Kragh, Helge - The Moon That Wasn't The Saga of Venus' Spurious Satellite (2008)
Kragh, Helge - The Moon That Wasn't The Saga of Venus' Spurious Satellite (2008)
Kragh, Helge - The Moon That Wasn't The Saga of Venus' Spurious Satellite (2008)
11
Editorial Board:
K. Andersen, Aarhus
D. Buchwald, Pasadena
H.J.M. Bos, Utrecht
U. Bottazzini, Roma
J.Z. Buchwald, Cambridge, Mass.
K. Chemla, Paris
S.S. Demidov, Moskva
E.A. Fellmann, Basel
M. Folkerts, Mnchen
P. Galison, Cambridge, Mass.
I. Grattan-Guinness, London
J. Gray, Milton Keynes
R. Halleux, Lige
S. Hildebrandt, Bonn
Ch. Meinel, Regensburg
J. Peiffer, Paris
W. Purkert, Bonn
D. Rowe, Mainz
A.I. Sabra, Cambridge, Mass.
Ch. Sasaki, Tokyo
R.H. Stuewer, Minneapolis
H. Wuing, Leipzig
V.P. Vizgin, Moskva
Helge Kragh
Birkhuser
Basel Boston Berlin
Author:
Helge Kragh
Institute for Science Studies
University of Aarhus
Building 1110
8000 Aarhus
Denmark
e-mail: [email protected]
e-ISBN 978-3-7643-8909-3
987654321
www.birkhauser.ch
Contents
Preface
vii
List of Figures
ix
1 Introduction
2 A moon or not? A century of confusion
2.1 Venus satellite observed: Fontana .
2.2 Jean Dominique Cassini . . . . . . .
2.3 The satellites of Mars . . . . . . . .
2.4 James Short and his Contemporaries
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vi
6 Closure: the discussion of the 1880s
6.1 The planet Neith . . . . . . . .
6.2 Stroobants solution . . . . . .
6.3 The second moon of the Earth
6.4 Twentieth-century postscripts .
Contents
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117
119
128
133
139
145
Biographical sketches
155
Bibliography
167
Index
193
Preface
The planet Venus is the closest neighbour to the Earth and in several respects
similar to our globe. It revolves around the Sun at an average distance of 0.72
astronomical units, in an elliptical orbit of eccentricity 0.007. The corresponding
numbers for the Earth are 1 and 0.017. The mean density of Venus is 5.2 g/cm3 ,
that of the Earth 5.5 g/cm3 . Venus acceleration of gravity at its equator is 8.9
m/s2 , compared with 9.8 m/s2 at the Earth. The escape velocity is 10.4 km/s,
while the corresponding gure of the Earth is 11.2 km/s. Although the mass of
Venus is somewhat smaller than that of the Earth the ratio is MV /ME = 0.815
the diameters of the two planets are almost the same. In other words, Venus is
indeed a sister planet of the Earth.
In earlier times, when almost nothing was known about the physical conditions of Venus, the similarity appeared even stronger than today. Not only was
Venus period of rotation thought to be close to that of the Earth, it was also possible (and indeed common) to imagine intelligent life on Venus. As late as 1870,
the British astronomer Richard Proctor spelled out how remarkably similar Venus
was to the Earth: In size, in situation, and in density, in the gure of her orbit
and in the amount of light and heat she receives from the sun, Venus bears a more
striking resemblance to the earth than any orb within the solar system. In fact,
there is no other pair of planets between which so many analogies can be traced
as between Venus and the earth. He then noted: Had Venus but a moon as the
earth has, we might doubt whether, in the whole universe, two orbs exist which
are so strikingly similar to each other.1
We know today that there is no life on Venus, a planet with most inhospitable
physical conditions. Far from being much like the Earth, Venus is very much like
hell, as a Russian astronomer has expressed it.2 Apart from being lifeless, we also
know that Venus, contrary to the Earth, has no appreciable magnetic eld. What
is here of greater importance, Venus is moonless. It is possible that it once had a
1 Proctor
2 Shklovskii
viii
Preface
companion, but if so it disappeared more than a billion years before the emergence
of complex life forms on Earth. For this reason, the real moon of Venus, should it
ever have existed, belongs to the history of the solar system, not to the history of
science.
This is a book about the non-existing satellite of Venus, a ctitious celestial
body which played a considerable role in astronomical circles in the eighteenth
century in particular. Why write a book about something that manifestly does
not exist? The brief answer is that for more than a century the enigmatic satellite or something taken for it was occasionally seen, or thought to be seen,
and that the object thus became part of the history of astronomy. Although few
astronomers believed in the existence of the Venus moon after about 1770, it continued to attract attention for at least another century. It was as if it would not
die. By following the discussions of this ghost-like satellite, we address the history
of planetary astronomy in a novel way. We get a dierent insight not only into
the world of the astronomers but also into the popular literature concerning the
planetary system and other aspects of astronomy.
The book endeavours to give an account of Venus moon which is as complete
as possible. There are undoubtedly details that can and will be lled in by others,
but we feel condent that this is a fairly complete history of the subject and
that nothing important has been left out. Although it is not the rst monograph
concerned with the Venus moon there is a predecessor from 1875, although of a
very dierent kind it is the rst time that the story of the satellite of Venus is
told in detail and in its proper historical context. It is a rich and fascinating story,
deserving more attention than the few lines to which it is commonly reduced , if
mentioned at all, in most books on astronomy and the history of astronomy.
The Moon that Wasnt is based on a large and varied collection of printed
sources, published over a period of more than 350 years. Many of these sources are
somewhat obscure and have not previously attracted the attention of either astronomers or historians of science. If many of the sources are obscure, so are many
of the persons related to the story of the Venus moon. Distinguished astronomers
and physicists were certainly involved in both observations and discussions, but
they were outnumbered by scientists of a lesser stature, many of them amateur
astronomers, not to mention individuals with little or no connection to the astronomical community.
The book is organized in seven chapters, followed by a comprehensive bibliography including nearly 400 primary and secondary sources. After a brief introduction there follows a chapter on the early observation claims, made in the
period from 1646 (by Francesco Fontana) to 1740 (by James Short). This chapter
also recounts the early history of beliefs in moons accompanying Mars, from Kepler to Voltaire. Chapter 3 focuses on the 1760s, a decade in which Venus passed
Preface
ix
twice between the Earth and the Sun and therefore oered excellent opportunities
for spotting the satellite. Although there were a few claims of having seen it, the
majority view was that the Venus transit observations had shown that the satellite
did not exist. But then, if the moon does not exist, why had several astronomers of
reputation seen it? Attempts to provide an answer were made by Maximilian Hell
and Johann Heinrich Lambert, among others, and these are analyzed in Chapter
4. By the end of the eighteenth century the satellite of Venus belonged to history,
but it was a history that was much alive. Although Alexander Humboldt dismissed
the satellite as nothing but a myth and he spoke for the majority of scientists
it continued to arouse discussion in astronomical as well as cultural circles. Chapter 5 is largely conned to the period 17901860, while Chapter 6 focuses on the
1880s, during which decade interest in the nearly forgotten satellite experienced a
kind of revival. The interest manifested itself in scientic commentaries as well as
in the science ction literature of Jules Verne and his contemporaries.
With the extensive analysis of Paul Stroobant in 1887, most astronomers
considered the case to be closed and no longer of scientic interest. All the same,
the story can be followed well into the twentieth century, which we do in a section
of the nature of a postscript. In 1928 a Danish astronomer, Carl Luplau Janssen,
gave voice to what had become common knowledge among astronomers. Venus
has no moons, he wrote. At many occasions in the past it was claimed that a
satellite had been seen near Venus, but the discovery has always turned out to
rest on a mistake. It can now be considered a fact that Venus does not possess
any larger companion. No one contradicted him.3
Finally, in the concluding Chapter 7 we summarize the case of the Venus
moon and reect on some of the more general lessons that may be associated with
it. Among these are observations of non-existing bodies and the problem of disproving an isolated observation claim. In order to understand the historical course
better, we nd it valuable to make a comparison between the satellite of Venus
and some other objects from the astronomical past, in particular the satellites of
Uranus. We also relate the story of Venus moon to the somewhat similar stories
of the Earths second moon and the discovery history of the satellites of Mars.
Following Chapter 7 we include a chapter that comprises a small collection of biographical sketches of some of the central gures in the saga of the Venus moon,
from Fontana in the mid-seventeenth century to Stroobant in the late nineteenth
century. It is followed by an extensive bibliography, including all relevant primary
and secondary sources.
Acknowledgments: We would like to thank librarian Susanne Nrskov for her help
with providing sources and Henk Bos, emeritus professor of history of mathematics,
3 Luplau
Preface
for valuable assistance in understanding and translating Latin texts. Also our
thanks to Karin Neidhart, the Birkh
auser Verlag, for her most ecient handling
of the book.
List of Figures
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
8
11
15
16
17
20
23
26
30
32
41
43
47
48
49
61
63
65
69
75
81
83
xii
List of Figures
4.3
4.4
5.1
5.2
Johann Schr
oters drawings of Venus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Front page of Schorrs book on the satellite of Venus. . . . . . . . . 113
6.1
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.6
85
88
120
121
126
130
136
140
Chapter 1
Introduction
The planet Venus is named after the Roman goddess of beauty, love and fertility, the equivalent of Aphrodite in Greek mythology. According to legend she
emerged from the foam of the sea onto the island of Cythera (Cyprus), for which
reason Venus is sometimes referred to as the Cytherean planet. (Venerean or
Aphrodisian have been proposed, but both names have unfortunate connotations.) Venus may have been the rst celestial object clearly recognized as a planet.
The Sumerians called it Inanna, the Akkadians chose Ishtar, and to the Egyptians
it was known as Astarte. The Chinese knew it as Jin Xing. Venus is the only planet
mentioned in the Homeric writings, where it appears in the Iliad, announcing the
close of day and darkening of night. Achilles deadly assault on Hektor is described
as follows:
As radiant Hesper [Venus] shines with keener light,
Far-beaming oer the silver host of night,
When all the starry train emblaze the sphere:
So shone the point of great Achilles spear.1
But Homer and his contemporaries seem to have regarded the planet as two
distinct objects, without realizing that the morning star (Phosphoros or Lucifer)
is the very same as the evening star (Hesperos or Vesper). The misconception was
shared by the Mayas. According to tradition, the insight that the two are merely
dierent manifestations of the same celestial body goes back to Pythagoras. Nor
can this insight be found in the Bible, where there is a rare reference to Venus
in Isaiah 14:2. It speaks of Lucifer, the light-bearer, and reads in the King James
1 Alexander Popes translation of 171520, book 22. Available online from
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au
Chapter 1. Introduction
version: How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art
thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations!
Of course, the praise of Venus has often been sung by the poets. Among
the numerous examples one may single out Lord Alfred Tennysons poem Maud
from 1855. The relevant verse is this:
For a breeze of morning moves,
And the planet of Love is on high,
Beginning to faint in the light that she loves
On a bed of daodil sky,
To faint in the light of the sun she loves
To faint in his light, and to die.
Some years earlier, in 1838, William Wordsworth used Venus to express his
worries about the progress of science, which had increased our knowledge of the
world but had not resulted in a corresponding moral development:
What strong allurement draws, what spirit guides,
Thee, Vesper! brightening still, as if the nearer
Thou comst to mans abode the spot grew dearer
Night after night? True is it Nature hides
Her treasures less and less. Man now presides
In power, where once he trembled in his weakness;
Science advances with gigantic strides;
But are we aught enriched in love and meekness?
Aught dost thou see, bright star! of pure and wise
More than in humbler times graced human story;
That makes our hearts more apt to sympathise
With heaven, our souls more t for future glory,
When earth shall vanish from our closing eyes,
Ere we lie down in our last dormitory?
The painters, too, have found Venus a fascinating celestial object. It appears
prominently in Vincent van Goghs Starry Night of June 1889 and also in another
of his famous paintings, the White House at Night from June 1890, showing a
white house at twilight with a prominent yellow star in the sky. According to some
astronomers, this star can be identied as Venus as it looked in the evening of 16
June 1890 (art historians do not necessarily agree).2 But enough of Venus! This is
not a book about the planet of love, but of its supposed satellite, a body invisible
to the naked eye indeed invisible to any kind of eye. In a sense, the story of
2 See
3
Venus moon begins with the chance discovery that the familiar Moon is not the
only satellite in the planetary system.
Galileo Galilei created a sensation when he announced in the Sidereus nuncius
of 1610 his telescopic discovery of four satellites encircling the planet Jupiter.3
To be precise, satellite as a name for a moon was not used by Galileo and
only came into general use after it was adopted by Newton in his Principia. The
name, introduced by Kepler in 1611, derives from the Latin satelles, meaning an
attendant. During the controversy in the seventeenth century over the Copernican
system, satellites moving around planets other than the Earth were initially seen
as support of the new world system. Galileo realized that the discovery answered
a criticism against the heliocentric theory, as it showed that the Earth was not
privileged by being the only planet with a companion around it. This was, he
wrote, an excellent and splendid argument against those who concluded from the
presence of our Moon that it constituted a proof of the geocentric world system.4
Galileos discovery was only the beginning of the steady extension of the
number of bodies in the planetary system that took place during the seventeenth
century. By 1700, ten satellites were known to exist, a number which did not
change until William Herschels discoveries of 178789. These discoveries increased
the number of satellites to fourteen, and at the beginning of the twentieth century,
twenty-ve satellites were recognized by the astronomers (see Table 1).
The rst and brightest of the Saturn moons (now called Titan) was discovered
by Christiaan Huygens in March 1655 and announced the following year in a
short publication entitled De Saturni luna observatio nova. Two more moons,
later known as Iapetus and Rhea, were found in 167172 by the Italian-French
astronomer Jean Dominique (or Gian Domenico) Cassini a couple of years after
he had moved from Bologna to Paris. He originally suggested naming the moons
of Saturn sidera Lodoicea, after the king of France, Louis XIV. It was also Cassini
who discovered Thethys and Dione, which he did in an observation of 1684.5 Thus,
by the end of the seventeenth century, ten satellites were known, one around the
Earth, four around Jupiter and ve around Saturn. In spite of occasional claims
that Mars and Venus might be provided with moons, and also that the number of
3 Galilei
Chapter 1. Introduction
Planet
Satellite
Distance from
planet (1000 kms)
Discoverer(s)
Year of
discovery
Earth
Mars
Moon
Phobos
Deimos
Io
Europa
Ganymede
Callisto
Amalthea
Himalia
Elara
Pasiphae
Titan
Iapetus
Rhea
Thethys
Dione
Mimas
Enceladus
Hyperion
384.4
9.4
23.5
422.0
671.0
1 070.0
1 883.0
181.0
11 480
11 737
23 500
1 200.0
3 558.0
526.8
294.6
377.4
185.4
238.2
1 482.0
1877
1877
1610
1610
1610
1610
1892
1904
1905
1908
1655
1671
1672
1684
1684
1789
1789
1848
Phoebe
Titania
Oberon
Ariel
Umbriel
Triton
12 960.0
438.7
568.6
191.8
267.3
353.6
A. Hall
A. Hall
G. Galilei
G. Galilei
G. Galilei
G. Galilei
E. E. Barnard
C. D. Perrine
C. D. Perrine
P. Mellote
C. Huygens
J. D. Cassini
J. D. Cassini
J. D. Cassini
J. D. Cassini
W. Herschel
W. Herschel
W. Bond,
W. Lassell
W. Pickering
W. Herschel
W. Herschel
W. Lassell
W. Lassell
W. Lassell
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
1898
1787
1787
1851
1851
1846
Table 1.1: The twenty-ve satellites known by 1910. The names are the ones
adopted by the International Astronomical Union, and the distances are those
known today.
moons around Jupiter exceeded four, this number kept stable until the end of the
next century.
From the perspective of late-seventeenth-century astronomy the idea of one
or more moons around Venus, the planet most resembling the Earth, was in many
5
ways attractive.6 On the other hand, astronomical or physical theory oered no
sure guidance to the question of which planets were equipped with satellites, or
how many. Although analogy, pluralism the belief in extraterrestrial beings
and philosophical expectations of uniformity of nature might speak in favour of
a Venus moon, it was realized to be a question entirely left to observation. In
his Dissertatio cum nuncio sidereo, a work hastily published in 1610 in the wake
of Galileos telescopic discoveries, Johannes Kepler enthusiastically deduced from
the Jupiter moons that it followed with the highest degree of probability that
Jupiter is inhabited. Moreover, he suggested that the other planets, too, might
possess moons and that the number of these followed a mathematical regularity.
He expressed his desire of discovering two satellites of Mars (as the relationship
seems to me to require) and six or eight satellites of Saturn, with one each perhaps
for Venus and Mercury.7 Unfortunately, at the time of writing Kepler did not
possess a telescope of the kind Galileo had constructed.
It is of little surprise that the rst observation claims appeared in the seventeenth century, as a direct consequence of the use of the telescope, but the further
story of Venus moon is complex and more surprising. Today we know that Venus
does not have a moon,8 but during a period of about 120 years several astronomers
observed, independently and at irregular intervals of time, the elusive companion
of the planet of love. More than thirty observations are recorded, made by at least
twelve astronomers, and there may have been more. For a short period of time the
possible existence of the satellite was a real puzzle. To paraphrase a well-known
verse:9
They seek it here,
they seek it there.
Those savants seek it everywhere.
Is it dark? Or is it bright?
That damned elusive satellite!
6 For the early temptations to consider Venus and Mars as copies of the Earth, and hence
presumably endowed with a moon, see Sheehan 1988, chapters 35.
7 Kepler 1965, p. 40 and p. 77. See further his letter to Galileo of 19 April 1610, in Galileo
192939, vol. 10, p. 322. For his Pythagorean numerology, see also Koyre 1961, pp. 138139.
However, such reasoning based on mathematical harmony played little role in the subsequent
development of observational astronomy.
8 Although this is true, it is not quite as true as it was just a few years ago. In 2004 a group of
astronomers discovered that Venus has a so-called quasi-satellite (as does the Earth and Mars).
This object, called 2002 VE68, is however an asteroid orbiting around the Sun, but in such a
way that it appears to travel around the Venusian sky about once every Venus year. See Mikkola
et al. 2004.
9 With due consideration to Leslie Howard, acting as Percy Blakeney in the 1934 movie version
of baroness Emmuska Orczys The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Chapter 1. Introduction
However, the latest about 1770, the hope for a moon encircling Venus was
eectively abandoned, a main reason being the lack of success in reproducing
previous observations. The failure to observe the satellite during Venus passages
over the Sun in 1761 and 1769 was generally taken as proof of its lack of existence.
Moreover, most previous discovery claims could be explained as optical illusions,
an explanation which enjoyed general support.
The case of Venus supposed satellite is not well known, not even to modern
historians of astronomy. Thus, one looks in vain for it in most accounts of the
history of planetary astronomy, and it also does not appear in modern works on
the history of the Venus transits.10 This is not to say that the subject is entirely
ignored, for it is sometimes referred to in works on the history of astronomy or
in handbooks on planetary astronomy. According to a modern and widely read
handbook: The rst report of a satellite of Venus was made by G. D. Cassini
on 18 August 1686. Other reports followed, the last being that of Montbaron at
Auxerre, on 29 March 1764. It is now certain that no satellite exists, and that the
observers were deceived by telescopic ghosts. 11 However, there is much more
to the story, which, strangely, has never been subjected to close and contextual
analysis. Most accounts are brief, anecdotal and fragmentary, often uncritically
based on earlier writings from the late nineteenth century and rarely on readings
of the original sources.12
The present work not only aims at remedying this state of aairs by oering a
much fuller account based on primary sources; it also follows the story throughout
the nineteenth century, at a time when practically no one believed in the existence
of the Venus moon. How is it that the non-existing moon continued to attract
interest more than a century after its existence was acknowledged as disproved?
10 Leverington 2003, a detailed history of planetary astronomy from the oldest times to the
present, includes no mention of Venus moon. On the transits of Venus and their relevance for
the problem of a possible satellite, see section 3.1.
11 Moore 1983, p. 61. The statements are not entirely correct. Thus, Cassinis observation was
from 28 August 1686. Furthermore, as we shall see, Cassini also reported an observation from
1672, and Fontana claimed to have seen a moon in 1645. The last observation claim dates from
1768, not 1764. William Sheehan, a prolic writer on the history of planetary astronomy, deals
only cursorily with the satellite of Venus, which he writes o as nothing but a curiosity. He says,
incorrectly, that after 1761 there were no more reports on the phenomenon (Sheehan 1988, p.
24).
12 The case of Venus moon is briey described in Ashbrook 1954, reprinted in Ashbrook
1984, pp. 281283. For a review by a French astronomer, see Lecomte 1990. More details are
given in Hunt and Moore 1982, pp. 9299, a slightly updated and better documented version
of the chapter in Moore 1956, pp. 9196. Ley 1964, pp. 215220, draws heavily on Moores
book, but is less reliable. Bakich 2000 only refers briey to the subject (p. 112). See also
http://www.solarviews.com/eng/hypothet.htm. Unsurprisingly, much of the information about
Venus satellite found on the internet is unreliable.
Chapter 2
Although appreciated as a maker of telescopes, Fontanas astronomical observations were not held in high esteem. Many of his contemporaries found that
his work was supercial and lacking in theoretical arguments, and they tended
to dismiss his many reports of celestial novelties. They admitted that he was a
ne craftsman, but not more than that. For example, Galileo had nothing but
contempt for the Neapolitan telescope maker and rival astronomer who had no
training in either mathematics or astronomy. Although he had to admit the greater
magnifying power of Fontanas telescopes, he denied that they revealed novelties
in the heavens that had not been discovered by his own instruments.2
Fontana was well known by his contemporaries, and his name appears frequently in the correspondence of the scientic intelligencer Marin Mersenne and
other natural philosophers in the mid-seventeenth century. On 15 November 1638,
2 See letter of Galileo to unknown correspondent, of 15 January 1639, in Galilei 192939, vol.
16, p. 18. See also Winkler and van Helden 1992, pp. 215216.
a somewhat sceptical Descartes wrote to Mersenne about the new telescopes from
Naples: Do not believe everything you are told about these marvelous Neapolitan glasses; for the majority of people, and the charlatans in particular such as
your Maire, no doubt always make things they tell of greater than they are.3
Galileos former assistant, Evangelista Torricelli, was no less sceptical. In a letter
of 1647, he wrote about Fontanas observation claims: I have the book of foolishnesses observed, or rather dreamed, by Fontana in the heavens. If you want to
see insane things, that is, absurdities, ctions, eronteries, and a thousand similar
outrages, I will send you the book.4 Many astronomers were unconvinced that
Fontanas claimed observations were authoritative and objective.
The book that Torricelli referred to was Fontanas only printed work, the
Novae coelestium terrestriumque rerum observationes published in Naples in 1646
and dedicated to Cardinal Camillo Pamphili. A second edition of the book was
issued in 1667. Although Fontana stated in the preface that In 1608 I invented
a kind of optic tube, he did his best to atter the recently deceased Galileo.
Referring to the pioneers of telescopic astronomy, he wrote: As far as the heavens
are distant from the Earth, so much do you, Galileo, shine more brightly than the
rest. Not a man of modesty, he compared himself to the great Kepler: Indeed
we are both gifted with two talents, to wit, theoretical and practical.5 A large
part of the small book was concerned with his observations of the Moon, which he
summarized in several plates. Although he agreed with Galileo that the Moons
light was reected sunlight, he also attributed some of its light to emanate from
the body itself.
In observations of 1636 and 1638 Fontana saw in the middle of Mars a black
cone like a very dark little globule, but was uncertain whether it was separate
from the planet itself and a satellite of it, or rather a big hollow on its disk.6
He also discovered what appeared to be additional satellites of Jupiter, rst in
1630 and later in a couple of other observations: Five stars, which until now have
perhaps been unknown to all astronomers, I have discovered around Jupiter. It can
be shown that they are not xed stars for the reason that xed stars always keep
the same positions to each other, as all astronomers agree. . . . Thus I am convinced
3 Mersenne 194588, vol. 8, p. 209. The reference is to Jean Maire (16171656), a Flemish
librarian and printer. On Mersennes interest in Fontana and his telescopes, see also vol. 15, pp.
1516.
4 Torricelli to Vicenzo Renieri, 25 May 1647, in Torricelli 1919, p. 448. Quoted in van Helden
1994, p. 16. On the sceptical attitude to Fontanas observations, see also Winkler and van Helden
1993, p. 99.
5 Fontana 2001, p. 15 and p. 26. According to Fontana, he had published lunar observations
in 1629 and 1630, but no such works are known to be extant.
6 Ibid., p. 98.
10
that these newly discovered bodies are not xed stars.7 The claim of nine Jupiter
moons had been independently forwarded by the astronomer Schyrlaeus de Rheita
in a book of 1643 (see section 2.3), but it is unknown if Fontana were aware of
Rheitas claim.
Among Fontanas many observations were markings on Venus, but these were
generally believed to be illusory. Unacquainted with Keplers elliptical orbits, he
deduced from his observations that the orb of Venus is not a perfectly rounded
sphere, for if the circle were completed of Venus as seen in those observations,
it would not be perfectly round, but an oval shape. In his depictions of Venus,
Fontana drew fringes of light around the planet, clearly an optical eect although
he did not seem to have recognized it as such. On the evening of 11 November 1645
he observed near the centre of the Venus crescent a certain spot of a subdued
reddish colour, noting that this was a new discovery, hitherto unknown. He
did not report the size of the spot, but from his drawing it appears that it had a
radius of about one-fth of that of Venus. The Neapolitan telescope maker further
reported:
Two small dots were seen to accompany Venus, which I would
suppose to be her Courtiers and Attendants, as we shall also call those
of Jupiter and Saturn. This is a new discovery not yet published in my
opinion. But it is true that they do not always appear, but only when
Venus is shimmering, as will be revealed in the diagrams, and these
little dots were always seen to be of a more reddish colour. These little
dots were, however, not always seen in the same situation on Venus,
but they moved back and forth like sh in the sea. From this it can be
deduced that Venus itself moves in the same way and is not attached
to any part of the sky.8
Then, on Christmas day 1645, about an hour after sunset: There were not
two, as in the previous observation, but only one little globe or star seen at the
top of the convex side of Venus. And on 22 January 1646: Venus was discovered
to be surrounded by a few rays but with sharper cusps resembling the shape of a
bow; a little globe or spot was facing the concave edge of the real Venus.9 Fontana
was apparently uncertain of the nature of the little globe he had seen. Although
7 Ibid.,
pp. 101102.
p. 91. Note that Fontana speaks in 1646 of a companion of Saturn, a decade before
Huygens announced his discovery of Saturns moon. Fontana undoubtedly referred to the enigmatic appearance of what Galileo had originally called stars or handles (ansae) but which
Huygens in 1659, in his Systema Saturnium, correctly interpreted as a thin ring surrounding
the planet. The last sentence refers to the Aristotelian belief in crystalline spheres that were
supposed to carry the planets.
9 Ibid., pp. 9596.
8 Ibid.,
11
he did not unambiguously claim to have discovered a moon moving around Venus,
he did speak of his observation as a discovery.
Figure 2.2: Fontanas visual presentations of the supposed satellite(s) of Venus. The
gures above are from the woodcuts in Fontanas work from 1646. Below to the left
is the redrawing as it appeared in Ricciolis Almagestum novum (1651); the gures
12
be accompanied by one or two small stars.10 More importantly, the famous Jesuit
astronomer Giambattista Riccioli referred to the claim in his Almagestum novum
of 1651. Primarily a selenography and an anti-Copernican cosmology, the new Almagest also included many of Ricciolis observations made in Bologna. Thus, he
described how he had found in 1643 that the unilluminated part of Venus appeared
to glow with a strange coppery light, later known as the ashen light.11 Having described Fontanas observations of the very ungraceful sight of a possible satellite
of Venus, Riccioli suggested that what had been seen was either something like
a meteor, or a little cloud in the evening, or something like sunspots in front of
Venus . . . , or the lunar image of a cave and of mountains. He added that I have
never, and neither has [Francesco Maria] Grimaldi nor [Pierre] Gassendi, as seen in
Book 3 of his Institutionis astronomic, admitted ever to have observed at Venus
or close to Venus any globules in any telescope.12
A competent astronomer, Gassendi was the rst person to report a Mercury transit, such as predicted by Kepler about a year earlier. He witnessed the
phenomenon on 7 November 1631 and described it in Mercurius in Sole visus et
Venus invisa, published in Paris the following year.13 (Kepler had also predicted
a Venus transit to occur on 6 December, but at night-time in Europe; we now
know that at Paris it ended half an hour before sunrise.) Gassendis Institutionis
astronomic, which appeared in 1647, included a reference to the possible moon
of Venus, but apparently Gassendi had little faith in Fontanas observations. After
having described the appearance of Saturn, he wrote: Furthermore, it must be
added that two [satellites] are carried around Venus, if what is written is true, that
two small ones have been observed . . . by the Neapolitan Fontana, both of which
are reported to have been observed with his own telescope used for [observations
of] Mars. Gassendi said that Fontana saw a little globe at the centre and at
the periphery of a circle becoming black, but, he continued, We have not been
able to this day to seize anything about this with our telescope although it was a
Galilean one.14
10 Mersenne 194588, vol. 14, p. 564. Baliani (15821666) corresponded with several of the
periods leading natural philosophers, including Galileo.
11 The elusive ashen light continues to be somewhat of a puzzle as it is observed only occasionally and by some observers. In this respect, it shares some of the features of the Venus moon.
