Plate 4.

The density of Mars is only about three-fourths of that of the earth.

239. Sidereal and Synodical Periods of Mars.—The sidereal period of Mars, or the time in which he makes a complete revolution around the sun, is about six hundred and eighty-seven days, or nearly twenty-three months; but he is about seven hundred and eighty days in passing from opposition to opposition again, or in performing a synodical revolution. Mars moves in his orbit at the rate of about fifteen miles a second.

240. Brilliancy of Mars.—When near his opposition, Mars is easily recognized with the naked eye by his fiery-red light. He is much more brilliant at some oppositions than at others, for reasons already explained (236), but always shines brighter than an ordinary star of the first magnitude.

241. Telescopic Appearance of Mars.—When viewed with a good telescope (see Plate IV.), Mars is seen to be covered with dusky, dull-red patches, which are supposed to be continents, like those of our own globe. Other portions, of a greenish hue, are believed to be tracts of water. The ruddy color, which overpowers the green, and makes the whole planet seem red to the naked eye, was believed by Sir J. Herschel to be due to an ochrey tinge in the general soil, like that of the red sandstone districts on the earth. In a telescope, Mars appears less red, and the higher the power the less the intensity of the color. The disk, when well seen, is mapped out in a way which gives at once the impression of land and water. The bright part is red inclining to orange, sometimes dotted with brown and greenish points. The darker spaces, which vary greatly in depth of tone, are of a dull gray-green, having the aspect of a fluid which absorbs the solar rays. The proportion of land to water on the earth appears to be reversed on Mars. On the earth every continent is an island; on Mars all seas are lakes. Long, narrow straits are more common than on the earth; and wide expanses of water, like our Atlantic Ocean, are rare. (See Fig. 266.)

Fig. 266.

Fig. 267.

Fig. 267 represents a chart of the surface of Mars, which has been constructed from careful telescopic observation. The outlines, as seen in the telescope, are, however, much less distinct than they are represented here; and it is by no means certain that the light and dark portions are bodies of land and water.