The Light of Planets
Abstract
A FEW facts relative to this subject may be interesting. At Plymouth on August 12 about 9 o'clock, favoured with a beautifully clear horizon, the brilliancy of Mars was so great that it cast a distinctly black shadow on a piece of white paper from an ordinary walking stick held at a distance of 4½ inches; the outline of the hand, under the same conditions, was also easily perceptible. A faint, yet decided, darkening of the white cliffs of the shore was caused by a person standing upright-the slope being about 45°. The point of observation was at the extreme north-west of the Sound, and the splendour of the planet's light reflected from three or four miles of water is perhaps unrivalled.
- Publication:
-
Nature
- Pub Date:
- November 1892
- DOI:
- 10.1038/047077b0
- Bibcode:
- 1892Natur..47...77G