On the history of the ashen light, see Hunt and Moore 1982, pp. 8793, and Baum 2000.
12 Riccioli 1651, vol. 2, p. 485.
13 Van Helden 1976b. Although Gassendi (15921655) was the only astronomer to publish his
observation of the Mercury transit of 1631, it is known that several others saw the phenomenon,
including Johannes Baptist Cysat (15881657), a student of Christopher Scheiner (15731650),
and Johannes Remus Quietanus (. 16101640). The next Mercury transit visible in Europe, on
3 May 1661, was seen by Johannes Hevelius (16111687) in Danzig and also by Huygens during
a stay in London.
14 Gassendi 1997, p. 106, a French translation of the Latin edition that appeared in 1658, as
13
14
included astronomical topics. Among these were a brief discussion of Venus moon
and a redrawing of Fontanas woodcuts of the planet and its strange spots.18 In
his Specula physico-mathematica-historica notabilium ac mirabilium sciendorum, a
richly illustrated compendium on all contemporary science published in 1696, Zahn
adopted a hybrid cosmology between the Ptolemaic and the Tychonian system.
His work included a magnicent table showing Venus and its supposed companions
(the table was inspired by a similar one in Kirchers Iter extaticum coeleste). Apart
from referring to Fontanas discovery claim, Zahn also referred to Johannes Wiesel,
an optician from Augsburg who may have thought to have observed a moon of
Venus. Wiesel was one of Europes rst professional opticians and manufacturers
of optical instruments, and his telescopes were in high demand.19
The German engineer, natural philosopher and politician Otto von Guericke
is best known as an inventor of the air pump and for his spectacular vacuum
experiments, but he was also greatly interested in matters of astronomy and cosmology. In his main work, the Experimenta nova of 1672, he developed his own
system of the world, a Copernican system in which the xed stars were distributed
indenitely beyond the realm of the planets. Guericke believed that the planets
were arranged according to their volume, with the biggest planets farthest away.
Contrary to Galileo and most other astronomers, he denied that the sunspots were
clouds or spots residing on the Sun, for we should not postulate the existence of
spots or unsightly bodies on the surface of the Sun, the eye of the whole world.20
Instead he argued that they were small planets moving inside the orbit of Mercury. A similar idea had been proposed sixty years earlier by the Jesuit astronomer
Christopher Scheiner, who in a tract entitled Tres epistolae de maculis solaribus
concluded that the sunspots were actually stars or satellites moving very close
to the Sun. He even convinced himself that they showed phases like the Moon.21
In order to account for the changes and dierent shapes of the sunspots,
Guericke postulated a large number of these intramercurial bodies, all equipped
with moons. He seems to have believed that all the planets, intramercurial or not,
carried with them one or more satellites. On the other hand, he did not accept
the nine moons of Jupiter postulated by Rheita and Fontana.
Acquainted with the works of Rheita, Fontana, Kircher and Riccioli, Guericke
supplied Venus with two moons. He had not seen these himself, but relied on the
18 The gure appears on p. 653 of Zahn 1702, a second and enlarged edition published in
Nuremberg.
19 On Wiesel (15831662) and his telescopes, see Keil 2000 and Willach 2001. It is unknown
if Wiesel, who never published anything, actually made observations of Venus and the other
planets.
20 Guericke 1994, p. 33. Experimenta nova also exists in a carefully annotated German edition
(Guericke 1968). See also Krat 2002.
21 Shea 1970. Scheiners tract is reprinted in Galilei 192939, vol. 5, pp. 3970.
15
Figure 2.3: Planet Venus in its revolution around the Sun, showing its phases.
Also shown, in the lower part of the gure, is Venus satellite as found by Fontana
and Wiesel. Plate from volume I of Johann Zahns Specula physico-mathematicahistorica from 1696.
16
Figure 2.4: Otto von Guerickes system of the world, as included in his Experimenta
nova, published in Amsterdam in 1672. The system diers from the traditional
Copernican system by the absence of a stellar sphere; the xed stars are spread
throughout an indenitely great space. Also notice the intramercurial planets and
the two satellites of Venus. Guerickes system was based on theory, not on observations.
observations of Fontana, who in his second observation saw a small sphere, dark
purple in colour, in the middle of its disk. His third observation found two separate
stars of the same dark purple colour adjacent to it, as it were, in the horns of
17
the planet.22 Experimenta nova contained a picture of Venus with two satellites
encircling it in the same orbit. Guerickes advocacy of the satellite of Venus was
clear but uninuential. It was ignored in the later literature on the subject.
Figure 2.5: The six planets and their satellites, as shown in Experimenta nova.
The new feature is the two satellites of Venus, moving in the same orbit.
22 Guericke
1994, p. 36.
18
Huygens looked with a 12-foot telescope for satellites around the planets
Venus, Mars and Saturn. On 23 June 1656, his friend Jean Chapelain told him:
Mr. de Montmor felt obliged by the manner you have written to me that you let
him see with your long and excellent telescope if Venus should not have a satellite
which turns around her; if Mars has on its disk a kind of pyramid-shaped mountain
at the foot of which there is a deep abyss; and also if there should be a planet
around him [Mars] analogous to our Moon.23 Having established the existence of
a moon revolving around Saturn, he wrote to Chapelain:
It therefore seems reasonable that Venus and Mars should be accompanied as the other planets . . . and yet I have not seen them [the
satellites] to this hour. Furthermore, I have even observed with a 24foot telescope, but not Venus, so perhaps there is something left around
her to be discovered. I have read by Mr. Fontana that he had noticed
the three other companions of Venus, but I nd it dicult to believe,
because he ought then also to have seen Saturns moons, and because I
know that the telescopes he used were only 6 feet long.24
At this point Huygens was optimistic. He thought he could discover a satellite around Venus and continued his observations, but after three more years of
observation he was forced to conclude that Venus was not endowed with a companion.
In his book on the Systema Saturnium from 1659, he came up with some
theoretical arguments in support of the conclusion.25 Although astronomical numerology was not highly regarded in the seventeenth century, it was such reasoning
that made Huygens conclude that there were no more satellites to be found. He
reasoned that, after his discovery in 1655 of the Saturn moon, the system of the
world was numerically complete as it consisted of a symmetrical pair of the rst
perfect number, six, namely, six planets and six satellites. Therefore, there would
be no point in looking for either new satellites or planets. In his posthumously
published Kosmotheoros from 1698, Huygens discussed the ve satellites of Saturn and admitted that there may be a Sixth; or perhaps there may be another
without the Fifth that may yet have escaped us. As to Venus, he thought it must
23 Huygens 1888, p. 437. Habert de Montmort (ca. 16001679) was a French patron of science
after whom the Montmort Academy was named. This academy consisted of a circle of natural
philosophers who met regularly in Paris between 1653 and 1664.
24 Huygens 1888, p. 472. Letter of July 1656. Huygens reference to the three other companions
of Venus is puzzling, as Fontana made no such observation claim. As to Saturns moons, Fontana
detected sometimes two satellites, and at most three. He did not identify the ring system, but
like earlier observers he described it as two crescent-shaped objects or kinds of handles.
Fontana 2001, p. 111.
25 Huygens 1925, pp. 212214.
19
20
nest telescopic astronomer.31 He made numerous observations of Jupiters satellites, in 1675 he discovered the gap in Saturns ring system known later as Cassinis
division, and in 1679 he published a new map of the Moon. There is no doubt that
he held a very high authority and that his observations were taken very seriously.
When it came to theory, matters were dierent, for Cassini was a conservative
who not only opposed Newtonian gravitation but also the nite velocity of light
discovered by Ole Rmer in 1676. But this is of no great relevance in the present
context.
Figure 2.6: The Paris Observatory in the beginning of the eighteenth century, at
a time when J. D. Cassini was still active. Reproduced from Wolf 1902, plate XI.
Cassini never recovered the spots that he had seen before he came to Paris.
On the other hand, he observed Venus moon twice, in 1672 and 1686, in both
cases as a faint object showing phases similar to those of Venus. In between, in
1683, Cassini had cooperated with Niccolo Fatio to make pioneering observations
of the zodiacal light, a faint glow in the night sky which at the time was thought
to be an extension of the solar atmosphere (but is now known to be due to the
reection of sunlight on cosmic dust particles). Details of the events of 1672 and
1686 only appeared in 1730, when his paper on the zodiacal light was reprinted,
now with the following inserted:
31 This
is the expression of van Helden 1994, p. 28. According to van Helden, Cassinis personal
prestige, his position at the French Observatoire Royale and Academie Royale, and his access to
the best telescopes in Europe made his discoveries accepted by everyone (ibid.).
21
22
23
24
p. 159.
1735, p. 211. This was the paper in which Jacques Cassini (16771756) suggested
that the period of rotation of Venus was 23 hours 20 minutes.
38 Cassini
25
26
after Pope Urban VIII. He also claimed to have found new satellites orbiting the
other superior planets, Mars and Saturn. Rheita reported his startling observations
in a letter of 6 January 1643 to Erycus Puteanus, a professor in Louvain, and
soon the news was disseminated to other natural philosophers.44 The published
version of the discovery claims appeared later the same year in a book published
in Louvain with the title Novem stellae circa Jovem, circa Saturnum sex, circa
Martem non-nullae (that is, Nine stars around Jupiter, six around Saturn, and
several around Mars). He repeated the claims in an important work published in
Antwerp two years later, Oculus Enoch et Eliae, sive radius sidereomysticus. In
this book he showed a drawing of Mars surrounded by six attened moons and also
included a map of the Moon. Rheita had become acquainted with Johannes Wiesel
in Augsburg in 164344, and in Oculus Enoch et Eliae he praised the telescopes
made by the skilful optician.
27
that Rheitas satellites around Jupiter were really xed stars, an argument which
was substantiated by Hevelius in his Selenographia of 1647. According to Gassendi
and Hevelius, the satellites that Rheita had claimed to discover were really xed
stars in the constellation of Aquarius. By mapping the region of Aquarius and
superimposing Rheitas diagram on it, Hevelius showed that the ve new satellites
were still in the same position, but with no connection to Jupiter. This amounted
to strong visual evidence against Rheitas claim.46
Before Hevelius rejection, Rheita defended his claim by pointing out in Oculus Enoch et Eliae that the mutual distances of the observed objects changed, so
that they could not be xed stars. Rheitas claim received support from Caramuel
Lobkowitz, a Cistercian natural philosopher, whose contribution to the debate was
included in the book of 1643. On the other hand, Riccioli did not nd the evidence for new satellites to be convincing. In his Almagestum novum he reviewed
the claims of Fontana and Rheita, and also mentioned that additional moons
around Jupiter had been seen by Johannes Baptista Zupus (or Zupo), who used
a telescope of Fontanas construction.47 A Jesuit mathematician and a friend of
Fontana, Zupus may have been the rst to observe phases of Mercury. According
to Fontana, who published his observation, he rst saw the phases of Mercury on
23 May 1639.48
Apart from the early ideas of Kepler, Rheita, Fontana and Huygens, in the
rst half of the eighteenth century several other authors mentioned the possibility
that Mars was supplied with one or more Moons. Most of these suggestions relied
on the physico-theological argument that the inhabitants of Mars were in need of
moons to serve them. Thus, in 1711 a German clergyman named Andreas Ehrenberg (or Hareneus Geierbrand) speculated that Mars was endowed with one or
two moons, and he was followed a decade later by another German, Johann Jacob
Schudt, a school rector.49
The inuential German philosopher and systematizer of knowledge, Christian
Wol from Halle, wrote a series of Vern
untige Gedancken on a variety of learned
topics. In one of these works, published 1723 and dealing with natural objects,
into a kind of partnership with Johannes Wiesel, who manufactured some of his telescopes. A
crater on the Moon is named after Rheita. Accused by the Inquisition, he was imprisoned in
Bologna and later in Ravenna, where he died.
46 Hevelius 1967 (a facsimile reprint of the original), pp. 3335. Winkler and van Helden 1993,
p. 106.
47 Riccioli 1651, vol. 1, pp. 488490. On the suggestions of more than four Jupiter moons, see
also Debarbat and Wilson 1989, p. 148.
48 Fontana 2001, p. 90. Zupus (15891667) taught mathematics in the Jesuit college in Naples
for 27 years. His name is sometimes given as Zupo or Zupi.
49 According to Crowe 1999, p. 34. The titles of the works were Ehrenberg, Curi
ose und
wohlgegr
undete Gedancken von mehr als einer bewohnten Welt (Jena, 1711) and Schudt, De
probabili mundorum pluralitate (Frankfurt, 1721).
28
he discussed the distances of the planets from the Sun and also their number of
satellites. Like Derham, to whom he referred, he subscribed to the view that the
more far away from the Sun a planet was, the more satellites would it have. Also
like Derham, he saw no reason why Venus should be equipped with a moon. But
matters were dierent with Mars, an exterior planet: It may be assumed that
Mars possesses one or perhaps more moons, but that they are so small that we
cannot discover them from the Earth, not even with our telescopes.50 In addition,
Wol came up with another proposal for why the supposed Martian moon had
remained unobserved, namely that it reected the light of the Sun very poorly.
As is well known, a few years later Jonathan Swift described in Gullivers
Travels, published 1726, how the scientists of Laputa had discovered two satellites
revolving around Mars.51 The relevant passage is this: They [the Laputians] have
likewise discovered two lesser stars, or satellites, which revolve about Mars, whereof
the innermost is distant from the centre of the primary planet exactly three of the
diameters, and the outermost ve; the former revolves in the space of ten hours,
and the latter in twenty-one and a half.52
Also Voltaire, in his Micromegas of 1752, wrote of two Mars moons, undoubtedly inspired by Swift whom he had met in England during his stay 172629. In
this satirical work, a giant inhabitant his height is eight leagues or about 35 km
of one of the planets revolving round Sirius embarks on a cosmic voyage, helped
by his marvelous knowledge of the laws of gravitation, and of the forces of repulsion and attraction. He traverses easily from globe to globe, and also happens to
visit the tiny Earth. Voltaire used the story to criticize science popularizers such
as Fontenelle and also to ridicule Derham and his astro-theology. In company with
a much smaller inhabitant of Saturn, Micromegas visits Jupiter and subsequently
. . . they travel through a space of about one hundred millions
leagues, and they pass along the planet Mars, which as you know is ve
times as small as our little globe; they see two moons which serve this
planet and which have escaped the eyes of our astronomers. I know very
well that father Castel has written, and that quite plainly, against the
existence of these two moons; but I relate myself to those who argue by
means of analogy. These good philosophers know very well how dicult
it would be if Mars, being so far away from the Sun, happened to have
less than two moons.53
50 Wol
29
It is much less known that in between Swift and Voltaire an obscure German
astronomer not only suggested the existence of a satellite of Mars, but actually
claimed to have discovered it. To the extent that Eberhard Christian Kindermann,
court astronomer to the king of Poland, is known at all, it is probably as Germanys
rst science ction writer and not as an astronomer. In 1744 he published a novel,
Die geschwinde Reise auf dem Luft-Schi nach der obern Welt, in which he described how ve German mariners set o on a journey to explore the solar system.
Among the purposes of their planetary voyage was to nd out whether it is true
that on July 10 of this year, the planet Mars appeared with a satellite or moon
for the rst time since the world has been in existence. The preface oered a few
more details, including that he had seen the moon between 3 and 4 oclock in the
morning: Herr Kindermann has discovered it for the very rst time, at the said
hour of the day and with a tube [telescope] of his own making.54 However, he
only saw it traversing a part of its orbit, before it moved behind the planet.
Two years later Kindermann wrote of a comet which he claimed to have
observed, although it is uncertain if it ever really existed. In this small pamphlet
he included a gure professing to show the orbit of the satellite of Mars that he
had discovered on 10 July 1744. Now the period of revolution was stated to be
59 hours 50 minutes 6 seconds, and the satellite to be removed about 2.5 Mars
radii from the centre of the planet. According to the German astronomer, both
Mars and its satellites were provided with atmospheres.55 Of course, this is not
where the story of the moons of Mars ends. The long phase of speculation and
hypothesis ended in 1877, when Asaph Hall discovered that the planet carries with
it two small moons. We shall return to Halls discovery in Chapter 6.
30
Figure 2.9: The German astronomer Eberhard Kindermanns depiction of the satellite of Mars, such as it appeared in a pamphlet on comets of 1746.
31
having been elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1737, he settled the following
year in London, where he established himself as a telescope manufacturer of the
rst rank, specializing in Newtonian reectors.56 He soon won recognition not only
as an expert manufacturer of reectors but also as an optician. He was one of the
rst British natural philosophers to endorse the vibration theory of light (as an
alternative to the projectile theory) and to incorporate John Dollonds achromatic
lenses into a telescope.
Short published many astronomical observations in the Philosophical Transactions, one of the earliest being of a small Star very near Venus. With a telescope tted with a micrometer, he found on the morning of 3 November 1740
(Gregorian style) an object at a distance of about 10 degrees and 2 minutes to the
west of Venus:
Finding Venus very distinct, and consequently the Air very clear,
I put on a magnifying Power of 240 times, and, to my great surprise,
found this Star put on the same Phasis with Venus. I tried another
magnifying Power of 140 times, and even then found the Star under
the same Phasis. Its Diameter seemed about a Third, or somewhat less,
of the Diameter of Venus; its Light was not so bright and vivid, but
exceeding sharp and well dened. A Line, passing through the Centre
of Venus and it, made an Angle with the Equator of about 18 or 20
Degrees.57
Short studied the object for about an hour, until the sunlight became too
strong for further observation. During the following mornings he continued to
look for it, but never had the good fortune to see it again. He was aware of
Cassinis earlier observations to which he briey referred. Short also reported that
he had seen two darkish Spots on the surface of Venus, but did not give further
information. In his brief communication he cautiously avoided referring to the starlike object as a moon or satellite of Venus (except in his title). It is unknown if he
originally believed the object to be such a moon, but when he made observations
in connection with the Venus transit in 1761 he had nothing to say of either a star,
a spot or a satellite.58 In fact, during a meeting of the Royal Society in 1761, where
the recent French observation claims of the satellite were reported, he supposedly
pointed out that he did not believe in the satellite of Venus. According to another
participant in the meeting, he wanted to retract his earlier paper.59
56 On
Short and his career in astronomy and telescope-making, see Turner 1969.
1744, p. 646. England only changed to the Gregorian calendar in 1752, and so Short
reported his observation according to the Julian system, as 23 October. See also Anon. 1876a.
Shorts paper was presented to the Royal Society in January 1741, but not published until 1744.
58 Short 1762.
59 See Hell 1792, p. 117, who refers to a conversation he had in 1764 with Nathanael Matthaeus
57 Short
32
The distinguished Paris astronomer Joseph Jerome Lalande, professor of astronomy at the Coll`ege Royal and since 1753 a member of the Academie des
Sciences, was known to have an interest in spectacular phenomena, whether astronomical or not. A man of boundless energy and an insatiable thirst for fame,
he had a weakness for the unusual. The interest included the satellite of Venus,
about which he wrote at several occasions, in the Encyclopedie as well as in his
important textbook Traite dastronomie. In the spring of 1763 he made a voyage to
London, arriving on 15 March, and already the next day he visited Short. During
the stay, he became involved in the Harrison aair, that is, the delayed award of
the British government to the instrument maker John Harrison for his invention of
von Wolf (17241784), a Polish-German astronomer and foreign member of the Royal Society.
33
34
informed by a letter that Short wrote on 8 June 1741 to Pierre Coste, a French
writer staying in England, and in which Short admitted his lack of success in
further observations of the supposed moon (at the time when Mairan wrote his
report, the issue of Philosophical Transactions had not yet appeared in print).66
Mairan referred to the works of Cassini and Short, but was unable to provide information that could throw new light on the question. It is surprising, he wrote,
that [although] M. Cassini has made many researches since then at dierent times
to establish a discovery of such a great importance, he was never successful, and
for a period of 54 years, no other astronomers, as far as we know, could see the
phenomenon, not even M. Bianchini, so renowned for his discoveries concerning
the planet Venus.67
In the absence of new observations, Mairan reected at length on the probability of a Venus moon as seen from a philosophical and physical perspective. Like
other contemporary authors, he reasoned from analogies and nal causes which
told him that the satellites must fulll a purpose for the inhabitants supposed
to live on the planets. However, Mairan did not regard analogies of this kind to
be quite satisfactory. The moons around the distant planets Jupiter and Saturn
served as mighty lamps, but why should nature, or God, have chosen to provide
Venus with a moon? And why not Mars? In the Histoire for 1741 Mairan referred
critically to the received view that satellites served as supplement to sunlight and,
therefore, the number of satellites increased with the distance of the planet from
the Sun. Not only was this view based on the convenience of analogies, and the
inclination we have to let nature act according to our views and our needs, it also
disagreed with the fact that apparently Mars had no satellite. Although he did not
doubt that Venus and Mars were inhabited, he was reluctant to draw astronomical
conclusions from the supposed needs of their inhabitants.
Most astronomers came to accept Mairans argument, and in the nineteenth
century the older view was often ridiculed and presented as an example of anthropomorphic error.68 However, the view did not die easily and in connection with
about Mairan as secretary and scientist, see Kleinbaum 1973 and the
eloge in Fouchy 1774. The
suggestion in Nature of 1876 that the author was Jacques Cassini, the son of Jean Dominique
Cassini, is erroneous (Anon. 1876a).
66 Pierre Coste (1668-1747) was a French Protestant refugee who lived in England as a writer
and translator. He made in 1700 a French translation of John Lockes Essay Concerning Human
Understanding and later of other of Lockes works. An important ambassador of English thought
abroad, he also translated Newtons Opticks into French. The French edition, entitled Trait
e
doptique, was published 1720 in Amsterdam.
67 Mairan 1744, p. 125.
68 For example, Frederik Kaiser (1802-1878), director of the Leiden Observatory, scornfully
referred to the silly explanation that the more distant planets are in need of many satellites
in order to compensate for the sunlight. He pointed out that such an explanation raised the
question of why Mars had no moon. Kaiser 1867, p. 167, a Danish translation by Mathilde
35
arguments of natural theology it can be found well into the nineteenth century.
An example will be given in section 5.2.
Concerning the interior planets, Mairan wrote that it was believed that
they did not have any [satellites], and that they ought not to have any, being
much closer to the Sun than the Earth; they are also very often confounded in
their rays, and this fact does not increase insignicantly the diculty to discover
that which surrounds them. Mairan also had his saying about Venus satellite
allegedly discovered by Cassini:
A celestial body so dicult to discover from the Earth does not
seem to be made for us, and one would not know how to defend a
conclusion other than it is intended to enlighten another world and
other inhabitants. In this respect the analogy in general leaves nothing
to be desired. But let us here point out that this analogy . . . was refuted
by the planet Mars, more remote than we, and yet it has no satellite,
and it is furthermore now refuted by the planet Venus, less remote than
we and which has one [satellite] just as big as our Moon.69
Although Mairan did not come up with a denite answer, he was favourably
inclined towards the existence of a Venus moon, such as rst given observational
support by Cassini and subsequently by Short (he ignored Fontana). At the end of
his essay he referred to the generally accepted view that the interior planets were
enveloped by an extended solar atmosphere. If this solar substance was luminous,
the darkness at night of these planets would be much reduced. The supposed satellites would probably also be surrounded by this substance, which would change
their density and extension as seen from the Earth and thus cause many uncertainties and errors in the observations of the satellites. Mairan would return to
the subject in a more elaborate manner twenty years later (see section 4.1).
Proceeding chronologically, the next astronomer to observe the moon of
Venus was Andreas Mayer in 1759, although his observations escaped public attention until 1778 and even then lay practically dormant until they were brought
forward again in a book of 1875. Mayer, who since 1741 had served as professor of
mathematics, physics and astronomy at the University of Greifswald in Northern
Germany, then under Swedish rule, reported in his observation diary as follows for
20 May 1759:
rsted, the daughter of H. C. rsted, of the third edition of Kaisers De Sterrenhemel (Leiden,
1860).
69 Mairan 1744. A German translation appeared in the Hamburgisches Magazin (Mairan 1747
48).
36
At the time of the Venus transits of 1761 and 1769, Mayer continued his
observations, perhaps in the hope of establishing whether or not the little globe
was a satellite of Venus. However, one may surmise that he did not see the object
again, for in his publication reports of the two transit observations he did not
mention any satellite.71 On the other hand, in his report of the rst event he
included a list of Venus observations made between November 1758 and February
1762, and in a footnote he did refer to the little globe seen on 20 May 1759. He
said as follows: When on the 20th in the evening I . . . directed it [the telescope]
towards the evening star, then so lively sparkling, there appeared in that part of
the sky at a distance of 1 21 diameter a little sphere whose diameter was equal to
1
4 of that of Venus. . . . Whether or not this satellite belongs to Venus, I do not
dare claiming.72
The observations of Cassini and Short were briey discussed in the rst
edition of the famous Encyclopedie or, to give its full title, Encyclopedie ou dictionnaire raisonne des sciences, des arts et des metiers. The author of the article
on Venus, none other than Jean le Rond dAlembert, maintained an uncommitted
attitude: If it is a Venus satellite, it becomes even more dicult to tell what can
be the usefulness of satellites. Would it be so to speak to supplement the light
that the planets do not receive from the Sun? But here is a planet much closer to
the Sun than we, and it has one [satellite] greater than ours; besides Mars does
not seem to have a satellite, although it is farther away from the Sun than the
Earth.73
70 Quoted in Lambert 1776, p. 186. See also Schorr 1875, p. 65. Moore 1956, p. 93, mistakes
Andreas Mayer (17161782) for the better known Tobias Mayer (17231762), the astronomer and
cartographer at G
ottingen University. (The error does not appear in Hunt and Moore 1982.) Nor
is Andreas Mayer to be mixed up with the contemporary astronomer Christian Mayer (1719
1783), who did most of his work in Heidelberg. Greifswald in Pomerania came under Swedish
rule in 1648, as a result of the Thirty Years War. In 1815 the city became part of Prussia.
71 Mayer 1762; Mayer 1769. The observations of Venus emersion on 5 June 1761, reported in
Mayer 1762, were made by his collaborator Lampert Heinrich R
ohl (17241790) who in 1773
became director of the Greifswald Observatory.
72 Mayer 1762, pp. 1617.
73 Encyclop
edie I, vol. 17, p. 34. It appears from the article on Venus that it dates from July
1760, that is, before the transit. Most of the articles in the Encyclop
edie were marked by a
letter by means of which the author could be identied (see the list in volume 1, p. lxxxix). For
37
Chapter 3
literature on Venus transits is considerable. See Woolf 1959 and Sheehan and
Westfall 2004, neither of which works refers to the satellite of Venus and its connection to the transit observations. See also the bibliographies avalilable online, such as
http://www.phys.uu.nl/vgent/venus/venus menutext.htm.
2 See the critical discussion in Goldstein 1969 of possible transit reports made by Avicenna,
Averroes and other Islamic astronomers in the Middle Ages. Kepler and some of his contemporaries believed that a Mercury transit had been observed in Europe in the ninth century (van
Helden 1976b and Sheehan and Westfall 2004, pp. 5759).
40
The 1761 transit results were mainly based on Halleys method, which required measurements of the duration between the contacts observed from two
dierent stations. They were somewhat disappointing, in the sense that they did
not succeed in narrowing down the solar parallax very precisely. The results ranged
from 8 .3 to 10 .6. The larger and better organized 1769 observation programme
fared better, as computations based on the many observations gave results in the
interval from 8 .50 (Lalandes value) to 8 .88 (Pingres value). The corresponding
solar distances were 154.726 million km and 148.108 million km. The current best
estimate of the astronomical unit is close to 149.598 million km.
One of the main reasons for the uncertainty of the solar parallax was difculties in exact timing caused by the so-called black drop eect. First publicly described by the Swedish chemist and physicist Torbern Bergman in 1761, it
turned out that Venus did not separate cleanly from the edge of the Sun, but that
it appeared for a brief while to be connected to the edge with a thick lament.
The disc of Venus was found to assume a distorted form, as if it was glued to the
Suns edge. Moreover, since the phenomenon varied from observer to observer, it
caused problems with establishing the exact time of the transit. The black drop
eect continued to be controversial during the transits in the nineteenth century.
It was for a long time believed that the eect was caused by either optical illusion, diraction of light around Venus, or refraction in the Venusian atmosphere.
However, none of these explanations are correct. Only in recent years has the phenomenon of the black drop been fully understood as due to a complex smearing
mechanism.3
Although the determinations of the solar parallax in 1761 were not entirely
satisfactory, as a side eect they resulted in valuable knowledge of the behaviour
and nature of planet Venus. Among these side eects were attempts to observe
the hypothetical satellite that had previously been seen by Fontana, Cassini, Short
and Mayer. Half of all observation claims of the Venus moon, namely 19, occurred
in that year, with the most important ones being recorded in Limoges and Copenhagen. Nine more observations followed in 176468, and then it was over. In the
table below we summarize all the known observations, a total of 36, made in the
123 years between 1645 and 1768.4
Astronomers interested in the question of a Venus moon realized that the 1761
transit provided a unique opportunity of either conrming or disconrming the
3 On the correct explanation of the black drop eect, see Schaefer 2001. Something like the
modern understanding of the eect was rst proposed by Lalande in 1770, although his explanation was incomplete (Lalande 1773).
4 More complete lists, including details of the observations, can be found in Haase 186069,
p. 8, Stroobant 1887a, pp. 69, and Schorr 1875, pp. 6667. The rst list of observations of
the Venus moon appears in Lambert 1775, p. 186, and includes data from Cassini in 1672 to
Montbarron in 1764.
