294. Number of Comets.—The number of comets recorded as visible to the naked eye since the birth of Christ is about five hundred, while about two hundred telescopic comets have been observed since the invention of the telescope. The total number of comets observed since the Christian era is therefore about seven hundred. It is certain, however, that only an insignificant fraction of all existing comets have ever been observed. Since they can be seen only when near their perihelion, and since it is probable that the period of most of those which have been observed is reckoned by thousands of years (if, indeed, they ever return at all), our observations must be continued for many thousand years before we have seen all which come within range of our telescopes. Besides, as already stated (289), a comet can seldom be seen unless its perihelion is either inside the orbit of the earth, or but little outside of it; and it is probable that the perihelia of the great majority of comets are beyond this limit of visibility.
Remarkable Comets.
295. The Comet of 1680.—The great comet of 1680, shown in Fig. 320, is one of the most celebrated on record. It was by his study of its motions that Newton proved the orbit of a comet to be one of the conic sections, and therefore that these bodies move under the influence of gravity. This comet descended almost in a direct line to the sun, passing nearer to that luminary than any comet before known. Newton estimated, that, at its perihelion point, it was exposed to a temperature two thousand times that of red-hot iron. During its perihelion passage it was exceedingly brilliant. Halley suspected that this comet had a period of five hundred and seventy-five years, and that its first recorded appearance was in 43 B.C., its third in 1106, and its fourth in 1680. If this is its real period, it will return in 2255. The comet of 43 B.C. made its appearance just after the assassination of Julius Cæsar. The Romans called it the Julian Star, and regarded it as a celestial chariot sent to convey the soul of Cæsar to the skies. It was seen two or three hours before sunset, and continued visible for eight successive days. The great comet of 1106 was described as an object of terrific splendor, and was visible in close proximity to the sun. The comet of 1680 has become celebrated, not only on account of its great brilliance, and on account of Newton's investigation of its orbit, but also on account of the speculation of the theologian Whiston in regard to it. He accepted five hundred and seventy-five years as its period, and calculated that one of its earlier apparitions must have occurred at the date of the flood, which he supposed to have been caused by its near approach to the earth; and he imagined that the earth is doomed to be destroyed by fire on some future encounter with this comet.
Fig. 325.
296. The Comet of 1811.—The great comet of 1811, a view of which is given in Fig. 325, is, perhaps, the most remarkable comet on record. It was visible for nearly seventeen months, and was very brilliant, although at its perihelion passage it was over a hundred million miles from the sun. Its tail was a hundred and twenty million miles in length, and several million miles through. It has been calculated that its aphelion point is about two hundred times as far from the sun as its perihelion point, or some seven times the distance of Neptune from the sun. Its period is estimated at about three thousand years. It was an object of superstitious terror, especially in the East. The Russians regarded it as presaging Napoleon's great and fatal war with Russia.
Fig. 326.
Fig. 327.