TABLES
TABLE I
THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
| Planet | Mean Distance from Sun | Period of Revolution | Velocity in Orbit (Miles per Second) | Eccentricity of Orbit | Inclination of Orbit to Ecliptic | |
| In Miles | Relative to Earth's Distance | |||||
| Mercury | 36,000,000 | 0.39 | 87.97 days | 23 to 35 | .2056 | 7°0' |
| Venus | 67,200,000 | 0.72 | 224.70 days | 21.9 | .0068 | 323 |
| Earth | 92,900,000 | 1.00 | 365.25 days | 18.5 | .0167 | 00 |
| Mars | 141,500,000 | 1.52 | 1.88 years | 15.0 | .0933 | 151 |
| Asteroids[1] | ........... | 2.0-5.2 | ......... | ...... | .00 to .40 | 0° to 35° |
| Jupiter | 483,300,000 | 5.20 | 11.86 years | 8.1 | .0484 | 118 |
| Saturn | 886,000,000 | 9.54 | 29.46 years | 6.0 | .0558 | 229 |
| Uranus | 1,781,900,000 | 19.19 | 84.02 years | 4.2 | .0471 | 046 |
| Neptune | 2,971,600,000 | 30.07 | 164.79 years | 3.4 | .0085 | 147 |
[THE PRINCIPAL ELEMENTS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM (Continued)]
| Name | Mean Diameter in Miles | Mass | Volume | Density Relative to that of Water | Surface Gravity (Relative to Earth's) | Velocity of Escape (Miles per Second) | Reflecting Power in Per Cent | Period of Axial Rotation | Inclination of Equator to Orbit |
| Relative to Earth's | |||||||||
| Sun | 864,392 | 329,390 | 1,300,000 | 1.40 | 27.64 | 383 | ..... | 25 d. 8 h. | 7°15' |
| Moon | 2,160 | .012 | .02 | 3.34 | 0.16 | 1.5 | 7 | 27 d. 7.7 h. | 641 |
| Mercury | 3,009 | .045 | .06 | 4.48? | 0.31? | 2.2 | 7 | 88 d. ? | ? |
| Venus | 7,575 | .807 | .92 | 4.85? | 0.85 | 6.6 | 59 | ? | ? |
| Earth | 7,918 | 1.000 | 1.00 | 5.53 | 1.00 | 7 | 44 | 23 h. 56 m. | 2327 |
| Mars | 4,216 | .106 | .15 | 3.58 | 0.35 | 1.5 | 15 | 2437 | 2359 |
| Asteroids | 5-485[2] | very small | very small | 3.3 | .0008 to .04 | .33 to .01 | 7 | ..... | ..... |
| Jupiter | 88,392 | 314.50 | 1309 | 1.25 | 2.52 | 37 | 56 | 955± | 3° |
| Saturn | 74,163 | 94.07 | 760 | 0.63 | 1.07 | 22 | 63 | 1014± | 27° |
| Uranus | 30,878 | 14.40 | 65 | 1.44 | 0.99 | 13 | 63 | 1045± | ? |
| Neptune | 32,932 | 16.72 | 85 | 1.09 | 0.87 | 14 | 73 | ? | ? |
TABLE II
THE SATELLITES OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
| Name | Apparent Magnitude | Mean Distance from Planet's Center, in miles | Diameter in miles | Period of Revolution | Discoverer | Year of Discovery |
| THE EARTH | ||||||
| Moon | 238,857 | 2160 | 27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes | |||
| MARS | ||||||
| 1. Phobos | 14 | 5,850 | 10? | 0 days, 7 hours, 39 minutes | Asaph Hall | 1877 |
| 2. Deimos | 13 | 14,650 | 10? | 1 day, 6 hours, 17 minutes | Asaph Hall | 1877 |
| JUPITER | ||||||
| v. | 13 | 112,500 | 100? | 0 day, 11 hours, 57 minutes | Barnard | 1892 |
| i. | 6.5 | 261,000 | 2452 | 1 day, 18 hours, 28 minutes | Galileo | 1610 |
| ii. | 6.5 | 415,000 | 2045 | 3 days, 13 hours, 14 minutes | Galileo | 1610 |