41
Figure 3.1: The black drop eect as depicted by Torbern Bergman, a famous
professor of chemistry at the University of Uppsala, Sweden. Although best known
as a chemist within the tradition of the phlogiston theory, Bergman also made
important works in physics, geology and astronomy. He recounted his observations
of the Venus transit in a letter of 19 November 1761 to Benjamin Wilson, F.R.S.,
published in Philosophical Transactions 52, part 1 (1761), 227228.
hypothesis. One of those astronomers was James Ferguson, the Scottish astronomy
author and designer of astronomical instruments. In his widely read Astronomy
Explained upon Sir Isaac Newtons Principles, a work of 1756 that went through
seventeen editions, he wrote:
Venus may have a Satellite or Moon, although it be undiscovered
by us; which will not appear very surprising, if we consider how inconveniently we are placed for seeing it. For its enlightened side can never
42
Published
Observer
Place
No. of
observations
1645
1646
1672
1686
1740
1759
1761
1761
1761
1761
1761
1761
1764
1764
1764
1768
1646
1646
1730
1730
1744
1762/1778
1781
1761
1761
1813
1776
1882
1765
1765
1766
1882
F. Fontana
F. Fontana
J. D. Cassini
J. D. Cassini
J. Short
A. Mayer
L. Lagrange
J. Montaigne
(anonymous)
F. Artzt
A. Scheuten
P. Roedkir
P. Roedkir
C. Horrebow et al.
Montbarron
C. Horrebow et al.
Naples
Naples
Paris
Paris
London
Greifswald
Marseille
Limoges
St. Neot
Gunderslvholm
Crefeld
Copenhagen
Copenhagen
Copenhagen
Auxerre
Copenhagen
3
1
1
1
1
1
3
4
1
1
2
8
2
3
3
1
be fully turned towards us, but when Venus is beyond the Sun; and
then, as Venus appears little bigger than an ordinary Star, her Moon
may be too small to be perceived at such a distance.5
As a believer in the divine principle of plenitude, he could easily imagine
that God had chosen to provide the planet with a satellite. After having explained
the diculties of observation, Ferguson continued: But if she has a Moon, it
may certainly be seen with her upon the Sun, in the year 1761, unless its Orbit be
considerably inclined to the Ecliptic; for if it should be in conjunction or opposition
at that time, we can hardly imagine that it moves so slow as to be hid by Venus all
the six hours that she will appear on the Suns Disc.6 Alas, no moon materialized.
A footnote in the sixth edition of 1778 tersely informed the reader that The transit
is over since this was wrote, and no Satellite was seen with Venus on the Suns
Disc.
5 Ferguson
1778, p. 18, the sixth edition, corrected and with an appendix on the results of the
1761 Venus transit observations.
6 Ibid.
43
Figure 3.2: One of many illustrations of the Venus transit of 1761, this one shows
the series of observations made by de Fouchy and Ferner in the Chateau de la
Muette. On Fig. 1 is shown the Suns passage over the telescopes eld of sight,
and in Fig. 2 the positions of Venus at six dierent occasions. From Grandjean de
Fouchy, Observation du passage de Venus sur le Soleil, Memoire de lAcademie
Royale des Sciences 63, 1761 (published 1763), 96104.
44
Jesuit order was disbanded by Pope Clement XIV in 1773. On the strained relationship
between Lagrange and Boscovich, see Hill 1961, pp. 8193. Lagrange published several astronomical and meteorological observations, but apparently not on the satellite of Venus (Poggendor
1863). Pezenas (16921776), his mentor, became director of the observatory in Avignon, where
he specialized in solar research and in 1774 published Nouvelles th
eorie du Soleil.
8 Reported by Lalande in his article on the Venus moon in Encyclop
edie II, p. 259. On the
Limoges observations, see below. Lalande praised Lagrange as an astronomer recognized for his
experience and accuracy, for which reason his observations deserved to be taken seriously.
45
46
47
Figure 3.3: Front page of Baudouins rst memoir on the satellite of Venus, read to
the Academie des Sciences on 20 May 1761. The observations on which Baudouin
based his claim were solely due to Montaigne.
48
material he was going to include and not include in his work: Nothing either
about the letters sent to me about this matter by the famous M. Wargentin; a few
things from the letters of the famous M. Messier, again nothing about the letters
of our father La Grange in which he told me that he had never seen this satellite
of Venus; nothing about the paper of the famous M. de Mairan on this matter,
and nothing about the paper of the renowned M. de Baudouin of Berlin translated
into German and annotated by the famous M. Reccard.18 Hell apparently believed
18 Hell
1765, p. 6. Wargentin (17171783) was a prominent Swedish astronomer, see section 4.2.
Gotthilf Christian Reccard (17351798) was at the time he translated Baudouins work a school
inspector in Berlin. After having moved to K
onigsberg in 1765, he was appointed professor
49
that Baudouin was either a German or associated with the Prussian Academy in
Berlin.
Baudouin was convinced that what he reported was a genuine and important
astronomical discovery, and he presented it as if it were the culmination of a
long series of attempts to conrm the original discovery of the great Cassini.
Since the year 1686, when Cassini thought to have noticed a satellite near Venus,
all astronomers have searched zealously for it, he exaggerated. Only now could
it be condently claimed that The satellite of Venus is no longer a matter of
uncertainty. Although he had not himself seen the moon, he had no doubts about
its existence: It is certain that Venus has a moon and we hope unceasingly to see
it.19
of theology and thus became a colleague of Kant. Better known as an astronomer than as a
theologian, he built his own observatory and published several works in astronomy, including a
treatise on the solar eclipse observed on 1 April 1764.
19 Baudouin 1761c, p. 3 and p. 31. According to Moore 1956, p. 128, Baudouin also reported on
50
Now France had nally been secured the honour that rightfully belonged to
Cassini and to which the Englishman Short (who was actually a Scotsman) had
signicantly contributed. Alluding to the Seven Years War, in which England and
France were engaged as enemies, Baudouin praised eloquently Short for having
raised above the national hatred and made a solemn testimony for France one
might imagine that Short would rather have been without the honour.
On the basis of the three rst observations Baudouin found the period of
revolution to be 9 days 7 hours, but after having taken the observation of 11
May into consideration he revised the gure to about 12 days. As to the size and
distance of the new star, he reported that its diameter was one-quarter of that
of Venus and that it was almost as far away from Venus as the Moon from the
Earth. Condent of the results, he predicted how the moon would move across the
disk of the Sun on the day of the transit and even provided an illustration of its
orbit. However, when the day of the transit arrived on 6 June, his prediction was
not conrmed. On this day Baudouin, in company with Charles Messier, made
transit observations in Paris at the terrace of Julians Baths near the H
otel de
Cluny, the site of Messiers astronomical observatory. He observed the exterior
contact between Venus and the Sun, but the satellite eluded him.20
In reports of 1768 in the Memoires of the Royal Academy he communicated
some of his observations of Venus and also of the moons of Jupiter, without any
mention of the elusive satellite of Venus. He compared his own observations with
those of Tobias Mayer in G
ottingen in order to determine the exact dierence in
longitude between Paris and G
ottingen. For the solar parallax he obtained a best
21
value of 9 30 .
Like several other astronomers, Baudouin was impressed by the similarity
between Venus and the Earth, which he now believed had been reinforced.
It follows that the distance of the satellite from Venus, or half the
diameter of its orbit, is almost 60 times the half-diameter of its primary
planet, just as the distance of the Moon from the Earth makes up 60
times the half-diameter of the Earth. This provides us with another
the measurements in Dictionnaire de physique of 1789, but we have not been able to locate this
source (it may refer to Lalande 1781). Ley 1964, p. 218, states that it was Montaigne who read
the memoir to the Paris Academy in 1761, and that he had repeatedly expressed skepticism
toward the existence of a satellite of Venus. The rst claim is wrong and the second lacks solid
documentation.
20 Lalande, who observed the 1761 transit from the Palais du Luxembourg, referred to the
observations of Baudouin and Messier in Lalande 1763b (p. 84).
21 Baudouin 1768a. In Baudouin 1768b he reported observations of two of Jupiters moons,
made in November 1761. The two communications were abstracted in Bernoulli 1771, pp. 156
158. Baudouins articles and addresses read to the Paris Academy indicate that at the time he
was considered with some respect by the French astronomical community.
51
resemblance between the Moon and the satellite of Venus; for it is not
only similar with respect to size, but also with respect to the distance
from its primary planet.22
Baudouin realized that Montaignes observations provided an opportunity to
calculate the satellites orbital elements, but his attempt to do so was not very
1761c, p. 24.
1802, p. 16. The author must have known, for most of the volume was written by
Lalande, who also served as an editor. (Montucla died in 1799, before his work was completed.)
24 Newton 1999 (based on the third edition of 1726), pp. 812813. See also I. Bernard Cohens
clear exposition on pp. 218228 and the recalculation in Garisto 1991. Newton found that the
mass of the Sun was 1,067 times that of Jupiter and 3,021 times that of Saturn; the modern
values are 1,047 and 3,498, respectively. For the Earth, Newton got 169,282, while the present
value is 332,946.
23 Montucla
52
Moon and the Venus satellite, respectively. Baudouin adopted the ratios as /am =
50/60 and Tm /Ts = 273/120, but instead of inserting them in equation () which
would have led to MV /ME
= 3 he introduced in his calculation the ratio between
the radii of Venus and the Earth. This ratio was usually taken to be slightly
less than 1, but Baudouin adopted the value RV /RE
= (64.2/93) = 0.69, which
gure he got from a book of the French astronomer Pierre Charles Lemonnier,
the Institutions astronomiques of 1746. Lemonnier gave two dierent values for
the radius of the Sun relative to the radius of the Earth and Venus, respectively.
According to one set of data, RS /RE = 100 and RS /RV = 83.3, and according
to the other the values were 64.2 and 93. He believed the last set of data was the
most precise.25
By multiplying (as /am )3 (Tm /Ts )2 with the cube of RV /RE Baudouin obtained the value 0.98, which he mistakenly thought was the mass of Venus relative
to the mass of the Earth: I nd in this way the gure 0.98, which is very close to
1; it then becomes clear that the mass of Venus is almost the same as that of the
Earth, for the dierence of 1/50 in calculations of this sort becomes negligible.26
Had Baudouin used his data correctly, he would have got MV /ME
= 3 and a
density of Venus nine times the density of the Earth. Whatever the obscurity of
his reasoning, he maintained that the mass of Venus was very close to that of the
Earth.27
Montaignes observations and the reports of Baudouin, delivered to the Academie des Sciences, attracted brief attention among the distinguished Paris astronomers. On behalf of the Royal Academy, Lalande added a supportive postscript
to the rst of Baudouins memoirs in which he praised the work of Montaigne and
Baudouin, describing it as a most important discovery. As a further sign of ocial approval, the postscript was certied by Grandjean de Fouchy, the Academys
perpetual secretary.28 After Baudouin had reported on the last of Montaignes
observations, which he did on 26 May 1761, Lacaille and Lalande issued another
certicate formulated as follows:
We have examined, by order of the Academy, the remarks of
M. Baudouin on a new observation of the satellite of Venus, made at
Limoges the 11th of May by M. Montaigne. This fourth observation,
of great importance for the theory of the satellite, has shown that its
revolution must be longer than appeared by the rst three observations.
25 Lemonnier 1746, p. 558. Contrary to other observers, William Herschel found that Venus
was a little larger than the Earth (Herschel 1912, vol. 1, p. 450).
26 Baudouin 1761c, p. 48.
27 Ibid., pp. 4748. See also Lynn 1887a. It is hard to understand how Baudouin could have
made this elementary mistake, especially if he was assisted by Lalande.
28 Baudouin 1761a, pp. 2325.
53
54
one obtained by Baudouin, was this: The mass of the Sun relative to the mass
of Venus is 23,946 : 1; thus, the mass of Venus is about 8 times as great as that
of the Earth, for we have demonstrated . . . that the mass of the Sun relative to
the mass of the Earth is 207,194 : 1.31 Actually the ratio is 8.65, closer to 9 than
to 8. Lalande did not comment on the discrepancy between his value of the mass
of Venus and the one obtained by Baudouin. Nor did he try to estimate the mass
density of Venus, in the manner Baudouin had done. Had he done so, and adopted
Lemonniers value of RV /RE = 0.69, he would have arrived at the incredible value
of V /E = 26.3. (Had he used RV /RE = 0.97, as Lambert did in 1775, his result
would have been V /E = 9.5.)
It is remarkable that Lalande considered Venus moon in a favourable light
for such a long time. By the early 1780s he may have been the only astronomer of
distinction who did not dismiss the satellite. The reason for his positive attitude
is not very clear, nor is it clear why he eventually lost faith in the existence of
a satellite of Venus. In the second edition of his Abrege dastronomie, published
in 1795, he mentioned explicitly that he no longer believed in the satellite: The
vain attempts that I, as well as several other astronomers, made to experience
it has persuaded me that it is an optical illusion created in the glasses of the
telescope; this is what Hell thought at the end of his Ephemerides of 1766 and
Boscovich in his fth dissertation of optics.32 In the Bibliographie astronomique,
completed in 1802, Lalande said about Baudouin that he has often been of use
to the astronomers. But he also wrote of the memoirs of 1761: These memoirs
were read to the Academy on the occasion of the observations that M. Montaigne
thought to have made of a satellite of Venus; however, it is now recognized that
it was an illusion.33 It was common to dismiss the satellite of Venus with the
argument that it had not been observed for several years. This was also Lalandes
argument, but why did it take him thirty years or so to reach the conclusion?
Montaignes true hunting ground was the world of comets, not the planets or
the satellites. As a postscript to the observation claim of May 1761 it is relevant
to point out that on 18 October 1780 he discovered a new comet, immediately
communicating the news to Charles Messier in Paris. However, the Parisian comet
hunter was unconvinced, as he failed to see the comet himself; he suggested that
Montaigne might have mistaken a small star-cluster for it.34 Only many years later,
in 1801, did Heinrich Olbers reveal that he had seen the comet at the same time as
31 Paulian 1781, pp. 336337. The articles in the dictionary appeared anonymously, but it is
most likely that the author of the entry on Venus moon was Lalande.
32 Lalande 1795, p. 322. On the arguments of Hell and Boscovich, see section 4.2.
33 Lalande 1803, p. 477.
34 Messier 1784, which includes excerpts of letters from Montaigne to Messier (17301817). For
Montaignes letters to Messier, dating from 1770, 1772 and 1780, see Bigourdan 1904.
55
56
57
Pingre, was sent to the island of Rodrigues in the Indian Ocean to observe the
transit. In his report to the Academy in Paris, he wrote: I have seen no satellite of
this planet; nor was Mr. [Denis] Thuillier, professor of mathematics, and appointed
to assist me, by the King and the Academy, luckier than myself.40
Bengt (or Benedict) Ferner, the professor of astronomy in Uppsala, Sweden,
was on an extended study tour abroad, and spent most of the year 1761 in Paris.
He wrote about his observations in the Chateau de la Muette near Paris to Thomas
Birch, the secretary of the Royal Society in London. In a postscript he commented:
I hope Mons. Baudouins pieces upon the satellite of Venus is [sic] come to your
hands. Notwithstanding all the care taken here, to discover this satellite upon the
disk of the sun, on the 6th past, we could see nothing of it.41
In England, Samuel Dunn, a teacher and amateur scientist, observed the
transit at Chelsea with a 6-foot reector: I carefully examined the suns disk, to
discover a satellite of Venus, but saw none. In a footnote he added: After the
transit, till two oclock afternoon the same day, I continued observing the disk
with this telescope, but saw no satellite pass over the sun.42 Likewise, William
Chapple and a friend observed the transit from Powderham Castle near Exeter,
trying to catch a glimpse of the rumored satellite of Venus. But they only found two
sunspots which did not follow the motion of the planet.43 The Oxford professor
of geometry Nathanael Bliss reported his observation of the Venus transit in a
lengthy letter to the president of the Royal Society. Although he did not mention
the satellite of Venus, on his drawing of the Suns disk there appear three distinct
dots, two of them close together and near the rim and the third just outside the
disk.44
The news of Venus alleged satellite had traveled as far as to America, where
John Winthrop, professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Harvard College, observed the transit. I viewed the sun with great attention . . . , in hopes to
nd a satellite of Venus; but in Vain. There were several spots then of the sun; but
at the observations in Vienna was also Maximilian Hell.
40 Pingr
e 1763, p. 376. On Pingres (17111796) adventurous voyage to Rodrigues and his
transit observations, see Woolf 1959, pp. 98115.
41 Ferner 1763, p. 225, who made his observations in company with Jean Paul Grandjean de
Fouchy, secretary of the Academie des Sciences from 1743 to 1776. The letter is dated 20 June
1761.
42 Dunn 1763, p. 189. Samuel Dunn (17231794) wrote several tracts on astronomy, nautical
science and instruments. In 1769 he was invited by Nevil Maskelyne (17321811), the Astronomer
Royal, to observe the transit of Venus, and he was one of the rst to observe evidence for an
atmosphere on the planet (Meadows 1966).
43 Chapple 1761a. In Chapple 1761b, he revised his data for the transit, without mentioning
the satellite of Venus.
44 Bliss 1762, gure on p. 244.
58
none that I saw could be a satellite.45 Most likely, several amateur astronomers
looked for the Venus moon in 1761, but without publishing their results. In a few
cases we know about these observations because they were published at a later
date. Scheuten thought that he had actually spotted the satellite, and so did a
Danish observer, F. Artzt, whom we will meet in the next section. Johann Caspar
Staudacher, an amateur astronomer from Nuremberg who specialized in sunspots,
believed in the existence of the companion of Venus and on 6 June 1761 he looked
eagerly for it with a 4-foot telescope. The result was disappointing: No satellite
was visible, but presumably it had already passed during the night or it stayed
behind the body of the planet.46
The interest in Venus moon greatly diminished during the next Venus transit
of 1769, when we only know of one astronomer searching for the object (but,
again, there may have been more). William Wales, a somewhat obscure British
astronomer, was instructed by Nevil Maskelyne, the fth Astronomer Royal, to
make an expedition to northern Canada to observe the transit. Together with
his assistant Joseph Dymond, Wales established an observatory at a place near
the Churchill River in Hudsons Bay. When the day of the transit came, the two
astronomers carefully observed the event. In their report to the Royal Society they
noted that they had looked in vain for Venus satellite: We saw nothing like the
appearance of an atmosphere round Venus . . . either at the beginning, end, or
during the time of the transit: nor could we see any thing of a satellite; though we
looked for it several times.47
Although the many observations of 1761 had failed to conrm the existence
of the Venus moon, a few years later claims of conrmation did appear, rst in
Copenhagen and slightly later in Auxerre, south of Paris, where a councillor by
the name of Montbarron observed the satellite in late March 1764. He could not
possibly have known of the Danish observations, made less than two weeks earlier
and not made public until much later. Montbarrons observations were reported
to Hell in a letter of 16 June 1764 from Messier, the famous comet hunter and
compiler of celestial objects:
While observing Venus with a 32-foot Gregorian telescope on 15
March 1764 at 7 h in the evening, Montbarron saw a small star at the
dark side of Venus which formed an eastern angle of about 60with
45 Winthrop 1764, p. 283. Woolf 1959, pp. 9394. On John Winthrop (17151779) as an astronomer, see Brasch 1916.
46 Quoted in Wolf 1857, p. 276. Over a period of forty years, Staudacher (17311792) made
observations of sunspots. These and other of his astronomical data were later published by
another Nuremberg astronomer, Johann Woeckel (18071849). See Woeckel 1846.
47 Wales and Dymond 1770. On the expedition to Canada, see Metz 2006. On Wales astronomical and nautical voyages, see Orchiston and Howse 1998.
59
60
and Schatten 1995. The 11-year sunspot cycle was discovered about 1840 by Heinrich
Schwabe (17891875), a pharmacist and amateur astronomer in Dessau, Germany, while looking
for evidence of an intramercurial planet.
52 Christian Horrebow was only appointed full professor in 1764, at the death of his father
Peder Nielsen Horrebow (16791764) who held the chair 171364 (and had earlier worked as the
assistant of Ole Rmer). However, since 1753 the younger Horrebow had served as director of
the observatory and de facto as professor of astronomy. On Christian Horrebow, see Moesgaard
1972, who fails to mention his work on Venus and its satellite. On the Danish transit observations
of 1761 and 1769, see also Pedersen 1992, pp. 102104, and Nielsen 1957a (in Danish).
53 Horrebow 1761a; Horrebow 1765c; Lalande 1763a.
54 Horrebow 1761b, p. 20.
55 Horrebow 1761a, unpaginated introduction.
61
Figure 3.6: The Round Tower in Copenhagen with its observatory on the top,
from where Christian Horrebow and his team of observers made their Venus observations 176168. Although the observation tower was built in conjunction with
Treenighedskirken (the Trinity Church), it never functioned as a church tower.
Illustration from the architect Laurids de Thuras Hafnia hodierna of 1748.
for its position relative to the planet.56 As pointed out by Hans Schjellerup, who
published the observations in 1882, it is a puzzle why Horrebow and Roedkir
chose to ignore them. The best answer is probably that Horrebow was uncertain
if his assistant had really seen a satellite of Venus. The Copenhagen astronomers
published observations made in 1764, but neither at this nor any other occasion did
they refer to the data obtained three years earlier. Roedkir initially thought that
he might have seen the satellite of Venus only assisted by a quadrant. However,
Horrebow and his other assistants were unable to conrm this rst observation:
While observing Venus with the quadrant Roedkiaer saw some
whiteness which followed Venus. He found the distance between it and
56 The
observations of 1761 remained unknown until 1882, when the Copenhagen astronomer
Hans C. F. C. Schellerup (18271887) reproduced them in their original Latin from the old
observations ledger. See Schjellerup 1882, who however seems to have been unaware of Horrebows
two dissertations of 1761. The observations of Roedkir and Horrebow are not well known in
the history of science. Pedersen 1992, p. 80, briey notes that Roedkir published a report of
an observation of the (alleged) satellite of Venus, but that is all.
62
report of 28 june 1761, in Schellerup 1882, p. 165. This and the subsequent
translations from Latin have kindly been made by Henk Bos.
58 Artzt 1813, pp. 453454.
63
Figure 3.7: Friedrich Artzts drawing of 1813 of the satellite of Venus, as he saw
it during the 1761 transit. The large circle to the left is the Suns disc with Venus
(v) at the top. The satellite, close to the centre, is denoted with a . The smaller
gure to the right is Artzts impression of Venus and the uid and transparent
substance which he saw at the southern pole of the planet. The observation claim
went unnoticed, both nationally and internationally.
made with Venus centre an angle of about half a right angle: it appeared higher than Venus centre in the telescope. He also could very
well distinguish its phase which conformed to Venus phase. . . . That it
was a satellite was clear primarily because both the diameters of Venus
and the satellite were enlarged noticeably (by the telescope of 14 feet
as compared with the telescope of 9 12 feet), which applied to none of
the xed stars.59
Roedkir was convinced that what he had seen was Venus moon and not
merely an optical reection. As he made clear in a communication to the Skrifter
of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, he believed he had conrmed Montaignes earlier observation such as discussed by Baudouin. I can now
assure that there no longer is any doubt about the satellite of Venus, he wrote.60
Christian Horrebow shared his assistants belief and communicated the ndings
59 Schjellerup
60 Roedkir
64
to the Royal Danish Academy on 9 March 1764. Horrebow had himself looked for
the satellite, but in vain, and also Johan Ahl, a Swedish instrument maker who
had emigrated to Copenhagen, had failed to see the satellite of Venus.
On this same night, the satellite was seen again by Roedkir, this time
in company with Christian Boserup and Peder Horrebow (a brother of Christian
Horrebow). On 11 March Christian Horrebow nally succeeded in seeing the moon.
He was much impressed:
I have never before seen a spectacle in the heavens which has
captivated me more; I thought that I truly saw the satellite of Venus and
felt happy in my heart that I now saw that the Lord had provided the
inhabitants of Venus with a satellite, just as ours. I sought to establish in
many ways whether this weakly luminating body might be a deceptive
reection in the telescope, but . . . [reached the conclusion] that the
light must really be the Venus satellite. . . . To describe this observation
more closely I know of no better way than to refer to precisely the
expressions that Mr. Cassini uses when he describes his observations
of 25 January 1672 and 28 August 1686. All of these t closely with
the ones here observed, and thus our observation might be considered
a perfect repetition of the ones reported by Cassini.61
In spite of his obvious fascination and joy of having made an important discovery, Horrebow was by no means naive or uncritical. An experienced astronomer,
he knew well the dangers of mistaking spurious light signals for real objects. He
argued that reections were well known to astronomers and that they were used
to take care of them. Moreover, why would the moon-imitating reections only
turn up in the few cases when a possible satellite had been seen, and not in all
the other observations of Venus?
To be more certain, on the same evening when I saw Venus satellite
I turned the telescope towards Jupiter and Saturn, and I saw them both
very distinctly and precisely . . . without any indication at all of a false
light in the telescope. What is more, during the observations I turned
the telescope in a variety of ways, and yet the position of the satellite
relative to Venus always remained xed. In addition, a couple of times I
let Venus pass through the tube, from beginning to end, and the satellite
followed its primary planet all the time, just as it should; had it been
a reection, it would sometimes have disappeared. In the case where I
arranged the telescope in such a way that Venus was just outside it, I
could still see the weak light of the lone satellite.62
61 Horrebow
62 Ibid.,
1765c, p. 402.
p. 403.
65
Figure 3.8: From the Copenhagen Observatory ledger. On the top is Roedkirs
drawings of the Venus satellite as seen on 3 and 4 March 1764. Below the drawings
of the congurations, he notes: N.B. This is how the satellite and Venus appeared
in the telescope. Courtesy: Institute of Science Studies, University of Aarhus.
66
Horrebow was also aware of the objection that what he had taken to be a
satellite might be a xed star, and he consequently argued that this could not
possibly be the case. Not only did the supposed satellite look very dierent than
a star, he had also observed it moving around Venus. Furthermore, none of the
known xed stars were in the area where he had seen the moon. He concluded
his account by encouraging other astronomers to follow up the observations in
Copenhagen and thus convincing themselves that the satellite of Venus really
existed. The observations, he optimistically hoped, would free astronomers from
the fear and modesty that had prevented them from presenting corroborative
data.
In regard to Horrebows condence that he had made a major discovery, it
is remarkable that he did not communicate the discovery claim to astronomers
abroad or otherwise followed it up. As far as we know, it remained largely unnoticed in the international astronomical literature. The observations of Roedkir
and Horrebow were not mentioned by Lalande in his article in the Encyclopedie,
nor did they appear in the Philosophical Transactions or the Histoire et Memoires
of the Paris Academy. Nonetheless, they were not completely unknown, as they
were reported in some detail in the Gazette Literaire de lEurope of 18 April 1764.
It was from this source that they found their way to Maximilian Hells comprehensive De satellite Veneris of 1766 (see below).63
Nearly four years later, on the evening of 4 January 1768, Horrebow saw the
moon one last time, now in company with his assistants Ole Nicolai B
utzov and
Ejolvor Johnsen (Roedkir had died the previous year). Using a Dollond telescope,
the three astronomers observed below Venus a small light, certainly not a star
(for there were stars in the telescope, which had a fully dierent appearance), and
it stood at a distance from Venus of about one Venus diameter. Soon afterwards
Venus was observed in the Islaean telescope of 12 feet. Horrebow believed that
the new observation conrmed the hypothesis of a Venus satellite. After an hour
or three quarters of an hour that light which adhered to Venus appeared more to
the right in the Dollian and more to the left in the astronomical telescope. Three
observers observed this same phenomenon at Venus, C. H., O. B., and J.; all saw
with certainty that this light was not a star, and were certain that the light was
not an optical illusion, and they therefore surmised that perhaps it was a satellite
of Venus.64
63 A German translation of Hells Latin version of the French account in the Gazette Lit
eraire
(based on the original Danish) appears in Haase 186369, pp. 251252.
64 Schjellerup 1882, pp. 167168. The Islaean telescope refers to a kind of refractor named
after the French physicist and astronomer Joseph Nicolas Delisle (16881768). C. H. = Christian
Horrebow; O. B. = Ole B
utzov; J. = Ejolvor Johnsen. In company with Peder Horrebow junior
(17281812), B
utzov (17421784) went the following year to the northern parts of Norway to
observe the Venus transit. During 177378 he was in charge of the small observatory at Vard.
67
Although Horrebows belief in Venus moon seems to have remained unshaken, he did not make the 1768 observation public, not even in a paper to the
proceedings of the local academy of science. He read papers before the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences on 18 February 1768 and 6 April 1770, in both cases on
the transit of Venus. However, these were oral presentations only and it is unknown if he referred to the satellite observation of January 1768. Might he have
been victim to the fear and modesty he had previously warned against? Or
did he suspect that the observation might have been false after all? According
to Maximilian Hell, who met Horrebow in Copenhagen in May 1768, the Danish
astronomer did not believe in a satellite of Venus. Nor had he ever believed that
his and Roedkirs observations of 1764 justied the conclusion that Venus had an
attendant! No, they were merely optical illusions, and Horrebows observations
had been reported in the newspapers against his will. According to Hell:
He had made a public statement in the Academy that what he saw
was just an indenite light which was neither round nor showed phases
like Venus; it looked like a little cloud. He had also been convinced
that it was an optical illusion when he had been unable to see the little
cloud with a 18-foot telescope. On the other hand, he saw it with a less
powerful telescope of 9 21 feet. He agreed with my opinion that also the
observations of other astronomers had been optical illusions, such as I
had explained in my treatise.65
Needless to say, Hells report of the conversation in Copenhagen does not
agree with either Horrebows published account of 1764 or his unpublished comments on the observation of January 1768. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that
Hell either misunderstood what Horrebow told him or deliberately misrepresented
the opinion of the Danish astronomer. At any rate, as far as observations are concerned, Venus satellite disappeared quietly and with no fanfare, both from Danish
and international astronomy.
