I have occasionally seen Mercury, about two or three hours after his rising, with outlines of extreme sharpness and quite comparable with the excellent views obtained of Venus at the time of sunrise or sunset. Those who possess equatorials should pick up the planet in the afternoon and follow him until after sunset, when the horizontal vapors will interfere. Others who work with ordinary altazimuth stands will find it best to examine the planet at his western elongations during the last half of the year, when he may be found soon after rising by the naked eye or with an opera-glass, and retained in the telescope for several hours after sunrise if necessary.
Mercury was displayed under several advantages in the morning twilight of November, 1882, and I made a series of observations with a 10-inch reflector, power 212. Several dark markings were perceived, and a conspicuous white spot. The general appearance of the disk was similar to that of Mars, and I forwarded a summary of my results to Professor Schiaparelli of Milan, who favored me with the following interesting reply:
“I have myself been occupied with this planet during the past year (1882). You are right in saying that Mercury is much easier to observe than Venus, and that his aspect resembles Mars more than any other of the planets of the Solar System. It has some spots which become partially obscured and sometimes completely so; it has also some brilliant white spots in a variable position.”
Professor Schiaparelli used an 8½-inch refractor in this work, and was able under some favorable conditions to apply a power of 400. The outcome of his researches, encouraged since 1882 by the addition of an 18-inch refractor to the appliances of his observatory, was announced in the curious fact that the rotation of Mercury is performed in the same time that the planet revolves round the sun! If this conclusion is just, Mercury constantly presents one and the same hemisphere to the sun, and the behavior of the moon relatively to the earth has found an analogy.
Spots or markings of any kind have rarely been distinguished on Mercury. On June 11, 1867, Prince recorded a bright spot, with faint lines diverging from it northeast and south. The spot was a little south of the centre. Birmingham on March 13, 1870, glimpsed a large white spot near the planet’s east limb, and Vögel, at Bothkamp, observed spots on April 14 and 22, 1871. These instances are quoted by Webb, and they, in combination with the markings seen by Schiaparelli at Milan and by the author at Bristol in 1882, sufficiently attest that this object deserves more attentive study.
One of the most interesting phenomena, albeit a somewhat rare event, in connection with Mercury, is that of a transit across the sun. The planet then appears as a black circular spot. Observers have noticed one or two very small luminous points on the black disk, and an annulus has been visible round it. These features are probably optical effects.
THE PLANET VENUS.—Camille Flammarion
Revolving round the sun in 224 days, Venus has its motion combined with ours in such a manner that it passes its inferior conjunction, between the sun and us, every 584 days; but the plane in which it revolves is inclined 3° 23′ to that in which the earth itself moves. When Venus attains its greatest elongations from the sun it shines in the west in the evening, then in the morning in the east, with a splendid brightness which eclipses that of all the stars. It is, without comparison, the most magnificent star of our sky. Its light is so vivid that it casts a shadow. Sometimes, even, it pierces the azure of the sky, in spite of the presence of the sun above the horizon, and shines in full daylight.
The maximum visibility of Venus is produced by its greatest phase, by its greatest elongation from the sun, and by the clearness of our atmosphere.
The brilliant Venus was certainly the first planet noticed by the ancients, as much on account of its brightness as its rapid motion. Hardly is the sun set than it sparkles in the twilight; from evening to evening it removes further from the west and increases in brightness; during several months it reigns sovereign of the skies, then plunges into the solar fires and disappears. It was pre-eminently the star of the evening, the shepherd’s star, the star of sweet confidences. It was the first of celestial beauties, and the names conferred upon it correspond to the direct impression which it produced on contemplative minds. Homer called it “Callistos,” the Beautiful; Cicero named it Vesper, the evening star, and Lucifer, the morning star, a name likewise given in the Bible and the ancient mythologies to the chief of the celestial army.