| iii. | 6 | 664,000 | 3558 | 7 days, 3 hours, 43 minutes | Galileo | 1610 |
| iv. | 7 | 1,167,000 | 3345 | 16 days, 16 hours, 32 minutes | Galileo | 1610 |
| vi. | 14 | 7,372,000 | small | 266 days, 0 hours, 0 minutes | Perrine | 1904 |
| vii. | 16 | 7,567,900 | very small | 276 days, 16 hours, 5 minutes | Perrine | 1905 |
| viii. | 17 | 15,600,000 | very small | 789 days, 0 hours, 0 minutes | Melotte | 1908 |
| ix. | 19 | 18,900,000 | 20? | 3 years | Nicholson | 1914 |
| SATURN | ||||||
| 1. Meimas | 15 | 117,000 | 600 | 0 days, 22 hours, 37 minutes | Herschel | 1789 |
| 2. Enceladus | 14 | 157,000 | 800 | 1 day, 8 hours, 53 minutes | Herschel | 1789 |
| 3. Tethys | 11 | 186,000 | 1200 | 1 day, 21 hours, 18 minutes | Cassini | 1684 |
| 4. Dione | 11 | 238,000 | 1100 | 2 days, 17 hours, 41 minutes | Cassini | 1684 |
| 5. Rhea | 10 | 332,000 | 1500 | 4 days, 12 hours, 25 minutes | Cassini | 1672 |
| 6. Titan | 9 | 771,000 | 3000 | 15 days, 22 hours, 41 minutes | Huygens | 1655 |
| 7. Hyperion | 16 | 934,000 | 500 | 21 days, 6 hours, 39 minutes | Bond | 1848 |
| 8. Japetus | 11 | 2,225,000 | 2000 | 79 days, 7 hours, 54 minutes | Cassini | 1671 |
| 9. Phoebe | 17 | 8,000,000 | 200? | 546 days, 12 hours, 0 minutes | W.H. Pickering | 1898 |
| 10. Themis | 17 | 906,000 | ? | 20 days, 20 hours, 24 minutes | W.H. Pickering | 1905 |
| URANUS | ||||||
| 1. Ariel | 15 | 120,000 | 500 | 2 days, 12 hours, 29 minutes | Lassell | 1851 |
| 2. Umbriel | 16 | 167,000 | 400 | 4 days, 3 hours, 28 minutes | Lassell | 1851 |
| 3. Titania | 13 | 273,000 | 1000 | 8 days, 16 hours, 56 minutes | Herschel | 1787 |
| 4. Oberon | 14 | 365,000 | 800 | 13 days, 11 hours, 7 minutes | Herschel | 1787 |
| NEPTUNE | ||||||
| 1. Nameless | 13 | 221,500 | 2000 | 5 days, 21 hours, 3 minutes | Lassell | 1846 |
RINGS OF SATURN
| Name | Width, in miles | Distance of Inner Edge from Surface of Saturn, in miles | Distance of Outer Edge from Surface of Saturn, in miles | Diameter of Ring System from outer edge to outer edge, 172,500 miles. Thickness of Ring System, about one hundred miles. Size of Individual Moonlets, probably less than three miles in diameter. |
| Dark or Crape Ring | 10,900 | 5,900 | 16,800 | |
| Bright Ring | 18,000 | 16,800 | 34,800 | |
| Cassini's Division | 2,200 | 34,800 | 37,000 | |
| Outer Ring | 11,000 | 37,000 | 48,000 |
TABLE III
THE TWENTY BRIGHTEST STARS IN THE HEAVENS
| Name | Magnitude | Color | On Meridian 9 P. M. | Passes through the Zenith in Latitude | Distance in Light-Years |
| Sirius, Alpha Canis Majoris | -1.6 | White | February 12 | 17 S. | 8.8 |
| Canopus,[3] Alpha Argus | -0.9 | White | February 8 | 53 S. | ? |
| Alpha Centauri[3] | 0.1 | Yellow | June 15 | 61 S. | 4.3 |
| Vega, Alpha Lyræ | 0.1 | White | August 15 | 39 N. | 40 |
| Capella, Alpha Aurigæ | 0.2 | Yellow | January 20 | 46 N. | 38 |
| Arcturus, Alpha Boötis | 0.2 | Orange | June 10 | 20 N. | 21 |
| Rigel, Beta Orionis | 0.8 | Bluish-White | January 20 | 8 S. | ? |