After the death of Christian Horrebow, the Copenhagen chair in astronomy
was taken over by Thomas Bugge, an internationally oriented astronomer and
geodesist. In a report to the Royal Danish Academy of 1781 on Herschels discovery
of Uranus he referred briey to the much-discussed satellite of Venus. He found
it conspicuous that it had only been seen so rarely and irregularly and concluded
that the observations were probably optical illusions, such as suggested by Hell.
He was inclined to believe, he wrote, that it was due to an optical illusion in the
telescope, and the esteemed Vienna astronomer, Mr. Hell, has shown that in any
telescope and at any planet, when the eye is in a certain position, there appears
65 Hell 1792, p. 118. Hell was on his way to Norway to observe the Venus transit of 1769 (see
section 4.2).
68
close to the planet a dioptrical ghost or a small imitation of the main planet.
He further pointed out that Lambert had calculated the satellite to be visible in
front of the Sun on 1 June 1777. The Sun was carefully observed the entire day
in Vienna, Berlin and Copenhagen, but not the slightest trace of a satellite was
found; from this one can safely conclude that what has been seen and calculated
to be Venus satellite has not been a real celestial body.66 As far as Bugge was
concerned, the satellite just did not exist. At the time, his attitude was shared by
the large majority of astronomers.
1783, p. 219. On the works of Hell and Lambert, see sections 4.2 and 4.3.
1775, p. 181.
68 On Bonnet (17201793) and the principle of plenitude, see the classic account in Lovejoy
67 Lambert
69
but in his introductory chapter Bonnet also mentioned the astronomical bodies,
including what were often called the secondary planets:
Venus and the Earth have each their satellite. Undoubtedly, one
day we will discover one at Mars. Jupiter has four [moons], Saturn has
ve in addition to its ring or luminous atmosphere, which may replace
many small moons. Since it is nearly three hundred million miles away
from the Sun, it would receive such a faint light if it were not for its
1964, rst published in 1936.
70
Given the popularity of Bonnets book, and recalling the extensive article in
the Encyclopedie, acquaintance with the supposed Venus moon must have been
widespread in cultured circles in the last decades of the eighteenth century.
The German translation of Bonnets book was undertaken by Johann Daniel
Titius, professor of physics in Wittenberg, who in his edition of 1766 inserted in
the main text a section in which he presented for the rst time what later became
known as the Titius-Bode law or just Bodes law. This law, which exists in several
versions, states that the relative mean distances of the planets from the Sun follow
a mathematical series (for example, that r = 0.4 + 0.3 2n , where n = for
Mercury and 0, 1, 2, . . . for the other planets). Titius suggested that there might
exist a new planet in the space between Mars and Jupiter, although he described it
as a secondary planet, namely a satellite of Mars. Reecting on the large distance
between Mars and Jupiter, where at present neither a primary nor a secondary
planet is to be seen, he wrote: But should the Lord Architect have left that space
empty? Never! Let us condently wager that, without doubt, this place belongs to
the as yet still undiscovered satellites of Mars; let us also add that perhaps Jupiter
still has around itself some smaller ones that until now have not been sighted by
any telescope.70
In a later translation of 1772, Titius added a footnote to Bonnets reference
to Venus moon, noting that Bonnets optimistic hope of 1764 had not yet been
fullled: The most recent observations of the passage of Venus across the disk of
the Sun, made in all parts of the world, have failed to discover it [the satellite of
69 Bonnet
1764, pp. 78. In a later edition, Bonnet added in a lengthy footnote a sketch of the
history of the satellite of Venus from Cassini to Lambert, leaving the erroneous impression that
Cassini, as well as Short and Lambert, rmly believed in the existence of the satellite (see the
excerpt in Thornton 1804, p. 328).
70 Bonnet 1766, pp. 78. Reproduced in Nieto 1972, plate IV. Readers of the German translation
would believe that the law of planetary distances was due to Bonnet, as Titius (17291796)
did not disclose the authorship of the inserted section. For details on the origin and historical
development of the Titius-Bode law, see Jaki 1972a, Jaki 1972b and Nieto 1972.
71
Venus]. Although the case for it is likely, nonetheless it has not been conrmed by
actual observations.71
In spite of the doubts that the lack of observational evidence cast upon Venus
alleged moon, in the 1760s it seems to have been the subject of considerable
interest. An enthusiastic patron of science and culture, Frederick the Great of
Prussia took it seriously enough that he proposed to name it after his admired
friend Jean le Rond dAlembert, who since 1746 had been a member of the Berlin
Academy. The king wanted dAlembert to become president of the Academy and
never gave up his attempt to lure the eminent mathematician to Berlin.72 Frederick
the Greats attering proposal to name the Venus moon after him may have been
part of his maneuver to get him to the Prussian capital. However, dAlembert
declined his generous oers and remained in Paris. Perhaps he realized that it
would not be much of an honour to have a non-existing moon named after him.
Whatever his reasons, in a letter of 3 November 1764 he wrote: It is not the rst
time there is a question of a Venus satellite, which H.M. [His Majesty] gives me the
honour to talk to me about; and surely the Academy does not ignore it. He then
gave a brief account of the history of the satellite, mentioning Fontana, Cassini
and Short (but not Baudouin), and continued:
It gives me too much of an honour to intend to baptize this new
planet in my name; I am neither so great to be the satellite of Venus in
the sky nor in so good health to be so on Earth; and I nd myself so well
in my little place which I occupy in this world to strive for one in the
rmament. If one day a Mars satellite is found I know well what name
I would give it, that of one of His Majestys generals. With regard to
Mercury, if it should be given the honour of a satellite, rather a malt
otier
[nancer or proteer] or a courtier will furnish us with more names; but
this god has already too many satellites on Earth to be anxious to have
more.73
The enigmatic satellite was also known to another of the kings favourites,
Francois-Marie Arouet, better known by his pen name Voltaire. Frederick courted
the French author, wanting him to set down in Berlin as the brightest ornament
of his new Academy. In a letter of 5 December 1742, the king attered Voltaire
71 Same
72
by calling him the satellite of Venus: Si Paris est lle de Cyth`ere, vous etes
assurement le satellite de Venus.74 Although Voltaire did go to Berlin for a couple
of years, his stay there was troubled and not very productive.
In a letter of 9 July 1761 dAlembert referred to the satellite of Venus and
the failure of observing it during the recent transit. I do not know what has
happened with the lackey of Venus, he told Voltaire. I am afraid it cannot be a
hired lackey which has ceased to stay with her for a long time, but rather that the
said lackey has declined to follow his mistress during her passage over the Sun.75
He further mentioned the great eorts of the French astronomers to observe the
Venus transit from dierent places of the world, as far away as India and Siberia.
As a result of these eorts and other observations dAlembert had abandoned any
hope that Venus might be provided with a lackey moon of her own.
Voltaire referred to the satellite in a polemical work published 1768, Singularites de la nature, which was principally concerned with philosophical questions
related to embryology and natural history. It included attacks on the English naturalist and advocate of spontaneous generation John Turberville Needham, and
also criticized Buon, Maupertuis and other biological thinkers. In between these
attacks, Voltaire digressed on astronomical matters. It is nearly a century ago
that it was believed that a satellite of Venus had been discovered, he wrote. Since
then, a famous English observer saw or believed to have seen this satellite,
which is also believed to have been seen in France. However, the astronomers have
seen nothing of it. It may exist but we must wait and see.76 Voltaire further
suggested from reasons of analogy the existence of a satellite of Mars, but admitted that the suggestion lacked observational support. As mentioned in section 2.2,
he had ventured the idea of a satellite of Mars earlier, in his Micromegas of 1752.
Although not an astronomer, the German philosopher Johann Gottfried
Herder, who had studied with Immanuel Kant at K
onigsberg, had a lifelong interest in matters of astronomy. In an unpublished manuscript from 1765, Anfangsgr
unde der Sternkunde, he said, referring to Cassini and Short, that so far
Venus was known to have a single satellite.77 However, in a later theological work,
74 From
73
74
they saw on the solar Disk. Cleonicus oers as his opinion that what the Gentlemen took for a Satellite in the Sun was only a solar Spot, and it is certain that
what was published in the common News-papers was the same Kind of Mistake;
for the Satellite having a similar Appearance with that of the Planet, . . . must
necessarily have been very easily seen on the Suns Disk, should any such Thing
been there. He elaborates:
From the Accounts of Mr. Cassini, Mr. Short, and now of these
French Philosophers, it is very certain there is something that must
have appeared about the Planet in their Telescopes; but whether it be
a Satellite of the same Nature and Kind with those which belong to
the Earth, Jupiter, and Saturn, is a very great Question, because of
the unusual Position of its Orbit, and of its very seldom and precarious
Appearance. Were it only an opake Body, like another common Satellite,
it would, like them, appear at all Times in a uniform Manner, more
or less enlightened, but generally in the Form of a Crescent, like the
primary Planet itself; and as Venus is so near to the Earth, at her
inferior Conjunctions especially, it would be impossible not to have a
frequent View of a common Satellite that attended her.81
Cleonicus admits that if the existence of the satellite is ever conrmed, it will
conduce not a little to the Advancement of Astronomy and natural Philosophy,
for other reasons because it will yield an authoritative value of the mass of Venus.
Before the couple proceed to other topics, Euphrosyne expresses her hope that
the Vigilance of Astronomers will one Day or other put that Matter out of all
Doubt, and satisfy Posterity whether it be a real Satellite, or a mere Ignis Fatuus
that now amuses them and perplexes their Curiosity.82 Astronomers may not
have cared, but in the 1780s the case of the satellite of Venus was far from a dead
issue in popular and cultural circles.
Another work in the same literary genre, only more strongly permeated by
physico-theology, was produced 1776-79 by the Dutch minister and science popularizer Johannes Florentius Martinet.83 His often reprinted four-volume Katechismus der Natuur appeared in 1779 in a German translation. Martinet, a major
exponent of natural theology and the great chain of being, may have been inspired
81 Martin 1781, p. 263. The Young Gentleman and Ladys Philosophy rst appeared in the
General Magazine of Arts and Sciences, a journal edited and largely written by Martin (1704
1782) in the years 175565.
82 Ibid., p. 264.
83 Martinet 1779, where the Venus moon is discussed on pp. 212214 and on p. 1 in the appendix. On Martinet (17291795) as an exponent of enlightenment physico-theology, see van
der Wall 2004. In 1769 he was elected a member of the Dutch Society of Sciences (Hollandsche
Maatschappij van Wetenschappen), founded in Haarlem in 1752.
75
Figure 3.10: Frontispiece of Benjamin Martins The Young Gentleman and Ladys
Philosophy (1759), showing a didactic conversation between brother (Cleonicus)
and sister (Euphrosyne). Part of their conversation dealt with the satellite of
Venus. Books like Martins helped disseminate the hypothetical satellite to a
broader public.
76
84 Review
Chapter 4
78
claims of 1761 to which he did not refer.1 Although rst and foremost a physicist,
Mairan was also greatly interested in atmospheric and astronomical phenomena,
such as the northern light and comets. These phenomena he sought to explain with
his favourite, Cartesian-like hypothesis of a subtle material medium penetrating
all bodies and parts of space. His writings on the aurora borealis culminated in
1754 with the massive Traite physique et historiques de laurore boreale.2
According to Mairan, the cause of the aurora borealis was the zodiacal
light, the mysterious faint luminescence that Jean Cassini had discovered in 1683.
Mairan suggested that the zodiacal light had its origin in the part of an extended,
tenuous and varying solar atmosphere that reached as far as to the orbit of the
Earth. As an interior planet, also Venus would experience an aurora, for the planet
was in the range of the solar euvia and, like the Earth, was rotating and covered by an atmosphere. This much was known, or thought to be known. Mairans
treatise was rst published in 1732, as a supplement to the Histoire et Memoires,
and a substantial review of it appeared in the Philosophical Transactions. The
reviewer, John Eames, a fellow of the Royal Society, summarized Mairans view
as follows:
Are not the Inferior Planets, Mercury and Venus, almost always
immersed in the Zodiacal Matter? and may not that be one Reason
why tis so dicult to observe Spots in them? May not a Change, the
Density, or Magnitude of the Solar Atmosphere, be one Reason why the
Astronomers at Paris have not been able to observe those Spots in the
Disk of Venus that have been taken Notice of, and described by Mr.
Bianchini at Rome, a little before, since the Telescopes at Paris were of
equal Length and Goodness?3
The hypothetical solar atmosphere might serve many purposes. One of them
was Mairans attempt to rescue Venus moon, as he argued that under normal
circumstances the solar atmosphere would make the moon invisible. He wrote as
follows:
1 Mairan 1764, p. 164. An almost identical version of the memoir appeared in Journal des
Scavans, August 1762, pp. 528533. Given that Mairan read his rst memoir to the Academy
on 8 May 1762, about a year after Baudouin gave his addresses on the satellite of Venus, his
silence with respect to Baudouin and Montaigne is puzzling. It is hard to believe that this work
was unknown to him. Mairans defense of the satellite of Venus was briey mentioned by the
Greifswald astronomer Lampert R
ohl in a book of 1768 dealing with the Venus transits (R
ohl
1768, p. 141).
2 This was the second, much enlargened edition. The rst edition appeared in 1732. On Mairan
and his theory of the aurora borealis, see Kleinbaum 1973, pp. 203228, who notes the connection
to the Venus satellite on p. 225. See also Briggs 1967.
3 Eames 1735, p. 256.
79
Venus satellite and its principal planet are almost always submerged in the Suns atmosphere, as we can show from the position and
dimensions of this atmosphere; the satellite is thus almost always enveloped by a uid matter more or less dense, which hides it totally or
partly from us, and it is complicated by its smallness and by the structure of its little reecting surface; I think it is to this variable cause we
must attribute its fortuitous appearance and its long disappearances,
whereas we always see its planet rather luminous both because of its
size, forty or fty times greater, and because of the structure of its
reecting surface.4
In this way Mairan attempted to explain the scarcity of observations of the
Venus moon without abandoning them as spurious. He believed that under the
right circumstances the moon would once again be observed and then vindicate the
observations of Cassini and Short. The 84-year-old natural philosopher hoped to
request the astronomers not to reject a discovery upon which there is all reasons
to believe that its object is very real, and which M. Cassini judged to be of a very
great importance. Lalande, too, found it puzzling that so many astronomers,
independently, at dierent locations and with dierent instruments, had observed
the same phenomenon. If it was maintained that Montaigne had been seduced by
optical illusions, it seemed necessary to assume that the other astronomers had
fallen prey to the same illusions. According to Mairan and Lalande, this would be
an unlikely coincidence. The observations had to be taken seriously, somehow to
be explained.
In his article in the Encyclopedie, Lalande discussed various suggestions,
admittedly of a somewhat speculative nature, in order to make sense of the observations. For example, the light from Venus satellite might be much more feeble
than the light from the satellites of Jupiter and Saturn, or perhaps the phases of
Venus and its satellite, or the vaporous atmospheres supposedly covering them,
might be responsible for the erratic observations.5 Being among the periods most
well known and inuential astronomers, Lalandes words counted heavily in the
astronomical community. Although he never supported the case of Venus satellite
unequivocally, for a period he was clearly sympathetic to the idea and did his best
to give it a fair trial. His sympathy lasted until the early 1790s (see also section
3.1).
Lalande further referred to an earlier attempt of Giacomo Maraldi, the
nephew of Jean Dominique Cassini, to explain the variability of a star in the
4 Mairan 1764,
pp. 164165. See also the account in the Histoire, which according to Kleinbaum
1973, p. 242, was written by de Fouchy (Fouchy 1764).
5 Encyclop
edie II, p. 260.
80
constellation the Whale (Cetus), the Mira Ceti. First observed by the German astronomer David Fabricius in 1596, the phenomenon was discussed by the French
natural philosopher Ismael Boulliau in his Ad astronomos monita duo of 1667.
Boulliau also oered an explanation of it, if not the correct one. The favoured
explanation, adopted by Maraldi, was based on the assumption that the star was
rotating and composed of two dierent parts, a bright and a dark region; if so, it
might only be visible when the bright region turned towards the Earth.6 Whatever the explanation, Mira had puzzled the astronomers because of its random
character and the irregular periods between its observations. Perhaps, so Lalande
suggested, the strange appearance and disappearance of the Venus satellite might
be explained in a similar way. About twenty years later, the German amateur
astronomer Friedrich von Hahn noticed in his observations of Mira Ceti a small
variable star which only appeared randomly and which he therefore feared might
be a deception, like the supposed satellite of Venus.7
81
was widely accepted for more than a century. However, this is a subject of no
direct relevance to the question of the satellite of Venus.9
Figure 4.1: Maximilian Hell dressed in a kind of Lapp costume during his stay
at Vard in 1769 to observe the Venus transit. Engraving from his Observatio
transitus Veneris ante discum Solis (Copenhagen, 1770).
In 175758 Hell had observed Venus with both a refractor and a reector and
seen an ill-dened object near the planet. When he slowly moved his eye towards
the eyepiece he found that the object changed into a moon-like image of Venus
and with the same phase. But when he moved his eye perpendicular to the tube,
the image (but not the planet) moved in the same way. Referring to the year of
1757, he wrote: These trials, often repeated, went on for about an hour; and for
that reason I concluded that I had been fooled by some optical image of false light
through the Gregorian telescope, brought to the lens, perhaps, by the reection
in some polished and glittering part of the telescopes interior; and so I judged
the observation to be an illusion which did not merit insertion in the diary of
9 In
addition to Sarton 1944, see also Woolf 1959, pp. 176179 and Nielsen 1957b (in Danish).
Hells late rehabilitation was due to Simon Newcombs (18351909) careful detective work. See
Newcomb 1883.
82
83
Figure 4.2: In his De satellite Veneris, Maximilian Hell made a series of optical
experiments in order to account for the observation claims of a satellite of Venus.
He concluded that the image of the strongly luminous planet was reected both in
the lenses and in the eyes cornea, and that this gave the impression of a satellite
with the same phase as that of the planet. He further concluded that the image
of a satellite only occurred if the eye was held in a special position relative to the
eyepiece of the telescope tube. His argument was widely accepted and repeated in
the literature of the late eighteenth century and the nineteenth century.
How is it that during the same year of 1764, throughout the months of
March, April, May and June I saw it very often, perhaps on the same
days that M. Messier in Paris sought for it in vain, while they saw it
in Copenhagen and Auxerre, but could not see it again at the same
locations? Why, then, did it appear to me as often as I wanted, and to
others not? Was that because I had clear skies while they all the time
had clouds? To what cause could they [the protagonists of the satellite]
ascribe it that all these times I saw it through two Gregorian telescopes,
but never through the two much better Newtonian telescopes, although
84
Together with other of his astronomical works, Hells treatise on the false
moon of Venus was translated into German shortly before his death in 1792.15
The Viennese Jesuit astronomer used the opportunity to comment on the discovery
claim of Scheuten of which he had not originally been aware. He had no faith at all
in the observations made in Crefeld and was surprised that Lambert apparently
had considered them to be reliable. What Mr. Scheuten saw on the Sun on 6
June 1761 between 12 and 13 oclock, apart from sunspots, I do not know; he has
most denitely not seen the satellite of Venus.16 The translator of De satellite
Veneris was Longinus Anton Jungnitz, a student of Hell who since 1789 served
as professor of astronomy and physics at the University of Breslau. Jungnitz used
the opportunity to include a poem of his own on Venus moon:
Wie kam es, dass man bey der Venus nichts
Den himmlichen Trabanten fand?
O sie bedarf ihn an dem Himmel nicht,
Die ganze Welt ist ihr Trabant.17
An English translation may go like this: How did it come that the heavenly
satellite / was not found at Venus? / O, it did not need to be in the heavens, /
for the entire world is its satellite.
Apparently independent of Hells ingenious hypothesis, his fellow-Jesuit
Roger Boscovich came in 1767 to a somewhat similar conclusion.18 Having stayed
for a year in Paris 175960, Boscovich had good connections to inuential French
scientists. As early as 1748 he had become a correspondent of the Academie des
Sciences, and while in Paris he formed close links to Mairan, Lalande and Alexis
Claude Clairaut in particular.19 As he was respected in French scientic circles, so
was it the case in British scientic circles. Like so many contemporary astronomers,
he was engaged in the preparations for the 1761 Venus transit, on which subject
he contributed an article to the Philosophical Transactions (shortly thereafter, he
was elected a foreign member of the Royal Society).20 His plan was to observe
the transit from Istanbul, but he arrived too late to witness the event. The Royal
14 Hell
1765, p. 89.
1792, which was the second volume of a four-volume work published 179194. The
editor and translator, L. A. Jungnitz (17641831), published on electricity, meteorology and
lunar eclipses.
16 Hell 1792, p. 113.
17 Ibid., p. 120.
18 Boscovich 1767. This work was translated into German the same year by the Viennese Jesuit
and priest Karl Scherer (17161783).
19 On Boscovich and the Paris Academy, including his strained relations to dAlembert, see
Pappas 1996. Issue 4, volume 49, of Revue dHistoire des Sciences is a special issue on Boscovich.
20 Boscovich 1761. He read the paper to the Royal Society on 19 June 1760.
15 Hell
85
Society later invited him to lead a voyage to California to observe the 1769 transit,
but this plan was cancelled for political reasons.
As mentioned, Boscovich was acquainted with and for a while a colleague of
Lagrange, the astronomer who in early 1761 believed to have observed the satellite
of Venus. In an optical treatise of 1767, the Dissertationes quinque ad dioptricam
pertinentes, he included an addendum on The secondary images seen through
lenses, and the apparent satellite of Venus in which he explained the sightings of
the Venus satellite as optical illusions caused by reections in the ocular lens of
the telescope as well as in the eyes cornea. His explanation was thus of the same
kind as the one proposed by Hell. Strangely, Boscovich did not mention Hell at
all or his work of the previous year, although it must have been known to him
(the works of Hell and Boscovich were published by the same Viennese printer).
In fact, there is no indication in the literature that Hell and Boscovich were in
contact with one another.21
Figure 4.3: The erudite Jesuit scientist Roger Boscovich, here shown on a Yugoslavian note from 1981, did important work in natural philosophy, optics and
astronomy. He was active in the preparations for the 1761 Venus transit observations. Familiar with the claims of a Venus moon, he argued that the sightings were
caused by optical illusions.
21 Between 1760 and 1786, Boscovich wrote more than 200 letters, but none of them was
addressed to Hell. See Mandrino, Tagliaferri and Tucci 1986.
86
Boscovich did not say explicitly that all the satellite observations were due to
reections, nor did he deal with the observations in nearly the same detail as Hell.
Nonetheless, the message of his essay was clear: he had no faith in the satellite of
Venus. He explained what might have fooled the observers in the following way:
The part of the light that is reected at the ocular lens can be reected once more by that lens towards the position of the pupil, and end
in the bottom of the eye at a place dierent from the one to which the
direct rays proceed to form the primary image; and these [the secondary
rays] can at that point form a secondary image and exhibit something
like a satellite. . . . This can also happen by two reections of which
the one is in the cornea and the other in the ocular. . . . The second
reection in that case [after the reection in the cornea] can occur both
in the rst and in the second surface of the ocular glass.22
According to Boscovich, the eects would only arise if the curvatures of the
ocular and the cornea were of the right order. Moreover, It is not sucient that the
rays reected from the ocular arrive at the pupil, but they also have to be sensibly
parallel, for which some particular curvature of the ocular lens is necessary, to be
determined by the curvature of the cornea.23
Sightings of ghost images were common and well known to astronomers,
but not of quite the type that Hell and Boscovich described. In 1761, the prominent
Swedish astronomer Per Wilhelm Wargentin, perpetual secretary of the Swedish
Academy of Science, thought for a brief while that he had seen the Venus moon;
but he soon discovered that the moon turned when he rotated the telescope
tube axially. Wargentin had a high reputation among contemporary astronomers,
and his experience was sometimes quoted in support of Hells ghost-image hypothesis. For example, this is what Lalande did in his textbook Astronomie.24
On 1 June 1777, when Venus was almost at conjunction at the upper limb of the
Sun, the Swedish astronomer tried to observe the supposed moon which according to Lamberts prediction should be visible on this particular date. But he saw
nothing. I have always doubted if Venus were accompanied by a satellite, he
wrote in the proceedings of the Swedish Academy of Sciences. I am convinced
that the astronomers, who believe to have seen it, have been the victims of optical
delusion.25
22 Boscovich
1767, p. 287. The translations from Hell and Boscovich have kindly been made by
Henk Bos.
23 Ibid.
24 Wargentin 1780; Lalande 1792, vol. 3, p. 211.
25 Wargentin 1780. On Wargentin and his observations of Venus, see the detailed biography
Nordenmark 1939, especially pp. 174197 (in Swedish but with an extensive French summary).
Wargentins Venus observations of 1 June 1777 were in response to the prediction made by
87
Johann Elert Bode reported a similar experience in his Astronomisches Jahrbuch for 1792, in which he referred to an observation he had made in 1788 in Berlin:
On the 21st of June I saw in a 3.5-foot Dollond telescope a mirror image of Venus
originating in the eyepiece; at a certain increased distance of the eyepiece from
the objective lens, Venus itself became unclear whereas the image became clearly
visible, and by rotating the eyepiece it turned around Venus.26
On the other hand, if the observations of Wargentin and Bode were taken
to count in favour of Hells hypothesis, so the observations of Mayer in 1759 and
Horrebow in 1764 would have to be taken as evidence against it. Both astronomers
noted specically that the bright spot did not move when they changed the axial
direction of the telescope. Moreover, it was dicult to make Hells explanation
agree with Shorts observation of 1740. Short had observed the supposed satellite
for an entire hour, using dierent magnications, and during this time he must
frequently have moved the position of his eye. As Lambert was to point out, it
was hard to imagine that the conditions of Shorts observation was as ne-tuned
as required by Hells hypothesis.27
88
Augsburg, the Sun became covered by a thin veil of clouds, which made it possible
to observe it with the naked eye. Lambert recalled:
Not only did some of the spectators see Venus, they said that they
had also seen an even smaller [object]. At that time I was unacquainted
with the satellite, and for this reason I merely replied that the smaller
Venus must be a sunspot, as such often occur. I did not take a closer
look, for I had seen plenty of sunspots and did not know that there still
was something to search for and observe. To be sure, now I would have
wished that I had paid more attention to it.29
Whatever Lamberts early acquaintance with the problem of Venus satellite,
the idea soon fell in disrepute. He seems not to have taken any interest in the
question during the 1760s. But in 1774-76 he decided to reconsider the problem in
detail, which he did in a memoir of the Berlin Academy and also in two articles
in the Astronomisches Jahrbuch oder Ephemeriden, the important publication
29 Lambert
1776, p. 188.
89
series that Lambert established.30 Since its beginning in 1774, the yearbook was
published by the Berlin Academy of Sciences of which Lambert, as mentioned,
had become a member in 1765. The more comprehensive article in the Nouveaux
Memoires of the Berlin Academy, written in the summer of 1774, was reviewed
in the Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek by Abraham Gotthelf K
astner, professor of
astner
mathematics in Gottingen and a friend and correspondent of Lambert.31 K
refrained from oering his own view on the controversial question of the existence
of the Venus moon and suced to give a neutral account of Lamberts work.
However, he found the subject to be fascinating, such as witnessed by a poem he
wrote on Der Venustrabant. In its original German it goes as follows:
Das ihr Adonis noch am Himmel um sie geht,
Von Wahlen ward zuerst Cythere so geschmaht.
Sie haben freilich stets die Weiber im Verdacht;
Manch Sternrohr hat umsonst den Cisisbee bewacht.
Zu zeigen hat sich ihn einst Lambert unterstanden,
Und die Verl
aumdung ward zu Schanden.
So ists am Himmel nur; man sieht Trabantenheere
Auf Erden leicht um jede Cythere.32
A rough English translation goes as follows: That your Adonis still turns
around her in the heavens, / this choice Cytherea at rst found disgraceful. / Of
course they always hold the women in suspicion. / Many a telescope has watched
over a cicisbeo in vain. / Lambert once ventured to show his [the satellites] presence, / and the calumny became a disgrace. / Only in the heavens is it like that;
armies of satellites are / easily seen around every Cytherea on Earth.
Leonhard Euler, at the time residing in St. Petersburg at the Imperial Academy, was not pleased with the memoir from Berlin. In a letter to Lagrange, the
great mathematical physicist, he commented on the reputed satellite of Venus.
Without mentioning Lambert by name, he wrote: Perusing the latest volume
of the Berlin memoires I was not surprised at all that he [Lambert] raises yet
30 Lambert 1773, Lambert 1775, and Lambert 1776. The Berlin Astronomisches Jahrbuch was
from 1777 to 1829 edited by Bode, with whose name the yearbook is usually associated. On
Lamberts occupation with the moon of Venus, and the connection to his cosmological world
view, see Blumenberg 1975, pp. 609626. Blumenberg argues that the two works represent the
same thought style.
31 Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek 27 (1775), 8485. K
astner (17191800) is today best known
for his work on parallel theory which inspired Lamberts important research on the topic and
indirectly inuenced the foundation of non-Euclidean geometry in the early nineteenth century.
