be there every night and every hour of the year. Now 
the zenith is simply the point from which the plumb-line seems to drop. Lie on 
the ground; hang a plummet above your head, sight on the line with one eye, and 
the direction of the sight will be the zenith of your place. Suppose the earth 
was still, and a certain star was at your zenith. Then if you went to another 
place a mile away, the direction of the plumb-line would be slightly different. 
The change would, indeed, be very small, so small that you could not detect it 
by sighting with the plumb-line. But astronomers and surveyors have vastly more 
accurate instruments than the plumb-line and the eye, instruments by which a 
deviation that the unaided eye could not detect can be seen and measured. 
Instead of the plumb-line they use a spirit-level or a basin of quicksilver. 
The surface of quicksilver is exactly level and so at right angles to the true 
direction of the plumb-line or the force of gravity. Its direction is therefore 
a little different at two different places on the surface, and the change can 
be measured by its effect on the apparent direction of a star seen by 
reflection from the surface. 

It is true that a considerable distance on the earth's surface will seem very 
small in its effect on the position of a star. Suppose there were two stars in 
the heavens, the one in the zenith of the place where you now stand, and the 
other in the zenith of a place a mile away. To the best eye unaided by a 
telescope those two stars would look like a single one. But let the two places 
be five miles apart, and the eye could see that there were two of them. A good 
telescope could distinguish between two stars corresponding to places not more 
than a hundred feet apart. The most exact measurements can determine distances 
ranging from thirty to sixty feet. If a skilful astronomical observer should 
mount a telescope on your premises, and determine his latitude by observations 
on two or three evenings, and then you should try to trick him by taking up the 
instrument and putting it at another point one hundred feet north or south, he 
would find out that something was wrong by a single night's work. 

We cannot measure across oceans from island to island. Without astronomy we 
should know nothing of the distance between New York and Liverpool, except by 
the time which it took steamers to run it, a measure which would be very 
uncertain indeed. But by the aid of astronomical observations and the Atlantic 
cables the distance is found within a few hundred yards.

(This extract is taken from Side-lights on Astronomy and Kindred Fields of 
Popular Science by Simon Newcomb)

Simon Newcomb was a Canadian-American astronomer and mathematician

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