| Procyon, Alpha Canis Minoris | 0.5 | White | February 26 | 5 N. | 12 |
| Achernar,[3] Alpha Eridani | 0.6 | Bluish-White | December 2 | 58 S. | 80 |
| Beta Centauri | 0.9 | Bluish-White | June 7 | 60 S. | 100 |
| Betelgeuze, Alpha Orionis | Var. 1.0-1.4 | Red | January 31 | 7 N. | 150-270? |
| Altair, Alpha Aquilæ | 0.9 | White | September 4 | 9 N. | 16 |
| Alpha Crucis[3] (Double Star) | 1.6-2.1 | Bluish-White | May 14 | 63 S. | 220 |
| Aldebaran, Alpha Tauri | 1.1 | Red | January 11 | 16 N. | 27 |
| Pollux, Beta Geminorum | 1.2 | Yellow | February 28 | 28 N. | 35 |
| Spica, Alpha Virginis | 1.2 | Bluish-White | May 29 | 11 S. | ? |
| Antares, Alpha Scorpii | 1.2 | Red | July 12 | 26 S. | 850 |
| Fomalhaut, Alpha Piscis Australis | 1.3 | White | October 24 | 30 S. | 25 |
| Deneb, Alpha Cygni | 1.3 | White | September 19 | 45 N. | ? |
| Regulus, Alpha Leonis | 1.3 | White | April 8 | 12 N. | 32 |
TABLE IV
A LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL CONSTELLATIONS
1. VISIBLE IN 40° NORTH LATITUDE
| Name | Chief Star or Noted Object | On Meridian 9 P. M. | Passes Overhead in Latitude[4] (Degrees) | |
| Andromeda | Great Nebula | November | 35 N. | |
| Aquarius | October | 5 S. | ||
| Aquila | Altair | September | 0° | |
| Aries | December | 20 N. | ||
| Auriga | Capella | February | 40 N. | |
| Boötes | Arcturus | June | 30 N. | |
| Cancer | Praesepe | March | 20 N. | |
| Canes Venatici | Cor Caroli | June | 40 N. | |
| Canis Major | Sirius | March | 20 S. | |
| Canis Minor | Procyon | March | 10 N. | |
| Capricornus | October | 15 S. | ||
| Cassiopeia | November | 60 N. | ||
| Cepheus | November | 70 N. | ||
| Cetus | Mira | December | 5 S. | |
| Columba | February | 35 S. | ||
| Coma Berenices | May | 25 N. | ||
| Corona Borealis | Alphecca | July | 30 N. | |
| Corvus | May | 20 S. | ||
| Crater | May | 15 S. | ||
| Cygnus. | Deneb | September | 40 N. | |
| Delphinus | Most distant globular cluster | September | 15 N. | |
| Draco | Alpha | August | 65 N. | |
| Eridanus | Achernar | January | 10° N. to 60° S. | |
| Gemini | Pollux | March | 25 N. | |
| Hercules | Great Cluster | July | 30 N. | |
| Hydra | April | 20 S. | ||
| Leo | Regulus | April | 15 N. | |
| Lepus | February | 20 S. | ||
| Libra | June | 15 S. | ||
| Lynx | April | 45 N. | ||
| Lyra | Vega | August | 40 N. | |
| Ophiuchus | July | 10 S. | ||
| Orion | Great Nebula | February | 0° | |
| Piscis Australis | Fomalhaut | October | 30 S. | |
| Pegasus | November | 20 N. | ||
| Perseus | Algol | January | 50 N. | |
| Pisces | December | 5 N. | ||
| Sagitta | September | 20 N. | ||
| Sagittarius | August | 30 S. | ||
| Scorpio | Antares | July | 30 S. | |
| Serpens | July | 20° N. to 15° S. | ||
| Taurus | Pleiades | January | 20 N. | |
| Triangulum | December | 35 N. | ||
| Ursa Major | Mizar | May | 65 N. | |
| Ursa Minor | Polaris | 85 N. | ||
| Virgo | Spica | June | 0° |