32 K
astner 1841, pp. 7980. Apart from his works as a scientist, K
astner was also known as a
prolic writer of occasional poetry. His poem on Venus satellite, written about 1778, was one
of many hundred Sinnedichte. The term cicisbeo (or cicisbee), derived from Italian, was widely
used in the eighteenth century for an escort or lover of a married woman.
90
another question of Venus satellite; and that even of the kind that turns upside
down all the principles of astronomy. I will never come to believe that the principle
of sucient reason can be used so boldly as a theatrical eect.33 It is unknown
what caused Lambert to take up the subject, which at the time was not considered
very interesting by the astronomers. It may have been a letter he received from
Hell, in which the Viennese astronomer denied the existence of the satellite, a
conclusion Lambert was not prepared to accept without further investigation.34
Aware of Baudouins earlier determination of the orbit of the Venus satellite, Lambert set out to do a better job. After all, contrary to Baudouin he was
an accomplished mathematician and astronomer. There is no indication that he
sought to consult either Baudouin or other of the actors involved in the observations of Venus moon. Lambert did not commit himself to either the existence or
non-existence of the satellite, but reasoned that if the satellite were real it must
be possible to calculate its orbital elements. He based his calculations not only on
Montaignes data but also took into account the observation that Scheuten had
reported to him as well as the work of Roedkier and Horrebow in Copenhagen. For
the eccentricity of the satellites orbit, he found e = 0.195, a little less than that
of Mercury, and he derived the orbital inclination to be 64 degrees. For the period
of revolution he arrived at 11 days and 5 hours. Moreover: I nd . . . that if the
diameter of the Earth is = 1, the diameter of Venus must be = 0.97, of the satellite
= 0.28, and of the Moon = 0.27. It further follows that the average distance of the
Venus satellite is as large as 64 21 times the radius of the Earth, or 66 21 times the
radius of Venus.35 His data were thus in rough agreement with those previously
obtained by Baudouin on the basis of Montaignes measurements.
From the associated tables of the motion of the satellite, Lambert found
that it would not have been visible towards the Sun in either 1761 or 1769, thus
oering an explanation of the failure to observe it during the transits. During the
rst transit it would have passed just below the solar disk, and during the second
above it. On the other hand, he calculated that on 1 June 1777 it should be possible
to see the satellite in front of the Sun, close to its centre: Venus will then pass 15
minutes above the upper limb of the Sun. When the satellite is in the lower part
of its orbit it is to be expected that it will pass in front of the Sun. And should
this really be seen, it will be an important contribution to decide the question
if Venus has a moon.36 This was a genuine prediction, but not a fortunate one.
33 Letter of 23 March 1775, in Euler 1862, pp. 586587. Euler (17071783) left Berlin for St.
Petersburg in 1766, when he was replaced by Lagrange (17361813), who stayed in Berlin until
1787.
34 On Hells letter to Lambert, see Bopp 1915, p. 74.
35 Lambert 1775, p. 183.
36 Lambert 1776, p. 191.
91
When the date appeared, no satellite was seen by the astronomers who looked for
it in Berlin, Vienna, Paris, Stockholm and Copenhagen. Johann Staudacher, an
amateur astronomer in Nuremberg, searched for it on the date, but I did not see
the Venus satellite, even though I looked for it until 4 oclock.37
It is unknown how Lambert responded to the failure, which may not have
come as a complete surprise to him. He knew about the objections against the
satellite of Venus, not only from the published sources but also from a letter
he received from Hell in early 1777. Although praising Lambert as an eminent
mathematician and theoretical astronomer, Hell disagreed completely with him
with regard to the question of Venus moon and the observational evidence in
favour of it.38 Lambert died prematurely a few months later, on 25 September
1777, and seems not to have commented on the unfortunate prediction.
In his two papers in the Astronomisches Jahrbuch Lambert did not comment
on the mass of Venus, but this he did in his earlier and more extensive contribution
to the Berlin memoir. He used the formula () given above in section 3.1, only with
data somewhat dierent from those used by Baudouin, namely: as = 64.5 Earth
radii, am = 60.25 Earth radii, Ts = 11.2175 days and Tm = 27.3215 days. Inserting
the ratios as /am = 1.07 and Tm /T s = 2.43 in the equation, he got MV /ME
=
7.278. Contrary to Baudouin, Lambert adopted the standard value RV /RE
= 0.97
and from this he found the relative density of Venus to be V /E
= 8. It may seem
incredible that Venus, the sister planet of the Earth, is so much more massive, but
Lambert sought to justify his result by relating it to the planets power of light
reection:
A planet like Venus which reects so much light does not seem to
be a very porous body. We know that the density of Jupiter is only 1/5
and that Saturns is only 1/10 of that of the Earth. This could let one to
believe that the density of the planets increases gradually as they come
closer to the Sun. Even so, however, the density of the Sun itself is only
a quarter of that of the Earth. So, there are no means to conclude much
from all this.39
Perhaps he did not nd his reasoning convincing by second thought, which
may have caused him to omit Venus mass altogether from his later articles in the
Astronomisches Jahrbuch. It is unclear if Lambert believed in the existence of the
Venus satellite, but in his treatise of 1773 he expressed himself as if he did. He
ended his memoir with reections on the use and purpose of the supposed satellite.
37 Quoted
92
Like most other natural philosophers in the period, he was convinced that Venus
and the other planets were inhabited:
This satellite being so little visible, its eclipses in the shadow of
Venus will never be of great use for us. Furthermore, they last not for
long, and the great inclination of its orbit makes them happen only
very rarely. On the other hand, the shadow which the satellite casts
on Venus is an extremely faint penumbra; the inhabitants of Venus see
their satellite under an angle of 14 21 minutes, whereas the Sun is seen
under an angle of 44 minutes. Because of this, daylight is only reduced
by 1/10, which is nothing for light such as the one that comes from
the Sun. Thus, this satellite not only hides itself from our view, but it
conceals moreover the traces of its movements.40
More than a century later the Belgian astronomer Paul Stroobant (of whom
more in section 6.2) argued that the values obtained by Lambert were inconsistent
and, therefore, the existence of a true satellite is denitely ruled out.41 Stroobant
did not use the systems considered by Baudouin and Lambert, but the VenusSun and the satellite-Venus systems, that is, he adopted the same approach that
Lalande had followed in 1781. By inserting in equation () the values TV = 224
days 7 hours, Ts = 11 days 2 hours, as = 63 Earth radii, and aV = 16846 Earth
radii, he arrived at the result
MV
1
.
=
M
42336
Comparing it with the modern ratio, based on perturbation theory, namely
MV
1
=
M
412150
Stroobant found that the mass determined from Lamberts data was 9.74 times
too great and concluded that he had refuted the hypothesis of a Venus satellite.
He had been foreshadowed by the English astronomer John Russell Hind, who
in a much earlier comment on Lamberts analysis concluded that there was one
fatal objection to it, namely: If it were correct, the mass of Venus would be ten
times greater than the value found from theory by other methods.42 Contrary to
40 Lambert 1773, p. 248. On Lambert and pluralism, see Crowe 1999, pp. 5559. In his Cosmologische Briefe, Lambert not only made all heavenly bodies (comets included) inhabitable, he
also believed in accordance with the principle of plenitude that there were on each of these
innumerable inhabitants of all possible kind and form (Lambert 1976, p. 82).
41 Stroobant 1887a, p. 11. William Smyth, on the other hand, found Lamberts theory to be
very consistent (Smyth 1844, vol. 1, p. 109).
42 Hind 1852, p. 38.
93
Stroobant, Hind realized that the objection did not rule out the satellite of Venus,
but only questioned the Baudouin-Lambert version of it.
The criticism of Hind and Stroobant carried no historical force. In 1773, when
Lambert wrote his essay, the perturbation method was not yet fully developed and
had not been applied to the case of Venus.43 Using perturbation theory, Laplace
reported in the fourth edition of his Syst`eme du monde the value MV /ME = 0.945,
which is rather far from the presently accepted ratio of 0.815.44 Laplaces value is
close to the one obtained by Baudouin, but the agreement in coincidental.
It may be worth summarizing the calculations made in the eighteenth century
to nd the mass of Venus relative to that of the Earth from the observed data
of the planets satellite. This is done in table 4.3, where the results are compared
with the perturbation-based values obtained by Dionis du Sejour and Laplace and
also the modern value.
Author
Mass ratio,
Venus/Earth
Method
Baudouin 1761
Lambert 1773
Lalande 1781
Dionis du Sejour 1789
Laplace 1813
(modern)
0.98
7.28
8.65
0.781
0.945
0.815
Venus-satellite; Earth-Moon
Venus-satellite; Earth-Moon
Venus-satellite; Sun-Venus
perturbations
perturbations
perturbations
Table 4.1: The mass of Venus relative to the mass of the Earth. The rst three
rows presume the existence of a satellite of Venus.
43 On the method of determining the mass and density of a planet by means of its satellite,
as known in the late nineteenth century, see e.g. Dionis du Sejour 1789, pp. 522524, who for
Venus reported MV /ME = 0.781 (p. 527). However, since he did not believe in the existence of
a Venus moon, this value was based on estimates of the planets perturbations on the orbit of
the Earth.
44 Laplace 1813, p. 217.
Chapter 5
96
For several years Herschel looked carefully for the spots that might reveal
an axial rotation, but was frustrated that in almost all of his observations they
failed to turn up. The reason, he suggested, was the dense atmosphere that most
often would hide the appearance of the solid surface. On 30 November 1789 he
wrote in his observation diary: No satellite visible. If she has one, it must be less
in appearance than a star of the 8th or 9th magnitude; power 300.1 This was
all he had to say about the moon of Venus. Bode, another of the periods great
astronomers, was no less sceptical. In a popular work on astronomy he referred
briey to the hypothetical satellite of Venus: A few astronomers have sometimes
thought to have seen a [Venus] moon, but, for various reasons, its existence is
still most doubtful.2 In a later work, published 1816, he repeated the judgment,
this time mentioning the various observation claims from Fontana to Montbarron.
Since that time [1764] no real astronomer has boasted of having noticed a similar
phenomenon at Venus.3
Among the specialists in observational planetary astronomy belonged the
respected German amateur astronomer Johann Hieronymus Schr
oter, a contemporary of Herschel. In 1790 Schr
oter provided additional observational evidence for
the Venus atmosphere, and he argued that he had seen exceedingly high mountains on the planet (as high as 40 km). He was also the rst to nd that the
observed and theoretically expected phases of Venus do not agree exactly; and he
noted that when Venus is close to the solar limb, it will appear to be surrounded
by a thin and luminous ring. But his diligent observations of Venus, made from
his observatory in Lilienthal near Bremen, never led him to entertain the idea of
a satellite. In the Aphroditographische Fragmente of 1796, primarily a description
of the 27-foot Lilienthal telescope, he exuberantly discussed the divine purpose
and inhabitableness of the planets. Is Venus not a fully developed celestial body
because it probably has no companion, such as our Earth? In a footnote he
added:
During my 15 years of observation I have never, in spite of all
attention, found the slightest trace of either a real satellite or, in any
telescope, a deceptive secondary image, such as the late Father Hell
thought in his treatise of 1766.4
1 Herschel 1912, vol. 1, p. 444. Originally published as Observations on the planet Venus,
Philosophical Transactions 83 (1793), 201219.
2 Bode 1807, p. 35. Calling the existence of the moon still most doubtful (noch sehr zweifelhaft) may suggest that Bode was not yet willing to write o the satellite.
3 Bode 1816, p. 357.
4 Schr
oter 1796, p. 193. A modern selection of Schr
oters important observations of Venus,
including papers by Herschel and Harding, appears as Schr
oter 1995. For an appreciation of
Schr
oters astronomical work, see Moore 1960.
97
98
99
that the observation reports have been due to errors on behalf of the observers.7
Charles Hutton, a distinguished applied mathematician and fellow of the Royal
Society, was more positively inclined in his Mathematical and Philosophical Dictionary of 1795. In his account of the satellite of Venus he emphasized the diculties
of observing a small moon belonging to an interior planet. Indeed it must be
acknowledged, that Venus may have a satellite, though it is dicult for us to see
it.8 Just like the Encyclopedie of 177882 included a detailed account of the satellite of Venus, so did its British counterpart, the Encyclopdia Britannica of 1801.
Much in the style of the Encyclopedie, and more or less copying it, the British
encyclopedia provided details about the observations of Cassini and Short, and
also referred to the works of Montaigne and Baudouin.9
Venus rumored companion found its way into the G
ottingen professor Johann Erxlebens Anf
angsgr
unde der Naturlehre, probably the most popular textbook in the physical sciences in Northern Europe. Edited by another G
ottingen
physicist, Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, the book was published in six editions
between 1784 and 1794. After having recounted a brief history of the satellite
of Venus, as usual starting with Fontana and ending with Lambert, Lichtenberg
noted that its existence is still very uncertain.10
The widespread knowledge of the Venus moon in the late eighteenth century
may be further illustrated by a reference to Denmark, a country which scientically
was at the periphery of Europe. Esaias Fleischer, a civil servant and amateur
scientist, wrote between 1786 and 1804 a huge work in 26 volumes, what he called
a universal natural history. In the rst volume of this great project he described
the world system from the perspective of astronomy, if constantly with an eye on
natural theology. Including a section on Venus satellite, he referred to the standard
chronology from Fontana to Roedkir and Montbarron. Although Fleischer found
it hard to accept Hells reection-image hypothesis, he admitted that the lack
of conrmation during the transits in 1761 and 1767 amounted to hard evidence
against the possibility of a satellite. For this reason he concluded that the existence
of a Venus moon was dubious.11
7 Gehler 1798, p. 340. The second edition, published in 1833 and edited by the chemist Leopold
Gmelin (17881853) and others, excluded the account of the former edition and simply stated in
a footnote that it was unnecessary to deal with the opinion, so certainly erroneous that Venus
possesses a moon (vol. 7, p. 64).
8 Hutton 1795, vol. 2, p. 649.
9 Most of the account on the satellite of Venus is quoted in Thornton 1804, pp. 329332. The
rst edition of the Encyclopdia Britannica appeared in 176871.
10 Erxleben 1787 (fourth edition), pp. 569570. The Danish translation of the book, Begyndelsesgrunde til Naturlren (1790), included references to the works of Roedkir and Horrebow.
11 Fleischer 1786, p. 909. Fleischer (17321804) was unaware of Scheutens observation and of
course also of the unpublished observations of his compatriots Roedkir and Horrebow of 1761.
100
The article in the Encyclopdia Britannica and Bonnets reference in Contemplation de la nature, mentioned above, furnished the main sources for Robert
John Thornton who in 1804 advocated the controversial satellite hypothesis in a
polemical reply to the chemist and mineralogist Arthur Aikin. Thornton, a London physician and naturalist, is best known for his magnicently illustrated tables
The Temple of Flora, a work he produced in 17971810 and the title of which he
borrowed from Erasmus Darwin, his hero.12 Inspired by Darwins cosmogonical
ideas, he defended in the second part of his great work that Venus was followed
by a satellite and that it was discovered in the eighteenth century. In a lengthy
and extremely critical review in the Annual Review, the chemist and mineralogist
Arthur Aikin took him to task for supporting such a ridiculous claim. How was it,
he asked, that the satellite had eluded the sight of Dr. Herschel, of the astronomer
royal, and of every other astronomer of the world? Surely it was nothing but a
phantom:
As we are told that the discovery was made in the last century, it
must have been known to others as well as to himself; and as no trace
of it is to be found in any professed treatise of astronomy, we may be
allowed to doubt on the subject, and to suspect that Dr. Thornton has
asserted what is not true.13
In his reply to Aikins attempt to ridicule him, Thorncroft documented in
detail that, whether or not the satellite really existed, he was in good company
and better informed than his critic. The satellite could indeed be found in many
professed treatises of astronomy.14
The belief in a Venus moon has been abandoned, and for a long time there
has been no talk about it.15 So stated a popular astronomy book of 1828, undoubtedly correctly. Even French authors agreed that whatever the great Cassini
had seen in his telescope, it was almost certainly not a moon of Venus. Lalande,
who for a long time had been favourably inclined towards the satellite, came
to agree with the majority view. In his Histoire de lastronomie moderne, JeanBaptiste Delambre dealt in great detail with Cassinis contributions to astronomy,
including his observations of 1672 and 1686. But he briey and rather supercially
dismissed them in terms of the mechanism proposed by Hell. What Cassini had
seen was nothing but an optical illusion which is reproduced not only in the case
12 Thornton
101
of Venus, but also for the other planets and most stars.16 Delambre obviously
did not nd the subject to be worth a closer examination.
Until the 1880s, scientic references to the satellite of Venus were few and
scattered, although they were a standard ingredient in more popular works on
astronomy. These typically told the story in the same way, relying on the same
secondary sources and repeating the same errors and misunderstandings.17 Most
stories were historically framed , in the sense that they accounted for what earlier
generations of astronomers had believed; and they also included a moral element,
in so far that they highlighted the epistemic superiority of current knowledge over
that of earlier periods. They never included unconditional knowledge claims that
there was, in fact, a moon of Venus.
In so far as they considered the question at all, the majority of astronomers
probably agreed with the verdict of the famous naturalist Alexander von Humboldt, who in his inuential Kosmos wrote about the so-called Venus moon that
adler, diit belongs to the astronomical myths of an uncritical age.18 Johann M
rector of the Dorpat Observatory and a leading gure in European astronomy,
tended to agree, concluding that neither Venus nor Mercury have satellites, and
among the interior planets the Moon of the Earth is the only satellite. M
adler
aired the possibility that the observations might be due to an unknown planet
with about the same period of revolution as Venus, but only to dismiss it as an
unlikely explanation. He preferred to support Hells hypothesis of optical illusions:
I have myself sometimes seen secondary pictures, not only at Venus
but also at Jupiter and Saturn, but at every occasion I have been convinced that they were nothing but pure optical illusions. Because, when
I brought the primary picture into the centre of the eld of vision, then
the secondary picture moved towards it from the other side and disappeared in the centre, merging with it.19
Later in the Geschichte der Himmelskunde he made the same point in a
slightly dierent way: I recall that once, in the beginning of my astronomical
career, I saw Jupiter accompanied by ve moons. Only after having turned the
eyepiece several times and changed the focus to Jupiter was I satised that the
fth moon was nothing but an optical reection of the primary planet.20
16 Delambre
1821, p. 743.
are Anger 1862 and Tuxen 1861, pp. 215216 (in Danish). We have not made any
systematical study of the literature.
18 Humboldt 184558, vol. 3, p. 539. Schorr 1875 protested against Humboldts characterization
(pp. v, x and 60).
19 M
adler 1873, vol. 1, pp. 475476. The idea of an unknown planet masquerading as the moon
of Venus was developed by J.-C. Houzeau in 1884 (see section 6.1).
20 M
adler 1873, vol. 2, p. 234.
17 Examples
102
1834.
185460, vol. 2, pp. 538542. The book appeared simultaneously in German, as
Popul
are Astronomie, ed. W. C. Hankel (Leipzig: O. Wigand, 185559), where the section on
the Venus moon is in vol. 2, pp. 473476. Although best known as a physicist, Arago (1786
1853) also contributed to astronomy and astrophysics. He was director of the Paris Observatory
184353 and during the 1842 solar eclipse he examined the Suns chromosphere and determined
that the limb of the Sun is gaseous.
23 Hind 1852, p. 37. J. R. Hind (18231895) received the Royal Societys Gold Medal and the
Lalande Medal. He discovered ten asteroids and was the rst to observe the new planet Neptune
from Britain. Obituary in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 56 (1896), 200205.
22 Arago
103
of 1740.24
The cautious attitude of Arago, Hind and Webb was shared by Karl Theodor
Anger, a mathematician and astronomer at K
onigsberg, who in 1862 argued that
the investigations of this matter should in no way be considered exhausted.25
He realized that some of the observations might be due to optical ghost images but
found it hard to believe that expert observers such as Cassini, Short, Montaigne
and Horrebow had been fooled by their telescopes. And if this were really what
had happened, why had the false images not turned up in later observations of
Venus? This was the same objection that Horrebow had raised nearly a century
earlier. The same point was also considered by Hermann Joseph Klein, a respected
amateur astronomer who possessed a private observatory in Cologne and edited
Sirius, a journal of popular astronomy founded in 1880. Klein leaned towards
the hypothesis of ghost images but nonetheless presented the observations as an
astronomical enigma. He did not believe in the satellite of Venus, but, like several
of his contemporaries, would not abandon it for good either.26
The only astronomer in the mid-nineteenth century who explicitly endorsed
the controversial satellite of Venus may have been William H. Smyth, a British
navy ocer and distinguished amateur astronomer. In his classic compilation A
Cycle of Celestial Objects he evaluated the controversial moon in a much more positive light than his contemporaries. To the present moment it cannot be demonstrated that it is not in existence, he wrote, urging his fellow astronomers not
to relinquish the search for it.27 Smyth pointed out that the satellite, supposedly
very small, would be extremely dicult to nd. Because, when Venus is nearest to
the Earth, and circumstances are most favourable for its detection, the dark side
would be turned toward us. As to the generally held belief that the observations
of the moon were due to ghost images or the like, he found it to be dogmatic.
As we have seen, in the years about 1840 interest in the satellite of Venus
was at a low point. Among the few works which referred to the subject, one in
particular stands out because it made a connection to pluralism and natural theology. Thomas Dick, an Irish-born priest, teacher and author, was equally occupied
with Christian education and natural science. A prolic writer, in several of his
works he argued eloquently in favour of extraterrestrial life throughout the universe. Not only were the planets and their satellites inhabited, so were the Sun,
the asteroids and Saturns system of rings (only with respect to comets did he
24 Webb
1859, pp. 4546. According to Hockey 2007, p. 1200, T. W. Webb (18061885) was
the patron saint of British amateur astronomers. On Webbs life, see the obituary in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 46 (1886), 198201.
25 Anger 1862, p. 103. See also Lardner 1860, p. 206, which concluded that the observations of
Venus moon were probably due to illusions.
26 Klein 1879, p. 118, which included a reproduction of Lambert 1775 and 1776.
27 Smyth 1844, vol. 1, pp. 109110.
104
express hesitation). To Dick and other pluralists the notion of habitable celestial
bodies without life went counter to their Christian faith; for this faith told them
that God had created matter for the sake of intelligent beings, supposed to be
more or less comparable to humans. Relying on the old principle of plenitude they
believed that if life could exist, it did exist. Although primarily a writer, Dick also
made astronomical observations, some of which he published in the Edinburgh New
Philosophical Journal. For example, in 1844 he reported observations of Venus at
the time of its superior conjunction.28
Dicks Celestial Scenery, published in 1838, ran into six editions and about 25
reprintings. This successful work was primarily concerned with astronomy rather
than theology, although in Dicks mind the two subjects were necessarily intertwined. What is of interest in the present context, the book included a detailed
section on the satellite of Venus with quotations from Cassini and later observers.
There is a singular consistency in these observations, which it is dicult to account for if Venus have no satellite, he opined. Based on analogical reasoning
he was inclined to believe that the satellite was real: It is somewhat probable,
reasoning a priori, that Venus, a planet nearly as large as the earth, and in its
immediate neighbourhood, is accompanied by a secondary attendant.29
As to the primary planet, Dick was of course convinced that it was inhabited,
for the Creator has, doubtless, in this as well as in every other case, adapted the
structure of the inhabitant to the nature of the habitation. He even calculated
the number of Venusians, arriving at the astounding gure of 53.5 billions.30 In
another work, The Sidereal Heavens of 1840, he went even further and estimated
the population of the entire universe to be about 6 1022 (one tenth of Avogadros number!). Not only did he consider it somewhat probable that Venus
was endowed with a moon, the same might also be the case for Mars: If such
a satellite exists, it is highly probable that it will revolve at the nearest possible
distance from the planet, in order to aord it the greatest quantity of light. . . . It
is therefore possible, and not at all improbable, that Mars may have a satellite,
although it has not yet been discovered. Moreover:
It is no argument for the nonexistence of such a body that we have
not yet seen it. . . . The long duration of winter in the polar regions of
Mars seems to require a moon to cheer them during the long absence of
28 Astore 2001, p. 37. On Dick (17741857) as a pluralist, see Crowe 1999, pp. 195202 and
Hennesey 1999, pp. 6265. Yeo 1986 provides an insightsful analysis of the British context of
pluralism and natural theology.
29 Dick 1838, p. 96 and p. 99.
30 Ibid. p. 135. His population number for Mars was 15.5 billions, and for the Moon 4.2 billions;
Saturn, including its system of rings, could boast of no less than 13,630 billion inhabitants. For
comparison, the population of the Earth in 1838 was about 1.2 billion. Dicks table is reproduced
in Crowe 1999, p. 199.
105
the sun; and if there be none, the inhabitants of those regions must be
in a far more dreary condition than the Laplanders and Greenlanders
of our globe.31
Although Dick was sympathetic to the satellite of Venus, and found its possible existence to be congruent with both pluralism and natural theology, there
never was a strong link between the two. As we have seen, Schr
oter described the
architecture of Venus in the language of natural theology, but he did not believe
that the planet had a companion.
Dicks interest in the satellite of Venus was noted by at least some astronomical writers. Hiram Mattison, an American Methodist minister and author of
elementary textbooks of astronomy, was among the few who actually supported
the hypothesis of a satellite. Referring to Dick, he found it highly probable that
such a body exists. Observations might still decide in favour of the satellite, he
thought, a question worthy of the attention of Lord Rosse, and the powers of his
colossal reector.32
David Brewster, the Scottish natural philosopher and eminent optician, was
no less a pluralist than Dick. And yet he considered the observations of the supposed satellite of Venus to be nothing but deceptions. Relating to Wargentin,
the Swedish astronomer mentioned in section 4.2, he wrote that he had in his
possession a good achromatic telescope, which always showed Venus with such a
satellite, and . . . the deception was discovered by turning the telescope about its
axis.33 Brewster was well aware of the history of Venus moon, but he shared
the standard view that the moon was not real. In More Worlds than One, a main
work in the pluralist literature, he wrote: In this group of [interior] planets no
moon or satellite has yet been discovered, and it is probable that none exists. An
atmosphere of great height, and of a peculiar constitution reecting on the planet
the light of the sun many hours after he has set, might in all of them supply the
place of a moon.34
Nor did William Whewell, Master of Trinity College and a highly respected
scientist and philosopher, endorse the hypothesis of a Venus moon. In his
31 Dick
1838, p. 140.
1849 (fth edition), p. 94. Apart from his lectures and books on astronomy, Mattison (18111868) was also known for his active support of the anti-slavery movements.
33 Quoted in Dick 1838, p. 99 and also in Smyth 1844, p. 109. We have not been able to locate
the original source. Neither Dick nor Smyth accepted Brewsters argument that astronomers in
the eighteenth century had been deceived by optical illusions. As Dick pointed out, the satellite
had been seen both with refractors and reectors, and sometimes with dierent powers applied,
for which reasons it was unlikely that the observations were caused by the instrument.
34 Brewster 1854, p. 76. On Brewsters pluralism and his debate with the prominent scientist,
philosopher and priest William Whewell (17941866) on this issue, see Brooke 1977 and Crowe
1999, pp. 313351.
32 Mattison
106
107
1896, p. 84.
p. 85.
39 Ibid., p. 86.
40 Spencer 1858, p. 86. First published in Westminster Review 70 (1858), 185225 and included
in the 1891 edition of his Essays (Spencer 1891). On Spencers theory, see Brush 1996, pp. 5053.
41 Lardner 1860, p. 213, found it not altogether improbable that a satellite of Mars may yet
38 Ibid.,
108
Venus
282
0
Earth
289
1
Mars
326
0
Jupiter
14
4
Saturn
6.2
8
Uranus
9
4 or 6
The smaller the gure, the more satellites. In this way Spencer explained that
Mars was a little less likely than Earth to have a satellite, but he also noted the
seeming anomaly that his theory predicted that Venus should have one (since
its ratio between gravity and centrifugal force was slightly less).
The anomaly might be apparent only, as it relied on what possibly was an
inaccurate value of the diameter of Venus. So as to safeguard his theory, Spencer
left the door open to the possibility that Venus did have a moon: Not a few
astronomers have asserted that Venus has a satellite. Cassini, Short, Montaigne
of Limoges, Roedkier, and Montbarron, professed to have seen it; and Lambert
calculated its elements.42 Although he did not really believe in the satellite of
Venus, nor did he think it was ultimately disproved. Spencers argument on the
number of satellites, including the possibility of a Venus moon, was adopted by the
American spiritualist Hudson Tuttle, who incorporated it in his Arcana of Nature,
a work published in 1860.43
What was perhaps the only eort of the mid-nineteenth century to observe
the phantom moon of Venus was made by John Craig, an eccentric English amateur astronomer and retired country clergyman. Craig not only dreamed to construct the worlds largest achromatic telescope, he actually did it. The enormous
instrument had a total length of 85 feet and was placed on Wandsworth Common in London. (The tube of Lord Rosses famous mirror telescope of 1844 the
Leviathan of Parsonstown had a length of 58 feet.) Completed in September
1852, Craigs intention was to use it for studies of Saturns ring system and to
decide the old question of Venus moon. Understandably, the monster refractor
attracted a great deal of local attention. Lord Rosse visited the observatory and
politely expressed his admiration of it. The telescope was described in the Illustrated London News, where it was praised for its powers as a measuring instrument.
