Fig. 261.
It is now generally conceded that Venus has a dense atmosphere; but Schröter's observations of the spots on her disk have not been verified by modern astronomers, and we really know nothing certainly of her rotation.
234. Transits of Venus.—When Venus happens to be near one of the nodes of her orbit when she is in inferior conjunction, she makes a transit across the sun's disk. These transits occur in pairs, separated by an interval of over a hundred years. The two transits of each pair are separated by an interval of eight years, the dates of the most recent being 1874 and 1882. Venus, like Mercury, appears surrounded with a border on passing across the sun's disk, as shown in Fig. 262.
Fig. 262.
Mars.
235. The Orbit of Mars.—The orbit of Mars is more eccentric than that of any of the larger planets, except Mercury; its eccentricity being about one-eleventh. The inclination of the orbit to the ecliptic is somewhat under two degrees. The mean distance of Mars from the sun is about a hundred and forty million miles; but, owing to the eccentricity of his orbit, the distance varies from a hundred and fifty-three million miles to a hundred and twenty-seven million miles.