2. INVISIBLE IN 40° NORTH LATITUDE
| Name | Chief Star or Noted Object | On Meridian 9 P. M. | Passes Overhead in Latitude[4] (Degrees) |
| Apus | July | 75 S. | |
| Ara | July | 55 S. | |
| Argo Navis | Canopus | March | 50 S. |
| 1. Carina | March | 60 S. | |
| 2. Puppis | March | 45 S. | |
| 3. Vela | March | 50 S. | |
| Centaurus | Alpha Centauri | June | 50 S. |
| Crux (Southern Cross) | Alpha Crucis | June | 60 S. |
| Dorado | Gt. Magellanic Cloud | February | 58 S. |
| Grus | October | 45 S. | |
| Hydrus | Lesser Mag. Cloud | 70 S. | |
| Indus | September | 55 S. | |
| Lupus | June | 40 S. | |
| Musca | June | 70 S. | |
| Octans | 85 S. | ||
| Pavo | October | 65 S. | |
| Phoenix | November | 45 S. | |
| Telescopium | July | 48 S. | |
| Triangulum Australe | July | 65 S. | |
| Tucana | Great Cluster | November | 60 S. |
| Volans | March | 75 S. |
TABLE V
PRONUNCIATIONS AND MEANINGS OF NAMES OF STARS AND CONSTELLATIONS
1. STARS
| Name | Pronunciation | Meaning |
| Achernar | a-ke´r-när | End-of-the-River |
| Aldebaran | al-de´b-ar-an | The Hindmost |
| Altair | al-ta´r | |
| Antares | an-ta´-rez | Rival of Ares (Mars) |
| Arcturus | ärk-t´u-rus | |
| Bellatrix | bel-la´trix | The Female Warrior |
| Betelgeuze | be´t-el-gerz or be´t-el-gez | The Arm-Pit |
| Canopus | cän-o´-pus | |
| Capella | ca-pel-la | Little She-Goat |
| Deneb | de´n-eb | |
| Denebola | de-ne´b-o-la | The Lion's Tail |
| Fomalhaut | fo´-mal-o | The Fish's Mouth |
| Hyades | hi-a-dez | The Rainy Ones |
| Pleiades | ple´-ad-ez | |
| Pollux | po´l-lux | |
| Praesepe | pre-se´-pe | The Beehive |
| Procyon | pro-si´-on | Precursor of the Dog |
| Regulus | reg´-u-lus | The Ruler |
| Rigel | ri´-gel or ri-jel | |
| Sirius | sir´-i-us | The Sparkling One |
| Spica | spi´-ka | The Ear of Wheat |
| Vega | ve´-ga |
2. CONSTELLATIONS
FOOTNOTES:
[1] About 940 have been discovered up to the present time.
[2] Extreme values.
[3] Invisible north of 35° N. Lat. (approximate).
[4] The approximate position of the center of the constellation.
Transcriber's Note:
Obvious typographical errors have been repaired.
Mid-paragraph illustrations were moved near to the text describing the illustrated material.
Redundant title—Astronomy for Young Folks—on p. 3 was deleted.
[P. 3]: Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth—"Canst" is assumed in blank space.
[P. 25]: brighter object than the nearby star Aldebaran—"star" is assumed in blank space.
[P. 122]: Illustration originally stated "See note page 126". That statement was removed, and the actual note from page 126 was moved to its place with the illustration.
[P. 174]: [...]—duplicate of later line "occurred at L'Aigle, France, in 1803. Between two" appeared at this spot. Possible missing text where the line occurred.
Data in tables retained as in original, but may be incorrect—for example, the [escape velocity of Mars], represented as 1.5 miles per second in Table I, is closer to 3.1.