Now that the instrument is adjusted, Mr. Craig wishes the Planet Venus to be
examined, for he hopes to settle the question as to whether she has a satellite or
be discovered. The argument was the traditional one of a correlation of the number of satellites
with the distances of the planets from the Sun.
42 Spencer 1858, p. 87.
43 H. Tuttle, Arcana of Nature, 2 vols. (Boston: Berry, Colby & Co., 186063), reprinted in
Tuttle and Denmore 2003, where the reference to the satellite of Venus is on p. 169.
109
not, and we need not say what an advantage the solution of this fact would be to
science.44
Craigs expensive brain child was a singular failure. Only a few years after its
completion it was dismantled and removed, apparently without having contributed
anything of value to the science of astronomy. It is unknown if it helped Reverend
Craig to form an opinion about the satellite of Venus.
110
passing in front of the Sun, or were they merely sunspots? The Zurich astronomer
Johann Rudolf Wolf quoted in his Mittheilungen u
ber die Sonnenecken of 1859
several observations of possible planetary bodies, including Scheutens observation
of 1761 of the supposed satellite of Venus. To his mind, planet Vulcan belonged
to the same category as the discarded moon of Venus. As the British astronomer
Richard Carrington was quick to point out, whatever the worth of Scheutens
observation, the object could not have been an interior planet.47
The result of the apparent discovery of an intramercurial planet gave rise
to a Vulcan-mania in astronomical circles and a general interest in new celestial
bodies in the interior part of the solar system. Infected by the Vulcan-mania, Haase
thought that perhaps some of the observations of the Venus satellite might have
been due to one or more planets (these being asteroids or not) masquerading as
a moon. He suggested that this was probably the case with some of Montaignes
observations.48
As Haase recognized, this idea, or something close to it, was not quite new.
In a report on various observations made in Mannheim in 1811, Ferdinand Adolf
Freiherr von Ende, an amateur astronomer from Celle, added a postscript on
Venus satellite, which has been disputed with such convincing arguments that,
I suppose, no one believes in it. On the other hand, he found it implausible
that the observations could have been caused by optical delusions and therefore
suggested: It might be possible that just at those dates one of the ve new
planets, Uranus etc., was located in the vicinity of Venus and had been mistaken
for its satellite. A rough estimate would suce to substantiate or disprove this
idea, made in passing.49 Whereas Haase did not suggest the planet Vulcan as an
explanation of the Venus observations, this is precisely what Mr. Arthur Blacklock
from Manchester did. He knew about the Venus moon from the English translation
of Humboldts Kosmos, but contrary to Humboldt he was unable to believe that
the observation reports and that of the fellow-Briton James Short in particular
could be without foundation in fact. As to what fact it was founded in, he
suggested that, in the case of Scheuten, we have here a record of a transit of
Vulcan.50 As far as we have been able to ascertain, no one else felt tempted to
47 Carrington
1860. On the attempts to nd observations of Vulcan before 1859, see Baum and
Sheehan 1997, pp. 157160. Wolf 1891, vol. 1, p. 537 puts Venus moon and Vulcan in the same
basket.
48 Haase 186369.
49 Ende 1811, p. 394, letter dated 4 September 1811. Apart from Uranus, the new planets
were the asteroids discovered in the early years of the nineteenth century: Ceres (1801), Pallas
(1802), Juno (1804) and Vesta (1807).
50 Blacklock 1868, p. 197. See also the comment by Thomas Webb in the same issue of the
Astronomical Register where Webb admitted that the consistency of the observations in 1764
was dicult to explain (Webb 1868).
111
52 Letter
1876b.
of 10 November 1781, reproduced in part by von Zach in his Monatliche Correspondenz
112
Some twenty years later Julius August Koch, a medical doctor and amateur astronomer from Danzig, looked more closely at the possibility mentioned by
Bernoulli. In 1802 he argued that what Roedkir had observed in Copenhagen on
4 March 1764 might possibly have been Uranus, at the time still undiscovered. As
to the other observations, Koch suggested that they were probably due to an as
yet undiscovered planet. I cannot deny that I strongly believe in such a planet,
especially since the discovery of Pallas, he wrote. He thought there existed a
primary planet whose average distance from the Sun is almost the same as that of
Venus, but which is smaller.53 Moreover, he assumed that the hypothetical planet
moved in an orbit strongly inclined relative to the Venus orbit and that part of its
surface was dark. If so, the rotating planet would reect light irregularly and in
this way all the other appearances of the satellite of Venus may be explained in a
quite satisfactory way.54
It is unclear if Haase shared Kochs view or believed that there was convincing
observational evidence for a Venus moon. As to Roedkir, if he had unwittingly observed Uranus in 1764, he was not the rst to do so. The planet had been recorded
on a number of earlier occasions, only taken to be an ordinary star, by Flamsteed,
Bradley and Tobias Mayer, among others.55 Although these astronomers actually
saw the planet Uranus, of course they did not discover it.
If Haase did not spell out his opinion about the satellite of Venus, Schorr was
more explicit in a monograph he published on the subject in 1875, Der Venusmond.
His interest in the subject was probably indebted to the transit of 1874, for as an
introduction to this event he had written a small tract on the history of the solar
parallax problem and the transits of Venus.56 Schorr was convinced that the
earlier observations of the moon were not illusions and that he had accumulated
convincing evidence in favour of the real existence of Venus satellite. The Venus
moon, he stated, belongs to the citizens of our solar system; new observations,
(Bernoulli 1802). Baron von Zach (17541832) was court astronomer to Duke Ernst of SaxeGotha, founder and editor of the Monatliche Correspondenz and a leading gure in the search
for missing planets between Mars and Jupiter (asteroids) in the early years of the nineteenth
century. J. Bernoulli (17441807), sometimes known as Jean Bernoulli III, was the last of the
famous Swiss dynasty of mathematicians.
53 Koch 1802, p. 235, letter dated 24 August 1802. See also the review in Allgemeine LiteraturZeitung, no. 54, 22 February 1803, p. 430. J. A. Koch (17521817), a member of the Danzig
naturforschender Gesellschaft, wrote several papers on variable stars, asteroids and other subjects. In 1818 he published a table of variable stars. The asteroid Pallas was discovered by Olbers
on 28 March 1802 and Gauss found its orbital inclination to be 34.
54 Ibid., p. 236.
55 For a count of 23 pre-discovery observations of Uranus, from 1690 to 1771 (but not including
Roedkirs in 1764), see Grosser 1979, p. 41. See also Forbes 1982 and the detailed list in
Alexander 1965, pp. 8091.
56 Schorr 1873. In this work he did not mention the possibility of a Venus moon.
113
Figure 5.2: Schorrs little book on the Venusmond summarized and discussed the
historical data concerning the elusive satellite of Venus. Although Schorr did not
succeed in changing the status of the moon from myth to reality, his work attracted
some attention and contributed to a revival of interest in the hypothetical moon.
more precise than the earlier ones, will eventually prove its existence without doubt
and provide means to determine its orbit with such accuracy that is required by
the present state of science.57 The larger part of Der Venusmond was a detailed
and historically valuable account of the development of the telescope and its use
in Venus observations in particular. Schorr was an amateur astronomer, but by no
means a crank. He evidently had a sound knowledge of both astronomical practice
and theory, and his knowledge of the literature on Venus and the history of the
57 Schorr
1875, p. xi.
114
p. 185. On the basis of the corpuscular theory of light, the English natural philosopher
John Michell (17241793) had put forward the idea of dark stars in 1784, and in 1844 Friedrich
Wilhelm Bessel (17841846) inferred that Sirius was accompanied by a small unseen star. See,
e.g., Clerke 1903, pp. 399403. Eisenstaedt 1991 is a detailed analysis of the idea of dark stars
from Newton to Laplace. For the connection to black holes, see also Israel 1987.
59 Webb 1876. Another lengthy and generally positive review appeared in Bertrand 1875 (see
also below). T. W. Webb is best known for his publication in 1859 of Celestial Objects for
Common Telescopes, a classic guide for amateur astronomy for more than half a century.
115
illusions. With this phrase he referred to optical illusions caused by refractions and
diractions in the Earths atmosphere, but he did not explain very clearly what
kinds of atmospheric illusions he had in mind.60
Webb further reported that as a very young man he had observed on 22 May
1823 a shining object exactly resembling Mercury, or a miniature Venus at a
short distance from the planet Venus. He thought that the object could not be a
star but nonetheless found it too hazardous . . . to include this with the other
observations of the pseudo-satellite.61
60 The
suggestion of atmospheric illusions or images was much elaborated in Thirion 1885 (see
section 6.1).
61 Webb 1876, p. 195.
Chapter 6
118
moons, soon known as Phobos and Deimos. (Hall proposed the names in 1878,
referring to a verse in the Iliad.) He immediately used their orbits to calculate
an accurate mass for Mars, much in the same way as Baudouin and Lambert
had sought to do with Venus a century earlier. His value that the Sun is 3.054
million times as heavy as Mars agreed nicely with the one found by Leverrier and
his computers after several years of laborious calculations based on perturbation
theory. (It also agrees nicely with the modern value, which is 3.100.) The discovery
of the satellites of Mars was fairly uncontroversial and won quick recognition in
the astronomical community. Yet it was also unexpected, for since the seventeenth
century it had been commonly accepted that Mars is a lone planet.3 On the other
hand, and as we have had occasion to mention, since the days of Kepler there had
been several speculations, including a few observation claims, that the planet was
surrounded by one or two moons.
One might imagine that the discovery of the two moons circling around Mars
caused astronomers to reconsider the question of Venus satellite. If it turned out
that planet Mars had a moon, against all expectation, why not planet Venus?
However, we are not aware of any documented connection. Halls and other astronomers early communications on the Mars moons seem not to have made
associations to the case of Venus, nor did the literature on the satellite of Venus
in the 1880s refer to the satellites of Mars. The only exception seems to have been
a brief remark made by Charles Young in 1893 (see section 6.3).
During the second half of the nineteenth century another controversial observation claim turned up in astronomy, namely the claim that the Earth has more
than one natural satellite. This little known episode diered in many respects from
the case of Venus satellite, especially by being eectively ignored by the astronomical community (for which reason it is so little known). On the other hand,
the two claims also had some features in common. For this reason, the brief and
parenthetic story of the Earths second moon is relevant to an understanding of
the saga of the satellite of Venus.
3 William Herschel, the German-Danish astronomer Heinrich Louis dArrest (18221875) and
a few other astronomers had searched in vain for a moon around Mars. According to dArrest,
there was little hope of seeing a Mars satellite, should it exist (dArrest 1865). On the discovery,
see Gingerich 1970 and Dick 1988. Earlier in the century four more moons were discovered: the
moon around Neptune (William Lassell, 1846), one more Saturn moon (George P. Bond, 1848)
and two more Uranus moons (William Lassell, 1851). On Halls discovery and its reception, see
also Hall 1878 and Nature 16 (1877), pp. 397398, 427428.
119
5 Bertrand
120
Figure 6.1: An artists impression of Venus and its satellite, as included in Flammarions journal LAstronomie (Bertrand 1882, p. 201).
those which resembles our own most. . . . The only scientic conclusion
we can draw from astronomical observation is that this world diers
little from ours in volume, in weight, in density, and in the duration
of its days and nights. . . . It should, then, be inhabited by vegetable,
animal and human races but little dierent from those which people our
planet.6
But in spite of all similarity between the two planets, Flammarion did not
believe in Venus having a moon of its own. He mentioned the asteroid hypothesis
as a possible explanation of the observations of the satellite, which strangely had
not been seen since the 1760s:
Since then, nobody has seen it. Has it felled down on the planet?
That is the last possible hypothesis. Have all these observers seen badly?
6 Flammarion
121
Certainly not. How then explain these appearances and this disappearance? Probably, Venus is found in these epochs to move in front of one
of the many small planets found between Mars and Jupiter.7
Perhaps signicantly, Flammarion relegated his reference to the satellite of
Venus to a footnote and he did not follow up his suggestion, which had more the
character of a side remark than a scientic hypothesis. Inspired by Bertrands article, he followed up on the subject in Les terres du ciel of 1884, now suggesting that
the observations could be explained by a combination of the asteroid hypothesis
and the optical illusion hypothesis of Hell. As to the real existence of the moon,
he dismissed it as highly improbable.8
Figure 6.2: The French astronomer and writer of popular astronomical works,
Nicolas Camille Flammarion (18421925), was obsessed with the idea of extraterrestrial life. Although he took the existence of Venusians for granted, he did not
believe that Venus had a small moon.
7 Ibid.,
p. 464. As mentioned above, the asteroid hypothesis had previously been suggested by
von Ende and Haase. On Flammarion as a pluralist, see Crowe 1999, pp. 378386, 410433.
8 Flammarion 1884, pp. 262266.
122
In spite of Thomas Webbs objections against Hells hypothesis of instrumentproduced ghost images, this kind of explanation enjoyed wide recognition. It was
easy to comprehend and suciently broad to encompass almost all the erroneous
observation claims. As Bertrand pointed out, it was supported by recent observations by the British astronomer William Frederick Denning, who in 1881 had
observed two crescents when he looked upon Venus. The reputed observations of
a satellite of Venus, described in astronomical text-books, immediately recurred
to me, Denning wrote. When he rotated the eyepiece, the relative positions of
the two objects remained the same. Denning readily came up with an explanation
in terms of reections in the telescope. I have no doubt, he wrote, that the
alleged observations of a satellite of Venus made in the last century were capable
of a similar solution.9
Haases idea to connect the observations of the Venus moon with a hypothetical planet moving within the orbit of Mercury was independently proposed
by the Belgian astronomer Jean-Charles Houzeau de Lehaie in a public lecture in
1880.10 Houzeau, who had started his career as a journalist and was equally at
home with social and scientic questions, was at the time director of the Royal
Observatory in Brussels, an institution founded in 1823 with the famous statistician and sociologist Adolphe Quetelet as its rst director. (Although best known
as a social statistician, he also did important work in astronomy and meteorology.)
The successor of Quetelet, Houzeau was a scientist of considerable inuence. He
rst addressed the question of Venus satellite in an address of 1878 before the
Royal Belgian Academy of Sciences and Letters, dealing with Certain enigmatic
phenomena in astronomy. After having accounted for the historical observations,
he pointed out a number of reasons why the hypothetical satellite had rightly
fallen in disfavour. Among those reasons were not only the non-observations related to the transits of 1761, 1769 and 1874, but also that the moon had not been
observed for a period of 114 years. If it is extremely faint, how to explain that the
old telescopes sometimes display it, and that the powerful instruments like those
used to discover the satellites of Uranus, Neptune and Mars have not revealed it
to us?11 Apart from the possibility of optical illusions, he also mentioned that
what had been taken for a moon might have been an intramercurial planet.
9 Denning 1882, p. 111. Denning (18481931) was a prominent amateur astronomer who discovered four comets. Obituary notice in The Observatory 54 (1931), 276283.
10 Houzeau, who served as director of the Royal Observatory in Brussels 187683 and for a
period was president of the Royal Belgian Academy of Sciences, was active in the Venus transit
observations in 1882. His interest in the Venus moon is illustrated by his massive astronomical
bibliography, which included the subject of the moon of Venus as a separate entry (Houzeau and
Lancaster 1964, vol. 2, columns 11361137). His eventful life, which included political activity
and extended stays abroad, is described in Verhas 2002.
11 Houzeau 1878, pp. 957958.
123
The Venus moon was not the only astronomical enigma that Houzeau dealt
with in his address of 1878. As earlier astronomers had likened the phenomenon
of the Venus moon to variable stars such as Mira Ceti, so Houzeau drew a parallel
to the mysterious comet Biela, named after the Austrian Wilhelm von Biela who
in 1826 succeeded in following the comet for 72 days, just long enough that its
period of 6.6 years could be determined.12 First observed by Montaigne in 1772, the
comet was seen in 1846 as broken into two pieces and after its appearance in 1852
it was never seen again. But on 27 November 1872, when the Earth passed close
to the orbit of the comet, there was a magnicent display of meteor showers, the
remnants of the comet. Houzeaus point with the comparison may have been that
the Venus moon might have been an object that once existed but had disappeared,
possibly disintegrated, at some time after the 1760s. However, if that is what he
meant, he did not spell out the hypothesis very clearly.
Whereas Houzeau had suggested in 1878 and 1880 that the Venus moon
might have been an intramercurial planet, a few years later he realized that the
hypothesis was untenable. By singling out seven historical observations, which he
believed were the best attested, he found that in all these cases Venus was further
from the Sun than an intramercurial planet could possibly have been, and this
ruled out the hypothesis.
Although thus falsied, Houzeau thought that a modied version of the hypothesis might fare better.13 The observations of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries apparently occurred randomly, but by examining the precise dates, expressed in decimals of a year, he was led to suggest that they occurred in multiples
of a unit of 2.96 years. For instance, Cassinis rst observation took place 26.20
years after Fontanas and 14.58 years before his second observation of 1686; and
Shorts observation of 1740 preceded Montaignes of 7 May 1761 by 20.50 years.
There may not seem to be much regularity in the numbers given in column
3 of table 6.1, but for the believer there is: Houzeau thought that it was no coincidence that 26.20 = 92.91, 14.58 = 52.92, 54.16 = 183.02, etc. Numerological
reasoning of this dubious kind made him to suggest that the historical observations were of two bodies in or near conjunction, one relatively large and the other
of much smaller dimensions. There can be no question that it cannot be a true
satellite, he observed, referring to the smaller body. It follows from the observed
facts that the path they follow brings them together at xed intervals of time.
12 Only with Bielas observation was it realized that the comet of 1826 was the same as that
seen in 1805 by the great comet hunter Jean Louis Pons (17611831) in Marseille, and that this
was the same as Montaignes comet of 1772. The ocial name for the comet is 3D/Biela, where
D stands for defunct. For a brief history, see http://cometography.com/pcomets/003d.html.
13 Houzeau 1884, based on an article in Ciel et Terre of the same year, with excerpts translated
in Anon. 1884.
124
date
interval
(years)
no. of
periods
length of period
(years)
1 (Fontana)
2 (Cassini)
3 (Cassini)
4 (Short)14
5 (Montaigne)
6, 7 (Montbarron)
1645.87
1672.07
1686.65
1740.81
1761.34
1764.24
26.20
14.58
54.16
20.50
2.90
9
5
18
7
1
2.91
2.92
3.02
2.97
2.90
Table 6.1: Houzeaus data for the observations of the moon of Venus, which he
thought was evidence for a new planet.
These paths are near one another throughout their entire length . . . [and] these
conditions can only be satised by imagining two orbits sensibly concentric and
of radii which dier but very little.15 One of the bodies was of course Venus,
and he proposed to call the minor one Neith, named after an Egyptian goddess
for hunting and warfare. He found that the new planet moved a little exterior to
Venus and with a period of revolution of about 283 days or 0.78 years.
The planet named Neith was much more short-lived than the unnamed satellite of Venus. In fact, the hypothesis was shot down immediately after it had been
proposed. Not only was the selection of the seven observations questionable and
the numerological basis of the hypothesis objectionable from a methodological
point of view; the suggestion also suered from internal inconsistency, such as
pointed out in a review in The Observatory. The anonymous reviewer probably
Edward Walter Maunder, the journals editor found the asteroid hypothesis to
be implausible and also had little faith in the vague and unsatisfactory resource
of ascribing as many of the observations as possible to false images. Perhaps, he
wrote, it is better to be content with things as they are, and to leave the satellite
of Venus, at least for the present, as an unsolved astronomical enigma.16
The American astronomer Charles Young, professor at Princeton University
and a leading solar spectroscopist, agreed that Houzeaus hypothesis was untenable, but disagreed that the case of the Venus moon was an enigma. As far as he
was concerned, the case was solved and the solution was to be found in the old
analysis of father Hell. There can be little doubt, he wrote, that all the Venus
14 In the case of Shorts observation of 1740, Houzeau mistakenly used the old time style as
used by Short. If the new one is used, as it should, the interval of time from Cassinis observation
becomes 54.19 years and the length of the period 3.01 years.
15 Houzeau 1884, p. 285.
16 Anon. 1884, p. 226. A more elaborate rejection of planet Neith appeared in Stroobant 1887a,
pp. 1518.
125
satellites so far observed are simply ghosts due to reections between the lenses
of the telescope, or between the cornea of the eye and the eye lens.17
Julien Thirion, a Belgian Jesuit astronomer and physicist, reconsidered the
problem of the Venus moon in a paper of 1885, ten years after Schorrs monograph
had appeared. Having no faith in the real existence of the satellite, he found that
neither the asteroid hypothesis nor the false image hypothesis `a la Hell were able
to account for all observations. As to Houzeaus recent suggestion of the planet
Neith, Thirion pointed out that it was based on an arbitrary selection of data. If all
observations were included, Houzeaus numerology just did not work. Therefore,
some other explanation was needed. Inspired by earlier observations of false images
of the Sun, so-called mock suns (also known as sun dogs or parhelia), Thirion
suggested that the apparition of a Venus moon might belong to the same class of
phenomena.18
The phenomenon being mentioned by ancient authorities such as Aristotle,
Cicero and Pliny the Elder, mock suns had been reported long before the invention
of the telescope. In the seventeenth century they were known from observations
made by Jean Dominique Cassini, Christopher Scheiner and Johannes Hevelius,
among others, and Descartes and Huygens had attempted to explain from optical
theory the strange halo-like phenomenon.19 A mock sun is an atmospheric optical
phenomenon, a luminous cloudy patch which appears in ice clouds at either side
of the Sun. Sometimes it is round, like the real Sun, but this is not always the
case; and in some cases the mock sun appears as provided with a tail. A similar
phenomenon of false images produced in the atmosphere exists for the Moon, in
which case one speaks of paraselenae. For example, Hevelius observed in 1660 a
triple picture of the Moon, with two mock moons shooting out long whitish beams.
The appearance of parhelia is caused by diraction by ice crystals in the
upper atmosphere, and it occurs when the Sun shines through a cloud composed
of hexagonal ice crystals falling with their principal axes vertical. If the crystals
are randomly oriented, a halo is observed. Parhelia may be white or coloured,
depending on the role played by reection and refraction. Other crystals than ice
may cause similar phenomena. Thus it is known that the atmospheres of Saturn,
Jupiter and Uranus contain ammonia, methane and other compounds which can
17 Young
126
Figure 6.3: An unusual parhelion or mock sun reported to the Royal Society by
Hevelius. On 5 February 1674 the Sun was seen with a cloud beneath it. The Sun
lanced out long rays and beneath the cloud there appeared a mock sun of almost
the same size as the real Sun. The spurious sun disappeared as the Sun descended
below the cloud. From Hevelius 1674.
produce halos of the same kind as parhelia. However, this was not known in the
mid-nineteenth century.
127
The modern explanation of halos and parhelia is due to the French physicist
15.
1885; Bravais 1847. For criticism of Thirions hypothesis, see Stroobant 1887a, p.
21 A brief account of the observations of Stuyvaert and Niesten is given in Thirion 1885, p.
46 and Stroobant 1887a, pp. 89. Stuyvaert and Niesten believed that they had seen rapid
displacements, relative to Venus terminator, of both bright and dark spots, and for this reason
they supported the short rotation period of 23 hours rather than the long one proposed by
Schiaparelli. See Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 52 (1892), 281282.
22 According to The Amateur Astronomer 18, no. 1 (1958), 36.
23 On Wilson (18511908) and his astronomical work, see the obituary in the Proceedings of
the Royal Society A 83 (1910), iiivii, and also Warner 1977.
128
spectrum in the atmosphere of the planet, he also tried to spot a satellite of Venus.
However, none was found.
At Crowborough, Sussex, Leeson Prince observed the transit, noting that a
halo of yellowish light surrounded the planet when it was fully on the Suns disk.
Aware of the discussions of a possible moon of Venus, he briey reported that
There was no appearance of a satellite.24 The following year he published his
observations in a booklet which included a translation of Baudouins account of
1761 of the supposed discovery of the satellite of Venus.25 Although Prince did
not endorse the real existence of the moon, nor was he inclined to write it o for
good. This was also the opinion of W. T. Lynn, who in the Observatory suggested
that we are rather, it seems to me, in the same position on the question as we
were with regard to a satellite or satellites of Mars before the year 1877.26 Lynn
admitted that no satellite of Venus had ever been actually seen, but not that this
was conclusive evidence against a very small moon revolving around the planet.
Another amateur astronomer who apparently took an interest in the possibility of a moon of Venus was Carl Venceslas Zenger, a professor from Prague who
was a member of the Royal Astronomical Society and also of the Astronomical
Society of the Pacic. Zenger was interested in the Venus transit and wrote a couple of papers in the Monthly Notices in which he discussed the use of photography
in the coming transit. While observing Venus in October 1876, he noted a very
brilliant patch near the southern horn some two seconds or less from the terminator in the dark parts of the disk, and this was still visible for two days, when
the terminator had passed it, shining like a brilliant star in the surrounding part
of the illuminated disk.27 The phenomenon he observed was of the same kind as
the one reported eight years later by Stuyvaert in Brussels. Zengers interest in
the Venus moon is indicated by a paper he read before the Royal Astronomical
Society on 8 March 1889, entitled On the satellite of Venus and its revolution.28
Unfortunately he did not publish the paper, whose content is unknown.
1882, p. 65.
1883, reviewed in The Observatory 6 (1883), 160. As pointed out in section 3.1, this
was a reproduction of John Bevis translation originally appearing in the Mathematical Magazine
in 1761.
26 Lynn 1884, p. 231.
27 Zenger 1877, p. 461. See also Baum 1999.
28 Mentioned in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 50 (1890), 253.
25 Prince
129
young Paul Stroobant, who at the time worked as a voluntary assistant at the
Royal Observatory at Uccle near Brussels.29 Stroobant was familiar with most of
the literature on the subject, including Schorrs book of 1875. Systematically discussing the various hypotheses, he not only dismissed the possibility of a real Venus
moon but also the hypothesis of an intramercurial planet as well as Houzeaus suggestion of the planet Neith. As to the other hypotheses based on false images,
asteroids or atmospheric mirages he found them to be either too vague or insucient to account for all the observations. Stroobants favoured alternative was
that the supposed moons had been faint stars close to the line of sight of Venus.30
His method was essentially the same which Hevelius had used 230 years earlier to
refute Rheitas claim of having discovered ve additional satellites orbiting Jupiter
(section 2.3). To test his idea, Stroobant made use of the Bonner Durchmusterung
catalogue of about 320,000 stars that had been completed in 1859 by Friedrich
Argelander and his assistants. By means of the catalogue he identied stars which
at the time of the historical observations were very close to the reported locations
of the Venus moon. And, indeed, he found an almost perfect match.
To mention but one example, on 4 August 1761 Roedkir had rst noticed
an object that he assumed was the Venus moon, but then he saw another nearby
star-like object which he instead took to be the moon. From Roedkirs data
Stroobant found the coordinates of the two objects and compared them with the
reductions from Argelanders star catalogue. He found the match to be convincing
in both cases, leading to an identication of the rst object with 64 Orionis and
the second the supposed moon with 62 Orionis. Likewise, the satellite that
Horrebow saw on 3 January 1768 agreed nicely with the position at the time of
Theta Librae, a fth-magnitude star.
Not all the identications tted equally well, and in the case of Cassinis
observations, and also the one of Mayer in 1759, Stroobant was unable to point
to a star in the catalogue. But in these cases he suggested that an error had been
made in the dates, although his arguments for this suggestion were not entirely
convincing. In a few other cases he fell back on the optical illusion hypothesis.
As to Scheutens observation of 1761, Stroobant thought that the German had
seen only a sunspot and taken it to be a moon. (In fact, in Scheutens letter to
29 Remarkably, at the time Stroobant presented his work to the Royal Belgian Academy, he was
only 19 years old. Two years later he earned a doctorate in physics and mathematics from the
University of Brussels and then embarked on a distinguished career in astronomy which made him
a professor of astronomy (1896) and director of the Royal Observatory (1925). Obituary notices
in The Observatory 59 (1936), 349352 and Astronomische Nachrichten 260 (1936), columns
175176.
30 Stroobant 1887a. In addition to this work, which included many excerpts from the historical
sources, he published shorter versions, such as Stroobant 1887b, Stroobant 1887c and Stroobant
1888.
130
Figure 6.4: Three examples of Stroobants star maps, from Stroobant 1887b. The
image above illustrates Roedkirs discovery claim of 4 August 1761, Venus being
shown with its phase. Above Venus is the star Theta Orionis (symbol 3 ), while
the symbol 4 denotes the location of the alleged satellite. The two smaller images
refer to Montaignes observation of 11 May 1761 (left) and Roedkirs of 18 July
1761.
131
Lambert he was careful to point out that the object did not look like a sunspot at
all, but this Stroobant chose to ignore.) Whatever these exceptions and diculties,
he considered them to be unimportant to his main conclusion: In brief, we can
say that the satellite of Venus does not exist, and when there was no false image
or optical illusions, we nd for the best observations a star corresponding almost
exactly to the dierent observed positions.31 Stroobants somewhat cavalier conclusion can easily be criticized, but since it was accepted by nearly all astronomers
this is beyond the point. Apart from its scientic arguments, his memoir was also
valuable from a historical point of view, as it reproduced in original language the
central parts of the relevant sources, from Fontana to Horrebow.
