Fig. 2. The Moon at Sunset.
The moon completes a revolution among the stars in 27 days, 8 hours; but it takes her a little longer to come up with the sun again, since he has meanwhile been moving in the same direction along his yearly path; and the ‘synodic’ month, or period from one new moon to the next, is 29 days, 13 hours.
As well as the moving sun and the moving moon, there are five other bodies, visible to the naked eye, which move among the stars. They look like stars, but their movements would lead us rather to class them with sun and moon. They also are in the zodiac, and they also, while carried round with the universal movement from east to west, revolve slowly, each in its own period, from west to east. But their motions are more complicated than those of sun and moon. Two, which we call Venus and Mercury, are never seen very far from the sun, and they oscillate from side to side, sometimes appearing before him near sunrise, and sometimes after him at sunset. Mercury keeps closest to the sun, and is not so bright, and therefore less easy to see; but Venus is a brilliant object when she gradually swings out further from the sun, remaining longer each evening after sunset in the western sky. Then she gradually draws back, closer to the sun, is lost in his rays, and a few days after begins to appear on his other side, as a Morning Star, visible in the east before sunrise. Here she swings out again, like a pendulum, to her furthest distance west, and then draws in again, just as she did on the sunset side of the sun.
In this way, swinging slowly from side to side of the sun, Mercury and Venus make with him the circuit of the zodiac, completing a revolution from west to east in about a year. The average period of Mercury’s oscillation, counting, for instance, from one Greatest Western Elongation (i.e. furthest distance from the sun on the west) to the next, is 116 days; that of Venus is 584 days.
Fig. 3. The Path of Mars among the Stars, 1909.
The other three “wandering stars”—or “planets,”[3] as they were named by the ancient Greeks—Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, are also often seen as morning or evening stars near the sun, but they do not always accompany him, like Venus and Mercury. They may be seen at any distance from him, even exactly opposite, so that they rise as he sets. They keep as strictly to the zodiac, however, and travel in it from west to east, in periods of approximately two, twelve, and thirty years respectively; and their paths are also complicated by oscillations. Periodically they slacken speed, stop, and go back a little distance among the stars, then they slacken, stop, and advance again. These changes are technically called direct motion, stations or stationary points, and retrograde motion.
It must have originally taken many years of patient watching to discover and distinguish all these planets. In these days, by means of an almanac and some knowledge of the constellations, they may easily be found and traced. Mars and Venus move quickly during part of the time they are visible, and if sketches be made of their positions among the stars, and their paths marked for a few weeks, a very good idea may be gained of the motions of planets as seen in the skies.