Fig. 32. The sun’s Deferent. (Its eccentricity is exaggerated).

The sun was much easier to manage than the planets. Moving always in the same direction, he needed no epicycle, and remaining always in the ecliptic, no wheels. His one irregularity, the varying speed in different parts of the zodiac, which Meton had discovered and Calippus confirmed, Hipparchus accounted for by placing him on eccentric deferent; Ptolemy adopted this without change, and made the year the same length as Hipparchus had done. As the slowest motion was observed when the sun was in the sign of Gemini (at the time of year corresponding with the end of our month of May), the eccentric was placed as in the diagram; and the sun, supposed to be revolving uniformly round the centre C, had a slower motion as seen from Earth when he went north, because he was then more distant.

We know now that it is really Earth which revolves round the sun, but the elliptical shape of her orbit is not unlike the eccentric deferent which the Greeks gave to the sun, and they guessed quite rightly from his motion that he is further from us in one part of the year than in the other. This is easily proved to-day by the fact that he grows apparently smaller, as shown by photographs or measurements taken at different times of year, but the change was not perceptible to the rougher methods of the ancients.

It was a pity that Ptolemy did not take more pains to verify the work of Hipparchus on the sun, for the sun’s “apogee,” or point of greatest distance from Earth, has an extremely slow motion among the stars which ought to have been quite perceptible in nearly three centuries;[52] but here again he seems to have thought that where Hipparchus had given so much attention he might pass on to something else, and so missed an interesting discovery.

1911, July 1.1912, Jan. 3.

[To face p 146

Fig. 33. Apparent Variation in the Size of the Sun.