Disseminated in shorter versions in widely read journals such as Nature,
Sirius, La Nature, Astronomische Nachrichten, lAstronomie and Bulletin Astronomique, Stroobants work soon became generally known among astronomers,
most of whom had no problem with accepting his explanation as the nal word on
the issue. According to Nature, Mr. Stroobant has fairly cleared up the mystery
which has perplexed astronomers so long.32 Hermann Klein, the editor of Sirius,
thought likewise: Stroobant has succeeded in solving the enigma of Venus satellite and conclusively cancelled it from the list of astronomical problems.33 In his
Text-Book of General Astronomy Charles Young accepted the explanation, but
cautiously added: It is not, however, impossible that the planet may have some
very minute and near attendants like those of Mars, which may yet be brought to
light by means of the great telescopes of the future, or by photography.34 A few
other astronomers, while admitting the value of Stroobants analysis, found that
it did not fully explain the history of the Venus moon and that the case was only
partially solved.35 As mentioned, no one argued in favour of the moon.
More or less ostracized from the scientic literature, the satellite of Venus
turned up in the science ction literature of the late nineteenth century. Well
versed in the history of astronomy, in one of his novels the famous French novelist
Jules Verne referred to the mysterious satellite. In Hector Servadac, a science
ction novel of 1877, the hero and his team experience a marked change in the
orbit of the Earth, bringing it dangerously close to Venus and the hot Sun. They
31 Stroobant
1887b, p. 457.
1887a, in which exception was taken to one case, the observations made by Roedkir
in March 1764. A similar appreciation appeared in Anon. 1887b.
33 Klein 1887, p. 249. Again, in a review by R. R. in Bulletin Astronomique 4 (1887), 473475:
Mr. Stroobant has succeeded to dissipate the mystery which envelopes this enigmatic satellite
of Venus, and to destroy a legend that menaced to perpetuate itself (p. 475). See also Wilson
1887. For a similar evaluation, of a somewhat later date, see Macpherson 1906, p. 88.
34 Young 1893, p. 331. The possibility was also mentioned in Russell, Dugan and Stewart 1926,
p. 320, apparently taken over from Young (it was a revision of Youngs textbook Manual of
Astronomy, rst published 1902).
35 E.g., Wolf 1891, vol. 1, p. 537.
32 Anon.
132
are able to see clear evidence of high mountains and also the seven spots, which,
according to Bianchini, are a chain of seas. Fortunately no catastrophe ensues,
and before the distance between the two planets begins to increase again, they
have the opportunity to take a closer look at Venus: The proximity to Venus had
been close enough to demonstrate that beyond a doubt the planet has no moon
or satellite such as Cassini, Short, Montaigne of Limoges, Montbarron, and some
other astronomers have imagined to exist. Had there been such a satellite, said
Servadac, we might have captured it in passing. 36
Capitalizing on the success of Verne, the French authors Georges le Faure
and Henry de Gragny published in 1888 a four-volume science ction novel, the
Aventures extraordinaires dun savant Russe, which tells the story of a daring
exploration of the solar system and the space beyond it.37 The group of French
and Russian astronauts y to the Moon and from there, on a spacecraft propelled
by solar pressure, to Venus. Then they proceed to Mars, passing on their way its
two moons, and eventually they pay a visit to Jupiter. The plot and style of the
novel is Vernerian throughout. On their way to Venus, one of the scientists asks
about the disputed satellite. Does it really exist? Mikhail Ossipo, the novels
Russian space explorer, responds:
Many astronomers have thought to have seen the satellite you
speak about; for my part, and in spite of the numerous tracts published
on the subject, I persist to consider its existence to be problematical.
On the other hand, you may reply if it is not dicult to admit that
scientists such as Cassini, Horrebow, Short and Montaigne have seen
wrongly or have been victims of an optical illusion. . . . I think that
only two explanations are possible: either that they took a small planet
passing the eld of sight for Venus satellite; or that the satellite, which
must be very small, is not visible from the Earth because of some quite
exceptional conditions.
Another of the company, named Gontran, mentions the possibility that the
satellite no longer exists but has fallen into the planet. This Ossipo nds to be a
reasonable hypothesis, for no law of nature forbids that such a phenomenon can
occur.
36 Hector Servadac, voyages et aventures a
` travers le monde solaire was published in Paris in
1877, and the following year an English translation appeared as Hector Servadac, or the Career
of a Comet. Later editions were published with dierent titles, such as O on a Comet, or Hector
Servadac. The work is available online, see http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au.
37 Faure and Gragny 1888, which includes a preface by Flammarion. We have used the online
edition http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2462, where the quotation appears on p. 65.
133
134
1851, p. 566.
185460, vol. 4, p. 281.
44 Guillemin 1866, pp. 192193.
43 Arago
135
If Petits moon was either rejected or politely ignored by the professional astronomers, it attracted a great deal of attention among amateurs and the general
public. A major reason for this was that it gured in one of Jules Vernes early
novels, the Autour de la lune of 1869.45 The French novelist and science ction
writer had one of his characters say: This second moon is so small and its velocity
is so great that the inhabitants of Earth cannot see it. It was by noticing disturbances that a French astronomer, Monsieur Petit, could determine the existence
of this second moon and calculate its elements. According to his observations,
this meteorite will accomplish its revolution around the earth in three hours and
twenty minutes, which implies a wonderful rate of speed.46 There is little doubt
that Vernes source of information about Petits second satellite was Guillemins
popular book and not the scientic paper in the Comptes Rendus. Thus, he gave
the time of revolution as 3 hours 20 minutes, as stated by Guillemin, rather than
the more precise value of 12,286 seconds as given by Petit in his communication
to the Academie des Sciences.
Among those who claimed to have discovered a second satellite of the Earth
was one Georg Waltemath, a citizen of Hamburg, who condently predicted that
it would pass in front of the Sun on 3 February and 30 July 1898 (needless to say,
it did not).47 Moreover, based on what he thought were earlier but unrecognized
observations of the moon he calculated its orbital elements. He gave the mean
synodic period of revolution as 177 days, its mean distance from the centre of
the Earth as 1.03 million km, and its volume and mass relative to the Moon
as 1/123 and 1/80, respectively. Although Waltemath mentioned several earlier
observations in favour of his claim, most of them taken from obscure sources, he
was apparently unacquainted with Petits moons of 184647, to which he did not
refer.
According to Waltemath, the secondary satellite had been observed several
times in the past, rst in 1701 by Cassini senior and Maraldi who however mistook
it for a sunspot.48 He also thought that the satellite of Venus observed in St. Neot
in England in 1761 was in reality the second moon of the Earth, but provided no
arguments in support of the claims. This seems to be the only direct connection
between the two non-existing satellites. Unconcerned about his lack of recognition
among astronomers, Waltemath announced later in 1898 yet another moon of
the Earth, a third one, which he said was 746 km in diameter and at a mean
45 On
Verne and astronomy, see Jacques Crovisier, LAstronomie de Jules Verne, a paper
delivered to the Colloque international Jules Verne: Les Machine et la science, held in Nantes
in October 2005. Online as http://www.lesia.obspm.fr/crovisier/JV/cro05 nantes.htm.
46 Quoted
from the 1873 edition of Round the Moon, available online as
http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/sherwood/R-II-d.htm.
47 Waltemath 1898, a privately published pamphlet.
48 Cassini and Maraldi 1707.
136
Figure 6.5: Georg Waltemaths Aufruf to the astronomical community concerning the Earths second moon. His claim was either ignored or ridiculed. Whereas
Waltemath was clearly a crank, the hypothesis of a second moon of the Earth, or
a satellite encircling the Moon, was entertained also by a few astronomers.
137
distance of 427,250 km, that is, moving on the far side of the Moon. The editors
of Science, to which he reported his discovery, did not take it serious at all. They
unceremoniously suggested that the moon presided over lunacy.49
The famous Harvard astronomy brothers, Edward Charles and William
Henry Pickering, had an interest in the possibility of a second moon, but in a
very dierent sense than the one proposed by Petit and Waltemath. It seems
likely that this interest was related to Halls discovery of 1877 of the two satellites
of Mars. In early 1888, Edward C. Pickering, the director of the Harvard College
Observatory, wrote to Hall about looking for additional satellites of other planets [apart from Mars]. He did not mention Venus, but asked: Would a satellite
placed at a greater distance from its planet continue under any circumstances to
accompany the planet, or would it become an independent member of the system?50 This was the kind of consideration that much later led to the hypothesis
that Mercury is a lost satellite of Venus. The two astronomy brothers thought that
by means of photography we may expect to discover such a satellite, if it exists,
or to prove that no such object above a certain limit of brightness revolves around
the Moon.51 During the lunar eclipse of 28 January 1888 they took a series of
photographs which they carefully examined for a possible satellite, without nding
a candidate. They concluded from their negative search that it is probable that
the Moon has no satellite more than 200 metres in diameter.52
The failed search did not deter them from further investigations. Edward
Pickering observed together with his assistants a total lunar eclipse which occurred
on 15 November 1891. At the same time, his brother Henry made observations in
the mountains of Peru. Part of the observation programme was aimed to search
photographically for a lunar satellite, that is, a small satellite orbiting the Moon.
According to the New York Times, the astronomers wanted to conrm Prof. [E.
C.] Pickerings opinion that the moon has no satellite.53 None of the photographic
plates, either from Harvard or Peru, revealed a satellite encircling the Moon. Although no lunar satellite was found, the photographic method proved successful:
In August 1898 William Pickering found in this way Saturns ninth moon, which he
named Phoebe, the rst satellite of any planet to be discovered photographically.
Photography made the search for small celestial bodies more accurate and
49 Science
138
objective, but it was no sure way of avoiding false results. This is illustrated
by Pickerings discovery claim in 1905 of the tenth satellite of Saturn, which he
named Themis and found in the same way as Phoebe. The following year Pickering
was awarded the prestigious Lalande Prize for his discovery of the ninth and
tenth satellites of Saturn, but it soon turned out that Themis was a mistake. No
other astronomer was able to conrm Pickerings claim. (Saturn does have a tenth
satellite, named Janus, but it was only discovered in 1966 and has nothing to do
with Themis.)
Another distinguished American astronomer, Edward Emerson Barnard, was
interested in the possible existence of a lunar satellite, although without having
much faith in it. From the Lick Observatory he made careful photographic studies
during the lunar eclipses occurring on 10 March and 3 September 1895. However,
the result was disappointing, if not perhaps surprising: None of these pictures
made during the two eclipses shows anything which might be taken for a lunar
satellite. According to Barnard, this was strong evidence against the hypothesis of such a body. He concluded that a further search for it therefore appears
quite unnecessary.54 In spite of Barnards conclusion, a few further searches for
a satellite of the Moon were made. The most notable of these was conducted by
Clyde William Tombaugh, the discoverer of the planet Pluto (or what until recently used to be planet Pluto). Tombaughs search, which was completed in 1959,
was no more successful than earlier searches.
The possibility of a meteoric satellite, the same kind of object that Petit
thought to have established in 1846, was considered by William Pickering in one
of his many articles in Popular Astronomy. By no means foreign to speculation,
he was known as an enthusiastic pluralist and for having proposed a number of
hypothetical planets so why not a second satellite of the Earth?55 Although he
did not claim that such a body existed, he believed it was a possibility that should
not be ignored. The body would be too small and move too rapidly to leave a
trail on a photographic plate, but Pickering suggested that amateur astronomers
might chance to detect it with their telescopes.56 His advice of how to observe the
hypothetical satellite caused some amateur astronomers to search for it, but no
additional moon was found.
Finally, a German amateur astronomer by the name W. Spill thought that he
had seen the second moon in an observation made on 24 May 1926. In a report to
the journal Sirius he wrote that he had observed a small darkish sphere of apparent
size 6 and that it could neither be a balloon nor a meteor. In 7 seconds the small
body passed with a scarcely diminished velocity almost the precise diameter of the
54 Barnard
1895, p. 347. See also Baum 1973, pp. 3334 and Sheehan 1995, p. 288.
Pickerings claims of undiscovered planets, see Hoyt 1976.
56 Pickering 1923.
55 On
139
140
141
when at elongation, this method would be worthy of trial.61 See did not follow
up the remark, nor did anyone else at the time search photographically for a moon
orbiting Venus.
The case of Roedkirs observation of 4 March 1764 as a possible detection
of Uranus was re-examined as late as 1963. Jean Meeus, a Belgian astronomer and
meteorologist, conrmed Stroobants conclusion that the object could not possibly
be Uranus and argued, in agreement with Hell, that the Copenhagen astronomers
had been the victims of optical illusions. According to Meeus recalculations, on
all the dates other than 4 March, Uranus was one or more degrees distant from
Venus and thus could not have been the object recorded on these other dates.
In addition, the nearness to Venus of the object observed on 4 March, which
Roedkir estimated to be half a Venus diameter, did not t with the computed
position of Uranus relative to Venus at the time of observation. As Meeus pointed
out, illusions are no more illusory than they can be detected on a photographic
plate and hence acquire a degree of apparent objectivity. Interestingly, he referred
to a French astronomer, Roget Rigollet, who on 12 March 1948 thought to have
discovered photographically a satellite of Venus; the negative was obtained at the
Paris Observatory with the help of an astrograph of 17 cm opening and 120 cm
focal length. It was soon noticed that the satellite revealed a complete steadiness
with respect to the planet, what left no doubt as to its nature.62
Still in the 1950s the possibility existed that Venus might possess a moon of
a kind, only so small and inconspicuous that it escaped even the best telescopes.
The concept or name moon refers to a body revolving around a planet, but it
does not limit the size of the body, neither in absolute nor relative terms. In his
book on Venus of 1956, the noted British astronomer Patrick Moore wrote that
it is not impossible that Venus may have a tiny companion, but the sentence
was left out in the edition of 1982 coauthored with Gary Hunt.63 The change was
undoubtedly due to the exploration of Venus with articial satellites, starting in
the 1960s with the Soviet Venera probes and the American Mariner probes. In 1978
Venus was even provided with a satellite, albeit an articial one, when the space
probe Pioneer-Venus 1 (also known as Pioneer-Venus Orbiter) was placed in an
elliptical orbit around the planet. Although many of the early spacecraft missions
to Venus were unsuccessful, by the 1980s the probes had provided astronomers
with a new and reliable picture of the planet and its surroundings. With the planet
being monitored by satellites constantly transmitting pictures to the Earth, the
romance of the natural satellite of Venus nally came to an end.
61 See
1909, column 345. On See (18861962) and his dubious reputation, see Sheehan 2002.
1963, pp. 3839. If Rigollet reported his astrographic observation, we have not found
the report.
63 Moore 1956, p. 96; Hunt and Moore 1982.
62 Meeus
142
Or almost so. One obvious way of making sense of the bewildering appearance and disappearance of the Venus moon would be to postulate that it was there
in the past and then, somehow and at some time, disappeared. If the observations
were of a real moon, such a knocking-o process would be hard to explain, but
what if the satellite were articial? A few enthusiasts have suggested that what
Montaigne and his colleagues saw in the eighteenth century was an unidentied
ying object, perhaps a huge extraterrestrial spaceship of some sort, subsequently
dismantled or moved to some other corner of the universe. Having recounted the
early observations, a Rosicrucian publication of 1958 asked: Were these observations illusions? Were they real, or has the density of the atmosphere covered them?
Is this Venusian atmosphere expanding? Could they have been articial satellites,
and, perchance, are we only 300 years behind the times?64 Again, according to
a more recent UFO newsletter, If the objects seen in 1740 and 1764 were merely
asteroids drifting through the inner solar system, then they should have been still
visible days or weeks later. They were not, which suggests a powered spacecraft moving out of Venusian orbit.65 This is a neat if fanciful explanation, but
strangely enough it has not won the acclaim of either astronomers or historians of
science.
The idea to explain away the sightings of Venus moon by identifying it with
a spacecraft may seem outrageous, and of course astronomers do not take it seriously. But it is scarcely more audacious than a somewhat similar suggestion made
in 1959 by the brilliant Russian astrophysicist Iosef Shklovskii in connection with
Mars inner moon, Phobos. A pioneer radio astronomer and the recipient of the
prestigious Bruce Medal, Shklovskii was a highly reputed scientist; more controversially, he was also a pioneer of modern SETI research (Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence). In order to explain why the orbit of Phobos was apparently shrinking,
he suggested that the upper regions of the Martian atmosphere might gradually
slow down the satellite in its orbit about the planet. Calculations proved that
this would work if Phobos were assumed to be hollow, which implied that it was a
technological product in eect a gigantic articial satellite on a scale surpassing
the fondest dreams of contemporary rocket engineers. Shklovskii admitted that
the idea might seem fantastic, but he nonetheless thought that astronomers should
seriously consider the idea that Phobos was launched into orbit in the heyday of
a technical civilization on Mars, some hundreds of millions of years ago.66 He did
64 Burbidge
1958, p. 168.
Roundup, 5 October 2000 (http://www.ufoinfo.com/roundup/v05/rnd05 40.shtml).
See also Moore 1956, p. 96, and Corliss 1979, pp. 137139. Several observations of unidentied
shining objects near Venus are reported in
http://www.xdream.freeserve.co.uk/UFOBase/Astronomers.htm.
66 Shklovskii and Sagan 1966, p. 373374. The book was a revised translation of a Russian
work of 1962, with Shklovskii (191685) as the sole author. Later in life, he abandoned his belief
65 UFO
143
not believe that Martians, technologically advanced or not, were still alive.
On a more scientic note, scenarios of how Venus might have lost its moon at
a stage in the early history of the solar system have been discussed by planetary
scientists since the 1970s. It is possible that Venus, and also Mercury, originally
had a satellite but that they lost it because of tidal friction that caused it to
recede.67 According to some calculations, at some stage the eect reversed and
the satellite was drawn in again and crashed on the planet. As late as in the fall of
2006 David Stevenson and Alex Alemi from the California Institute of Technology
suggested that the mystery of the missing moon might be explained by assuming
two large impacts: The rst giant impact created a moon and caused Venus to spin
counterclockwise (as seen from above the planets north pole); the second impact,
taking place a couple of million years later, reversed the direction of rotation
and caused the moon to move inwards and eventually collide with the planet.68
Whatever the scientic merit of this and other theories, should Venus once have
had a moon, it was long before there were humans to observe it. Consequently
these theories, interesting as they are from the point of view of astronomy, have
no real signicance for the history of the satellite of Venus such as it evolved during
the period from the late seventeenth century to the late nineteenth century.
As the satellite of Venus entered the literary world of the Enlightenment with
such works as Bonnets Contemplation de la nature and Martins Young Gentleman
and Ladys Philosophy, so it entered into the literature of the early twentieth
century. But it did so in very dierent kinds of works, less reputable than those of
the eighteenth century. For example, the long discarded moon continued to attract
attention in some esoteric and astrological circles. The leading clairvoyant and
theosophical author, Charles Webster Leadbeater, a close friend of Annie Besant,
referred in 1911 to the remarkable fact that astronomers of a hundred and fty
years ago recorded several observations of a satellite of Venus. Although aware of
the alleged moon, apparently he had not bothered to check its history: It was seen
by astronomers as well known as Cassini and Short, in 1761, and that not one but
many times, and again in 1764 by R
odkier, Horrebow and Montbaron. Unable
to believe that the observations were nothing but errors, Leadbeater suggested
that they agreed with theosophical doctrines, for we are told that in our seventh
round the moon will disintegrate and we shall be left without a satellite; it may
only be a coincidence that Venus is in its seventh round, but it is a curious one.69
in extraterrestrials and turned towards anti-pluralism.
67 See Burns 1973 and Ward and Reid 1973. Other astronomers have suggested the possibility
that Mercury might once have been a satellite of Venus, but that tidal interactions caused Mercury to escape into a solar orbit. This line of research started with Van Flandern and Harrington
1976.
68 Alemi and Stevenson 2006. See also Scientic American, online edition, 10 October 2006.
69 C. W. Leadbeater, The Inner Life: Theosophical Talks at Adyar (Chicago: Rajput Press,
144
Chapter 7
146
were convinced of its existence, at least for a time, but none of them had actually
seen the moon or the image that looked like it. Neither had Lalande, and yet he
was for a period of more than twenty years sympathetically inclined towards the
satellite.
The relatively few discovery claims were not accepted by the astronomical
community, which found the evidence for them to be wanting in quality and, not
least, in quantity and regularity. For this reason alone, one cannot speak of a
discovery, not even of a spurious object. A further indication of the undecided
status of the Venus moon is the absence of eponymy a name was never proposed for it (King Fredericks suggestion of dAlemberts satellite was informal
and merely an expression of attery). Horrebow rmly believed that he and his
assistant had discovered the satellite, yet he refrained from axing a name to it.
Whereas Houzeau was quick indeed too quick to announce his hypothetical
planet as Neith, Schorr, writing at about the same time, refrained from suggesting
a name for the moon in which he clearly and heterodoxically believed.
In spite of the general agreement that Venus did not possess a moon, something imitating a moon was seen in the telescopes, and from the mid-1760s onwards
the problem became to account for the observations without taking the satellite
hypothesis too seriously. This problem was routinely addressed in the astronomical
literature. It was considered by several astronomers, from Hell to Stroobant, who
over more than a century came up with a number of suggestions. The more important of these explanations of why something had been mistaken for the satellite
of Venus were the following:
(i) Optical illusions produced in telescope and eye, i.e. Hells explanation.
(ii) Faint stars mistaken for the moon, which was Stroobants favourite explanation.
(iii) A new interior planet, as proposed by Houzeau.
(iv) Asteroids, such as rst suggested by von Ende.
(v) Uranus, being mistaken for the satellite, such as rst proposed by Jean
Bernoulli in 1781.
(vi) Atmospheric illusions caused by diraction in ice crystals, as proposed by
Thirion in 1884.
(vii) Sunspots mistaken for a satellite.
In addition, Bianchini, Jacques Cassini and Mairan suggested in the eighteenth century that the observations might be due to condensations of the uid
matter that supposedly lled up the space of the solar system. However, this hypothesis fell with the abandonment of the interplanetary uid matter in the wake
147
of the transition to Newtonian physics. Of the suggestions listed above, (iii) and
(iv) were not taken very seriously they explained observations by introducing an
unconrmed hypothesis. Nor was explanation (v) widely accepted, if for no other
reason that at best it could explain only a few of the observations. Explanation
(vi) may have come too late to attract much interest, and explanation (vii) was
only relevant in the few cases when a moon-like object had been seen during a
Venus transit. The most popular explanations were clearly (i) and (ii), which were
often used in combination if one of the explanations failed in some cases, the
other might be appealed to.
At any rate, after Stroobants work in 1887 astronomers lost interest in the
matter, condent as they were that the mystery had been solved. It continued to
be reported in the more popular literature, typically as an instructive case of how
errors and illusions might enter astronomical observations.1 The account in the
1911 edition of the Encyclopdia Britannica was quite typical. After briey having
mentioned the observations of Cassini, Short and others, it said: But as no such
object has been seen by the most careful search with the best instruments of recent
times, the supposed object must be regarded as what is known to the practical
astronomer as a ghost produced by reection from the lenses of the eyepiece,
or perhaps of the object-glass, of the telescope. We have not tried to determine
what really was seen in the various observations, that is, to determine whether
Mairan, Hell, Stroobant, Thirion or other post-1760 commentators were right or
not; nor do we believe that such an undertaking would be historically fruitful (it
may be of a certain astronomical interest, but that is a dierent matter).
The history of science amply illustrates that believing is seeing, in so far
that it includes numerous examples of scientists who have seen things that do
not exist, either for psychological, social or instrumental reasons. Among those
examples, the N -rays that were discovered by the French physicist Rene Blondlot
and investigated in the early years of the twentieth century is a classical case
that has received a great deal of attention from historians of science.2 Many false
observations have been rooted in or stimulated by preconceptions, more or less
articulated beliefs that something should exist and therefore do exist. Such beliefs
or expectations may be theoretically grounded, but in other cases they are based
on vague analogies or sheer wishful thinking.
To mention but a few examples from the history of planetary astronomy,
Thomas Harriots early drawings of the Moon from 160910 included features
that almost certainly had their origin in his mind rather than in his telescope.
As mentioned in section 2.2, Bianchini thought in 1728 that he had identied
1 For
a couple of examples from about the turn of the century, see Plassmann 1898, p. 355,
Krisch 1901, p. 532 and Vogel 1905, pp. 345346.
2 Nye 1980; Ashmore 1993.
148
continents and oceans on the surface of Venus. At the end of the eighteenth century, Schr
oter believed that he had seen very high mountains on the planet and
reported details that he could not possibly have seen. More than a century later,
Percival Lowell reported that he had seen clearly dened markings on Venus
other astronomers failed to verify the observation. The most well known case of
deception is undoubtedly Lowells sensational discovery claim of canals on Mars
and the furor it created.3
Yet another example is provided by the great William Herschel, who on 13
March 1781 observed a puzzling object which he initially took for a comet. He was
able to measure its apparent diameter and, in conformity with his expectations,
found that it certainly increased, from which we may conclude that the Comet
is approaching to us. In reality, the size of the object the planet Uranus
decreased during the period of observation. It was only in mid-April that Herschel
began to realize that it was not a cometary object, but something else; and it took
another year until he referred to it as a new planet.4 Again, in 184647 the reputed
British amateur astronomer William Lassell observed a ring around the recently
discovered planet Neptune, although what he saw did not actually exist.5 His
expectation that Neptune was accompanied by a ring inuenced his observations.
Interestingly, Lassell was not the only observer to see Neptunes non-existing ring.
So did a few others, including James Challis, the Plumian Professor of Astronomy
in Cambridge, who was aware of Lassells claim. The more or less independent
observations made the Council of the Royal Astronomical Society declare in early
1847 that the existence of the ring seems almost certain.6
Telescopic observations are often delicate and may blur the line between
what is actually observed and what the observer wants to see. Barnard had found
Jupiters fth satellite (Amalthea) on 9 September 1892, but for some time the
faint object eluded European astronomers. E. Walter Maunder at the Greenwich
Observatory was among those who much wanted to see the satellite. In early 1893,
after several failed searches, he wrote to Barnard: I have tried hard again and
again to catch a glimpse of your fth satellite with our new 28-inch telescope, but
only succeeded on two occasions in just fancying I saw it for a moment.7 He was
3 On
Lowell and his disputed observations of Venus and Mars, see Sheehan 1988.
Austin 1967 and Schaer 1981.
5 For this case, see Baum 1973, pp. 126146 and Smith and Baum 1984. Neptune does have a
system of very thin rings, but this was only discovered by the Voyager spacecraft in 1989. Neither
Lassell (17991880) nor other Earth-bound observers could possibly have seen it. Hetherington
1988 and Sheehan 1988 oer several other examples of believing is seeing in the history of
astronomy. On the general problem of objectivity versus visual perception and representation,
see Daston and Galison 2007 and the many sources cited therein.
6 Cited in Baum 1973, p. 141.
7 Sheehan 1995, p. 215. European observers were also unable to see Mars inner satellite,
discovered in August 1877; it took about half a year until they succeeded in verifying Halls
4 See
149
well aware of the danger of substituting observation with the fancy of observation.
Instructive as these cases are, the story of Venus moon belongs to a dierent
category, in so far that preconceptions played no or only a very limited role. Most
of the astronomers who thought they had seen the moon had no preconceived
convictions that Venus ought to have a companion. They just happened to see
something in their telescopes that might or might not be a satellite. This was a
reasonable hypothesis, but it was no more than that. Theory did not support it,
nor did it speak against it. In fact, if there were a preconception with respect to
Venus satellite, it was that there probably was no such satellite, and that for the
reason that Venus is an interior planet. As we have seen, it was widely believed
that the number of satellites increased with the distance from the Sun, the reason
being that the outer planets were in more need of moons.
Scientists of the eighteenth century were well aware of the problems of observation and the dierence between scientic observation and brute visual perception. Such problems were evident to those scientists who relied on instruments such
as the microscope or the telescope. The Geneva clergyman and physiologist Jean
Senebier published in 1775 a pioneering account of these and related problems, the
Lart dobserver. He noted that rare phenomena were particularly puzzling and
referred in this connection to the halos and meteors known from meteorology and
astronomy. Moreover: Astronomy is interested in the observations of the zodiacal
light and the satellite of Venus, whether true or supposed.8
The reluctance of late-eighteenth-century astronomers to admit a satellite of
Venus should be seen on the background of the conservative climate with respect
to new celestial bodies comets excepted in the solar system. Ever since the
victory of the Copernican system there had only been six planets (rather than
seven), a number which initially was seen as pleasing because it is the simplest
perfect number this was an argument employed by Rheticus, Copernicus only
pupil, and it was also used by Huygens.9 Although the magic of perfect numbers soon evaporated, when Uranus was discovered in 1781 it came as a complete
surprise. It is well known that Herschel initially resisted classifying his discovery
as a planet.10 Even after the number of planets had increased from six to seven,
observation (Hall 1878, p. 208).
8 Senebier 1802 (second edition), p. 136.
9 In his Narratio Prima of 1540, the rst published work on the Copernican world system,
Georg Joachim Rheticus (15141574) reasoned: What is more agreeable to Gods handiwork
than that this rst and most perfect work should be summed up in this rst and most perfect
number? Rosen 1959, p. 147. Kepler adopted Rheticus reasoning (Koyre 1961, p. 139). On
Huygens use of a similar argument, see section 2.1.
10 As mentioned, Herschel discovered Uranus in 1781 but at rst thought it was a comet (Austin
1967 and Schaer 1981). On his discovery of the satellites of Uranus, see Lubbock 1933, pp. 161
168.
150
conservatism remained, such as shown by Giuseppe Piazzis reluctance to acknowledge his nding in early 1801 of an asteroid (Ceres) as a new member of the solar
system.
