Fig. 99.
Fig. 99.
The weight of the earth in pounds may be found by multiplying the number of cubic feet in it by 62-1/2 (the weight, in pounds, of one cubic foot of water), and this product by 5.6.
Fig. 100.
86. Cause of Precession.—We have seen that the earth is flattened at the poles: in other words, the earth has the form of a sphere, with a protuberant ring around its equator. This equatorial ring is inclined to the plane of the ecliptic at an angle of about 23-1/2°. In Fig. 100 this ring is represented as detached from the enclosed sphere. S represents the sun, and Sc the ecliptic. As the point A of the ring is nearer the sun than the point B is, the sun's pull upon A is greater than upon B: hence the sun tends to pull the ring over into the plane of the ecliptic; but the rotation of the earth tends to keep the ring in the same plane. The struggle between these two tendencies causes the earth, to which the ring is attached, to wabble like a spinning-top, whose rotation tends to keep it erect, while gravity tends to pull it over. The handle of the top has a gyratory motion, which causes it to describe a curve. The axis of the heavens corresponds to the handle of the top.