By comparing this Table with the Table on page 113, it is easy to find how many Lunations are contained in any given number of Sidereal, Julian, and Solar years, from 1 to 8000.
CHAP. XX.
Of the fixed Stars.
Why the fixed Stars appear bigger when viewed by the bare eye than when seen through a telescope.
391. The Stars are said to be fixed, because they have been generally observed to keep at the same distance from each other: their apparent diurnal revolutions being caused solely by the Earth’s turning on its Axis. They appear of a sensible magnitude to the bare eye, because the retina is affected not only by the rays of light which are emitted directly from them, but by many thousands more, which falling upon our eye-lids, and upon the aerial particles about us, are reflected into our eyes so strongly as to excite vibrations not only in those points of the retina where the real images of the Stars are formed, but also in other points at some distance round about. This makes us imagine the Stars to be much bigger than they would appear, if we saw them only by the few rays which come directly from them, so as to enter our eyes without being intermixed with others. Any one may be sensible of this, by looking at a Star of the first Magnitude through a long narrow tube; which, though it takes in as much of the sky as would hold a thousand such Stars, yet scarce renders that one visible.
A proof that they shine by their own light.
The more a telescope magnifies, the less is the aperture through which the Star is seen; and consequently the fewer rays it admits into the eye. Now since the Stars appear less in a telescope which magnifies 200 times than they do to the bare eye, insomuch that they seem to be only indivisible points, it proves at once both that the Stars are at immense distances from us, and that they shine by their own proper light. If they shone by borrowed light they would be as invisible without telescopes as the Satellites of Jupiter are: for these Satellites appear bigger when viewed with a good telescope than the largest fixed Stars do.
Their number much less than is generally imagined.
392. The number of Stars discoverable, in either Hemisphere, by the naked eye, is not above a thousand. This at first may appear incredible, because they seem to be without number: But the deception arises from our looking confusedly upon them, without reducing them into any order. For look but stedfastly upon a pretty large portion of the sky, and count the number of Stars in it, you will be surprised to find them so few. Or, if one considers how seldom the Moon meets with any Stars in her way, although there are as many about her Path as in other parts of the Heavens (the Milky way excepted) he will soon be convinced that the Stars are much thinner sown than he was aware of. The British catalogue, which, besides the Stars visible to the bare eye, includes a great number which cannot be seen without the assistance of a telescope, contains no more than 3000, in both Hemispheres.
The absurdity of supposing the Stars were made only to enlighten our nights.
393. As we have incomparably more light from the Moon than from all the Stars together, it were the greatest absurdity to imagine that the Stars were made for no other purpose than to cast a faint light upon the Earth: especially since many more require the assistance of a good telescope to find them out, than are visible without that Instrument. Our Sun is surrounded by a system of Planets and Comets; all which would be invisible from the nearest fixed Star. And from what we already know of the immense distance of the Stars, the nearest may be computed at 32,000,000,000,000 of miles from us which is more than a cannon bullet would fly in 7,000,000 of years. Hence ’tis easy to prove, that the Sun seen from such a distance, would appear no bigger than a Star of the first magnitude. From all this it is highly probable that each Star is a Sun to a system of worlds moving round it though unseen by us; especially, as the doctrine of a plurality of worlds is rational, and greatly manifests the Power, Wisdom, and Goodness of the great Creator.