The conservatism may not have been quite as strong with regard to the
secondary planets, but after 1684 most astronomers took it for granted that the
number of satellites had stabilized to ten. Although there were no good reasons
why still more satellites (or, for that matter, planets) should not exist, neither were
there any good reasons to expect they did exist. Most astronomers considered this
kind of argument to be persuasive. When it comes to ontology, science is essentially
conservative. If scientists have to consider an increase of natural objects, and
there are no strong theoretical or empirical reasons for such an increase, they will
typically regard it as uneconomical and therefore oppose it. They will tend to
adopt an ontological version of Ockhams famous razor. By the 1760s the number
of satellites had remained unchanged for about eighty years, and to accept new
ones would require strong observational evidence. As the majority of astronomers
saw it, in the case of Venus moon such evidence was lacking. The attitude with
respect to the moon of Mars, occasionally discussed in the literature, was the same.
The quick change in attitude during the 1760s and 1770s presents something
of a puzzle. After the last public discovery claim of 1764 it took less than a decade
until the credibility of the Venus moon was eroded. Obviously the discovery claim
was not proved wrong in the ordinary sense, nor could it be. Because, how does
one prove that a celestial body does not exist? The claim that there exists a
satellite of Venus is an example of what Karl Popper calls a restricted existential
statement, one which says that something exists under certain specied circumstances.11 According to Popper, whereas a strict existential statement of the type
X exists is irrefutable (and hence non-scientic), this is not necessarily the case
with statements of the restricted type. The claim that Venus possesses a moon
is obviously veriable, but until the advent of spacecraft in the 1960s it was in
practice non-falsiable. Yet, the astronomers, unconcerned with Popperian philosophy, considered it a question that could be solved and in fact was solved by
scientic means.
The satellite of Venus was de-discovered, but only passively, in the sense
that after 1764 no further observations were reported. The mere absence of conrmation counted as a refutation. This may be compared with Cassinis observation,
which remained unconrmed for more than fty years and still enjoyed fairly wide
(if not general) recognition, undoubtedly in part because of the high reputation
of the distinguished Italian-French astronomer.
More generally, one may ask: If an observation is not conrmed, what does
11 Popper
151
it take to disconrm it? How many years have to pass until lack of conrming
evidence counts as a disproof? Or, on an even more general level, what is the
relationship between lack of evidence and counter-evidence? This is far from a
trivial question, and it is not one that philosophers of science have paid a great
deal of attention to. The formula that absence of evidence is not evidence of
absence is generally accepted, but not very helpful. Logic apart, in the real world
of science it often happens that lack of corrobative evidence counts as evidence of
absence. Venus satellite was not really a case of absence of evidence, for several
astronomers had seen the object; it was rather a case of absence of convincing
evidence where the many non-observations amounted to evidence of absence. The
many observations in connection with the transits of 1761 and 1769 that failed to
reveal the attendant of Venus are undoubtedly part of the explanation of why the
astronomers declared it non-existent, but they do not explain it fully, nor do they
explain why it happened so quickly and decisively. After all, there was no more
reason to believe that Venus was companionless than Mars was without a satellite
or relating to the years between 1781 and 1787 that the new planet eventually
called Uranus possessed no moon.
It is instructive to compare the reception of the Venus moon with the corresponding case of the satellites of Uranus. William Herschel was convinced that
what he called the Georgian planet had several satellites, mainly because it was
heavy and so far from the Sun. In 1787 he reported to have discovered two of
the moons, later called Titania and Oberon. Although he did not see them very
clearly, he was able to follow the moons for as long as nearly ve hours, considerably longer than the Venus moon was ever seen in a telescope. It may be a matter
of discussion whether the evidence for Titania and Oberon was solid or not, but
what matters is that neither Herschel nor others had any doubts about their existence. The two moons became facts from the very beginning. Then, at the end
of the 1790s, he announced the discovery of four additional satellites.12
As far as we can tell, no one suggested that the Herschelian moons were
telescopic phantoms, due to faint stars, concentrations in the ether or otherwise
mistakes. For example, the distinguished French amateur astronomer and mathematician, Achille-Pierre Dionis du Sejour, stated in a work of 1789 that Uranus
had two moons, presenting it as if it was a plain matter of fact. Contrarily, as to
Venus, he said in a likewise matter-of-fact way that this planet has no satellite.
The following year the German scientist Ernst Gottfried Fischer opined that the
Uranus moons were now incontestable facts truths, no longer hypotheses.13
12 On Herschels work on the satellites of Uranus, see Herschel 1912, vol. 2, pp. 121 and
542574. See also Schorr 1875, pp. 5260 and Alexander 1965, pp. 5876.
13 Dionis du S
ejour 1789, p. 531, who referred to the planet as Herschel, a name proposed
by Lalande. E. G. Fischer (17541831) suggested on a speculative basis the longer away, the
152
153
them.18 The only conrmation of these satellites came in 1837, when Johann
Lamont, director of the Munich Observatory, saw the rst two of Herschels satellites and also, if only on one occasion, what he thought was the most distant of
the supplementary satellites. Lamont realized that his observation was not very
reliable and consequently left it out in his calculation of the mass of Uranus.19
To summarize a long and complex story, it is remarkable that for about half
a century almost all astronomers accepted the existence of the moons of Uranus,
and that in spite of the meagre evidence and almost total lack of independent
observation. According to William Smyth, writing in 1844: On account of the
extreme delicacy of these objects, and because for a few years [sic] nobody else
had succeeded in shing them up, several continental astronomers were pleased
to doubt whether Uranus had any satellites at all.20 In fact, such doubt scarcely
existed and may well have been a product of Smyths chauvinistic imagination.
As to Smyth, he accepted on Herschels authority that Uranus was surrounded by
six moons. And he was not the only one.
Only in 1847 did Lassell and, independently, Otto Wilhelm Struve at the
Pulkovo Observatory, see Titania and Oberon as well as one or two of the supplementary satellites. Matters rested there until the fall of 1851 when Lassell nally
provided unambiguous evidence for the existence of the two satellites of Uranus
that are now named Ariel and Umbriel.21 However, as Lassell realized, none of
these celestial bodies are identical to the Herschelian moons. Both Lassell and
Struve later observed all four of the satellites of Uranus extensively. As to Herschels two last satellites, they vanished from history into the thin air of oblivion.
It is now believed that the four supplementary satellites observed by Herschel in
the 1790s were in reality very faint xed stars. (There is a small fth moon revolving around Uranus, called Miranda, but it was only discovered by Gerard Kuiper
in 1948; later several more moons were detected.)
So persuasive was Herschels reputation that his discoveries were still defended by 1870, many years after Lassell had assumedly claried the matter.
Richard Proctor thought that Uranus had at least eight moons, the six discovered by Herschel and the two found by Lassell. The four moons announced in
the 1790s have not been yet identied; but one cannot read the account of his
method of procedure without feeling that no amount of mere negative evidence
can be opposed eectively to the positive information he has left respecting these
18 Herschel
183336.
1838.
20 Smyth 1844, vol. 1, p. 207. According to Schorr, Several astronomers seriously doubted the
existence of the four satellites that had been claimed in the treatise of 1790, but he gave neither
names nor references (Schorr 1875, p. 54).
21 Lassell 1852, letters of 13 and 29 November 1851.
19 Lamont
154
four orbs.22 This is an interesting statement, of relevance also to the history of the
satellite of Venus. Are there cases where isolated positive evidence takes priority
over any amount of negative evidence?
The relevance of the story of the satellites of Uranus for the case of Venus
moon should be obvious. The case for the six moons of Uranus, say about 1820,
was not much stronger than the case for Venus moon had been fty years earlier,
and yet the astronomical community responded very dierently in the two cases.
Whatever the reasons, there is no doubt that Herschels reputation counted very
highly even more highly than Cassinis in the case of the Venus moon. It is also
worth pointing out that Herschels discoveries of moons around Uranus did not
prompt a reconsideration of the satellite of Venus. Nor was this the case when
Lassell discovered a moon (Triton) around Neptune in 1846 and ve years later
established the existence of a third and fourth Uranus moon. Again, the discovery
of Mars two moons in 1877 did not in the slightest disturb the conviction of the
astronomers that Venus is a lone planet.
It is as if the astronomical community had decided that the companionless
Cytherean planet was a fact rather than a convincing hypothesis. And facts are
not to be questioned.
22 Proctor
Biographical sketches
Baudouin de Gu`emadeuc, Armand Henri (17341817)
Baudouin worked as a civil servant in Paris, but little is known of his life except
that he had an interest in both astronomy and literary culture. At one time he was
imprisoned for fteen months, and later he was forced to leave France. In 1782 he
published in Neuch
atel, Switzerland, a collection of anecdotes entitled LEspion
devalise. The book appeared anonymously and was for a long time ascribed Honore
Mirabaud.
In the spring of 1761 he looked in vain for the satellite of Venus, after which
he established contact with Montaigne and requested that he proceeded in the
hunt. After Montaignes success, Baudouin read two papers on the Venus moon
to the Academy in Paris. His published version, Memoire sur la decouverte du
satellite de Venus, appeared in 1761 and was translated into German and English.
Condent that the elusive satellite had now been discovered, he used Montaignes
observations to determine the mass of Venus, which he stated was almost the same
as the mass of he Earth. He also predicted the appearance of the satellite on the
day of the transit. In company with Messier, he observed the transit on 6 June
1761, but saw no moon. In 1768 Baudouin made observations of Venus and the
satellites of Jupiter, which he communicated to the Academie des Sciences. After
that time, he seems to have disappeared from the scene of astronomy.
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Biographical sketches
was published in Rome in 1728. In this rst monograph about Venus, he studied
the elusive markings of the planet and determined its rotation period to 24 days
8 hours. He drew a map of Venus and suggested names for several oceans and
continents. Craters on Mars and Venus are now named in Bianchinis honour.
Although he did not see, nor believe in, the Venus moon, nor did he believe that
the observations of Fontana and Cassini were caused by optical illusions. As an
alternative he suggested that they were due to a uid substance in interplanetary
space.
Bonnet, Charles (17201793)
Born in Geneva, he spent his entire life in Switzerland as an independent naturalist
and author. Within natural history, he made several important discoveries, in particular that certain tiny insects could reproduce by means of parthenogenesis. He
was in favour of preformation, the view that every creature existed in a preformed
state within the egg, and in palaeontology he supported the philosophy of catastrophism. A great advocate of the principle of plenitude, he expounded this idea
in his popular Contemplation de la nature of 1764. The work dealt briey with the
planetary system and included comments on the satellite of Venus, which Bonnet
thought might well exist. There is another connection to astronomy, namely by
way of the German translation made by Johann Daniel Titius in 1766. Titius inserted his own speculation concerning the distances of the planets, the rst version
of what came to be known as the Titius-Bode law. Possibly inspired by Bonnet,
the Dutch minister and writer J. F. Martinet discussed the satellite of Venus in
his Katechismus der Natuur of 1779.
Boscovich, Roger Joseph (17111787)
Rudjer Josip Boskovic, as his name is also spelled, was born in Ragusa (now
Dubrovnik) in Croatia. He entered the Jesuit order in 1725 and began studies at
the Collegio Romano in Rome, where he was made a professor of mathematics in
1740. He later became a professor in Pavia and helped (with Louis Lagrange) to
establish the observatory in Brera. Throughout his career, he travelled widely and
was very well connected. As a correspondent for the Royal Society, he was involved
in the preparations to observe the Venus transits of 1761 and 1769. Boscovich is
today best known for his dynamical theory of matter, an atomic theory based solely
on a universal law of force, which he developed in his Theoria philosophiae naturalis
of 1758. He also did important work in astronomy and optics, in particular in the
theory of telescopes and other optical instruments. Much of this work was collected
in a book of 1767, Dissertationes quinque ad dioptricam, which included a section
on secondary images and the apparent satellite of Venus. Boscovich did not believe
Biographical sketches
157
in the satellite and explained the observations as optical illusions, much in the same
way that his fellow Jesuit Maximilian Hell had done the previous year. Strangely,
he did not refer to Hells investigation.
Cassini, Jean Dominique (16251712)
The scientic career of Gian or Giovanni Domenico Cassini, as his Italian name
was, began in Bologna, where he studied under Riccioli and Grimaldi. Through
patronage connections, in 1650 he was appointed professor of astronomy at the
University of Bologna, where he stayed for nearly twenty years. In 1669, he became
a member of the Academie Royale des Sciences and was recruited as the rst director of the new observatory in Paris. He became naturalized as a French citizen
in 1673. During his period in Bologna, Cassini made a series of important observations, which included the rotation periods of Mars and Jupiter. He also came
up with a rotation period of Venus a little less than 24 hours. In 1668 he published new tables of Jupiters satellites, the Ephemerides Bononsienses Mediceorum Syderum. In Paris, working with telescopes constructed by Campani, he found
two new moons of Saturn in 167172 and another two moons in 1684. In 1675 he
observed the gap in Saturns ring system known today as the Cassini division.
He was also a pioneer in the study of the zodiacal light, which he thought was of
cosmic origin. In 1672 and again in 1686 he saw a faint object near Venus which
had the appearance of a satellite, but he did not identify it as such.
Although a brilliant observer, Cassini was conservative when it came to theory. He did not accept the determination of Ole Rmer of the velocity of light and
opposed Newtons theory of gravitation. Contrary to the Newtonians, he maintained that the shape of the Earth was a prolate spheroid. During the last years
of his life, he was blind. He was succeeded as director of the Paris Observatory by
his son Jacques (16771756), and also his grandson Cesar-Francois (17141784)
and his great-grandson Jean Dominique (17481848) became directors of the institution.
Dick, Thomas (17741857)
Christian philosopher and high pluralist, the Irishman Thomas Dick was a successful author of popular and morally uplifting books on science. After studies at
Edinburgh University, he was licensed to preach, but preferred instead a career as
teacher and writer. His rst work, The Christian Philosopher of 1817, employed
natural theology and pluralism to emphasize the divine nature of the heavens. A
later book, the Celestial Scenery of 1838, included a section on Venus moon in
which Dick surveyed its history and suggested from reasons of analogy that the
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Biographical sketches
satellite was probably real. He also considered it probable that Mars might have
a satellite.
Fontana, Francesco (ca. 15851656)
Known as a telescope maker and observational astronomer, Fontana graduated
in law from the University of Naples, but he subsequently devoted himself to the
construction of telescopes and other optical devices. He claimed to have built and
used a telescope as early as 1608, before Galileo. Although appreciated as a telescope maker, his contemporaries did not hold him in high esteem as an astronomer.
Among his many observations were the belts of Jupiter and the phases of Venus.
He also observed the 1645 Mercury transit and made a number of drawings of
the Moon. These he published in his only printed work, the Novae coelestium terrestriumque observationes, which appeared in Naples in 1646. In this work he also
reported markings on Venus and one or two small globes observed from November 1645 to January 1646. Although he did not explicitly identify his discovery
with satellites of Venus, most later astronomers thought he did. His discovery was
mentioned by Riccioli, Gassendi and Kircher, none of whom believed in a Venus
satellite. On the other hand, Guericke apparently supported Fontanas claim.
Hell, Maximilian (17201792)
Born in Slovakia as the son of a Hungarian family, Hells original name was Miksa
H
oll. He entered the Jesuit order in 1738 and after studies of mathematics, astronomy and theology in Vienna he was ordained a priest in 1752. Three years
later he was appointed professor of mechanics at the university and the following year the rst director of its observatory. Among his many duties was to edit
the Ephemerides astronomicae ad meridianem Vindobonensem published between
1757 and 1791. He was involved in the 1761 Venus transit project, and in connection with the transit of 1769 he was invited by the king of Denmark to make
measurements in Vard in northern Norway. His data were important, but they
arrived late and Lalande thought he had manipulated them, which greatly tarnished Hells reputation. He was only rehabilitated in 1883, as a result of Simon
Newcombs careful detective work. Hell had an interest in Venus and its alleged
satellite, for which he had looked in vain in 1764. But he came to the conclusion
that the satellite was spurious and that the observation claims were all due to
optical reections in the telescope and the observers eye. Based on a series of optical experiments, he argued for this conclusion in De satellite Veneris, included
in the Vienna Ephemerides of 1766 and translated into German in 1792. Many
astronomers found his explanation to be satisfactory.
Biographical sketches
159
160
Biographical sketches
Milan, and in 1772 he was placed in charge of the Brera Observatory. He left the
observatory in 1776, after having published a history of it. During this period he
collaborated with Boscovich, but after 1772 the two Jesuit scientists separated and
became enemies. Lagrange published his rst observations in 1756, in the memoirs
of the Marseille Observatory, and in May 1761 he made three observations of the
satellite of Venus, but without publishing his results. They only became known
through Lalande, who reported them in the Encyclopedie.
Lalande, Joseph Jer
ome Lefrancais de (17321807)
Not yet twenty years old, and after having completed his studies in law, he went
to Paris to observe the Moon. After a successful scientic mission to Berlin, where
he met luminaries such as Voltaire, Euler and Maupertuis, in 1753, at the tender
age of 21, he was elected a member of the Academie des Sciences in Paris, rst
as adjunct professor and from 1772 as pensionnaire. In 1768 he became professor
of astronomy at the Coll`ege Royal, where he followed his teacher Joseph-Nicolas
Delisle, and in 1795 he was appointed director of the Paris Observatory. A gifted
teacher and popularizer, he published many works aimed at the general public,
including the eight-volume Voyage dun francais en Italie and the often reprinted
Astronomie des dames. As an outspoken freethinker he collected material for the
Dictionnaire des athees published in 1800.
Lalandes contributions to astronomy covered a wide span, both in observation, theory and organization. He served as editor of the astronomical almanac
Connaissance des temps from 1760 until 1776 and again from 1794 until his death
in 1807. He was also involved in the work on the Venus transits of 1761 and 1769,
and deduced in 1770 a best value of the solar parallax. A prolic author, Lalande
published numerous articles and books. His Traite de lastronomie of 1764 became
inuential as a textbook, and his articles on astronomy in the Encyclopedie and
Encyclopedie methodique were of no less importance. He had an interest in the
history of astronomy, such as shown by his Bibliographie astronomiques published
in 1803. Another important work was the Histoire celeste of 1801, a star catalogue
which comprised about 50,000 stars. In 1802, while director of the Paris Observatory, he established the Lalande Prize, to be awarded each year for an outstanding
contribution to astronomy.
Lalande took an interest in the satellite of Venus, of which he gave an account
in the Encyclopedie, the Dictionnaire de physique and elsewhere. Rather than dismissing the satellite, he maintained an uncommitted attitude and communicated
the observations of Lagrange, Montaigne and others. On behalf of the Academie
des Sciences, he expressed his appreciation of Baudouins memoir of 1761 on the
supposed discovery of the Venus moon. Although he did not support the actual
Biographical sketches
161
existence of the moon, for a period he was sympathetic to the idea. By 1795 at
the latest, he reached the conclusion that the satellite of Venus was not real but
caused by optical illusions.
Lambert, Johann Heinrich (17281777)
Although born in Mulhouse in Alsace, Lambert spent most of his life in Switzerland and Germany. He became involved with science while a private teacher in
Chur, Switzerland, and in 176061 he published in Augsburg two of his most
important works, Photometria and the Cosmologische Briefe. The rst was a pioneering work in photometry, the second a grand if rather speculative attempt to
describe the entire stellar universe. On the recommendation of Euler, he was made
a member of the Berlin Academy of Sciences in 1765. He stayed in Berlin until
his death, producing important works in mathematics, philosophy and physics.
Apart from Photometria, his main contributions to physics were included in the
Pyrometrie of 1779, his last book. His most important mathematical work was
also one of the earliest, Die freye Perspective published in Zurich 1759, which is a
classic of descriptive geometry. In 1774 he founded the Astronomisches Jahrbuch,
subsequently edited by J. Bode. As a true polyhistor, he covered and contributed
to a large part of science and scholarship. His most important work in astronomy
was a method of analyzing cometary orbits, published in 1761 as Insigniores orbitae cometarum proprietates. In this work he developed an earlier theory of Euler
and generalized it to the case of an elliptical orbit.
In a memoir of the Berlin Academy of 1773, and also in two articles in the Astronomisches Jahrbuch, Lambert analyzed in detail the observations of the Venus
moon. He clearly found the subject to be of value, but refrained from committing
himself on the moons existence. Having calculated its orbital elements, he predicted, wrongly, that it should be possible to see it in front of the Sun on 1 June
1777. On the basis of the moons orbital elements he found the mass of Venus, for
which he got a surprisingly large value, more than seven times the mass of the
Earth.
Mairan, Jean Jacques dOrtous de (16781771)
A physicist in the dying Cartesian tradition, Mairan attempted to nd physical
mechanisms for such phenomena as heat, light, the shape of the Earth and the
aurora. He became a member of the Academie des Sciences in 1718 and served
as its secretary in 1741-43. Although basically a Cartesian, he sought to construct theories which included features of Newtonian natural philosophy. Among
his works was an investigation of phosphorous bodies, Dissertation sur la cause
de la lumi`ere des phosphores et des noctiluques from 1717, and a massive work on
162
Biographical sketches
the northern light, Traite physique et historiques de laurore boreale from 1754. In
1741 Mairan surveyed the possible existence of the Venus moon, for which he had
considerable sympathy. He suggested that the few and erratic observations were
caused by an extended solar atmosphere, which hypothesis he presented in a more
elaborate form in 1762. Just as he had explained comets, the aurora borealis and
the zodiacal light on the basis of a subtle interplanetary medium, so he thought
he could explain the observations of the satellite of Venus in the same manner.
Mayer, Andreas (17161782)
A German astronomer, Mayer served from 1741 as professor of mathematics,
physics and astronomy at the University of Greifswald. This town in northern
Germany was at the time under Swedish rule, which may explain why Mayer became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and at one occasion
published a paper in Swedish in the societys proceedings. In 1759 he observed
near Venus an object which he thought might have been a moon. Knowledge of
the observation only became public after it was reported by Lambert in 1778.
Mayer participated in the 1769 Venus transit project and published a paper in
Latin of his observations in the Philosophical Transactions. He collaborated with
Lampert Heinrich Rohl, who in 1773 succeeded him as director of the Greifswald
Observatory. R
ohl, too, was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Montaigne, Jacques Leibar (b. 1716)
Born in Narbonne, Montaigne was an accomplished amateur astronomer associated with a scientic society in Limoges, France. He made his name by discovering
two comets, one in 1772 (today known as 3D/Biela) and the other in 1774. In 1780
he discovered yet another comet, subsequently veried by Heinrich Olbers. On the
instigation of Baudouin, he searched in 1761 for the satellite of Venus, which he
saw at four dierent occasions in May. Rather than communicating the results
himself, Baudouin did so in two treatises to the Academie des Sciences. Because
Montaigne did not publish on the matter, it is unknown how he felt about the
observations and the collaboration with Baudouin.
Montbarron
A councillor in Auxerre south of Paris, he observed Venus in March 1764 and saw
twice an object which he thought might have been a satellite. He was certain that
it was not a star. The observations were known to Messier, who communicated
them to Hell, and they also received notice in the Encyclopedie. Nothing further is
Biographical sketches
163
164
Biographical sketches
Schorr, F.
Except from being a German amateur astronomer and member of a learned society
in Danzig (now Gdansk in Poland), little is known of Schorr. In 1873 and 1875, he
published two small books, one on the solar parallax problem and the other, Der
Venusmond, on the satellite of Venus. He provided valuable historical information
and argued that the accumulated evidence was in favour of the existence of a
satellite. Although no astronomer accepted his claim, the book was fairly well
received and helped to revive interest in a possible Venus moon, or at least to
explain the earlier observations. Apart from his two books, Schorr seems not to
have contributed to the astronomical literature.
Schr
oter, Johann Hieronymus (17451816)
An observational astronomer, Schr
oters strength lay in his enthusiasm for observation and his excellent instruments. As chief magistrate of Lilienthal, near Bremen,
he spent his free time with observations. His mirror telescope completed in 1793
was the largest in Germany. Tragically, when French troops invaded Lilienthal in
1813, his observatory was burned down. Schr
oter is best known for his observations
of the Moon and Venus. He published a book in two volumes on lunar topography,
the Selenotopographische Fragmente (179197), and collected his studies of Venus
in the Aphroditographische Fragmente (1796). In 1790 he established the presence
of an atmosphere around Venus, and he also claimed to have seen very high mountains on the planet. Although he looked for the satellite of Venus, he never saw it
and also he saw no secondary images of the kind that Hell had suggested. Together
with his assistant Karl Harding, in 1797 he succeeded in observing the two moons
of Uranus discovered by William Herschel.
Short, James (17101768)
Born in Edinburgh, he entered the university in 1726 and became the protege
of Colin Maclaurin, the professor of mathematics. He started making mirrors for
telescopes at an early age. In 1737 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society,
and the following year he settled in London, where he established his reputation
as a rst-rate optician and astronomer. He specialized in reecting telescopes, of
which he made a total of 1,370. In 1757 he became a foreign member of the Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences. He was one of the rst British natural philosophers
to endorse the vibration theory of light and to incorporate John Dollonds achromatic lens into a telescope. Short was actively involved in the determination of the
solar parallax based on the Venus transit in 1761, on which subject he published
two papers. He was appointed to a special committee set up by the Royal Society
Biographical sketches
165
to study the 1769 transit, but died before he could take part in the plans. In 1740
he observed an object near to Venus which he described as a small star. He may
or may not have thought it was a satellite, but later in life he seems to have denied
the existence of a Venus moon. In any case, his report in the Philosophical Transactions was well known, also on the Continent, and caused other astronomers to
consider the possibility of a satellite of Venus.
Stroobant, Paul Henri (18681936)
After having worked as a voluntary assistant at the Royal Observatory at Uccle
near Brussels, he presented in 1887 (at the age of nineteen) a systematic analysis
of the satellite of Venus to the Royal Belgian Academy. According to Stroobant,
almost all of the sightings had been of faint stars, a claim which he substantiated by
comparing the positions of the alleged satellite with the Bonner Durchmusterung
star catalogue. He concluded that there was no basis at all for believing in a Venus
moon, which conclusion was generally accepted. Most astronomers thought that
he had solved the mystery of the satellite of Venus.
In 1889 Stroobant earned a doctorate in physics and mathematics from the
University of Brussels. After studies in Paris, he returned to Brussels, where he
became professor of astronomy in 1896 and director of the Royal Observatory in
1925. During his distinguished career, he worked in a variety of elds, including
the satellites of Saturn, the personal equation and the dynamics and distribution
of stars in the Milky Way. He was active in the International Astronomical Union,
where he served as president for its bibliographical committee. Among his honours
was the Lalande Prize, which he received from the Paris Academie des Sciences
in 1921. In 1950 a Stroobant Prize was created by the Royal Belgian Academy of
Sciences, to be awarded to an outstanding Belgian or French astronomer.
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Index
academies, scientic:
Berlin 47, 71, 8789, 161;
Brussels 122, 159, 165;
Copenhagen 60, 6364, 67, 159,
163;
London 31, 8485, 164;
Paris 19, 3233, 46, 52, 155, 157,
161;
Petersburg 89;
Stockholm 86, 162, 164
Ahl, Johan 64
Aikin, Arthur 100
Alemi, Alex 143
Amalthea (satellite) 139, 148
Anger, Karl T. 103
Arago, Francois 10203, 134, 163
Argelander, Friedrich 129
Ariel (satellite) 153
Aristotle 125
Arouet, Francois-Marie. See: Voltaire
Artzt, Friedrich 58, 6263
asteroids 110, 112, 119, 146, 150
aurora borealis 78, 162
Averroes 39
Avicenna 39
Bailly, Jean-Sylvain 80, 97
Baliani, Giovanni B. 11
Barnard, Edward E. 13840, 148
Baudouin, Armand H. 4554, 57, 78,
9091, 128, 155, 162
Bergman, Torbern 4041
Bergmann, Liborius 72
Bernoulli, Jean 11112
Bertrand, Joseph 117, 119, 122
Besant, Annie 143
Bessel, Friedrich W. 114
Bevis, John 47
Bianchini, Francesco 2224, 34, 178,
119, 147, 15455
Biela, Wilhelm von 123
Birch, Thomas 57
black drop eect 4041
Blacklock, Arthur 110
Bliss, Nathanael 57
Blondlot, Rene 147
Bode, Johann E. 25, 55, 70, 87, 89,
96, 152, 161
Bond, George P. 118
Bonnet, Charles 6870, 75, 145, 156
Boscovich, Roger J. 44, 8486, 156
57, 160
Boserup, Christian 64
Boulliau, Ismael 80
Bravais, Auguste 127
Brewster, David 25, 105
Briga, Melchior della 23
Buon, Comte de 72
Bugge, Thomas 60, 6768, 159
B
utzov, Ole N. 66
Campani, Guiseppe 22, 157
Carrington, Richard 110
Cassini, Jacques 24, 157
194
Cassini, Jean Dominique 3, 7, 64, 77
79, 82, 125, 135, 157;
observations 1921, 100
Cassini, Jean Dominique II 157
Cassini de Thury, Cesar-Francois 56,
157
Castel, Louis B. 2829
Challis, James 148
Chapelain, Jean 18
Chapple, William 57
Charlier, Carl 106
Christian VII 80
Clairaut, Alexis Claude 84
Clap, Thomas 133
Cohen, I. Bernard 19
comets 2930, 46, 5455, 59, 162
Biela 123
Copernicus, Nicolaus 133, 157
Coste, Pierre 34
Crabtree, William 39
Craig, John 10809
Cysat, Johannes B. 12
dAlembert, Jean le Rond 36, 7172,
84, 145
dArrest, Heinrich L. 118
Darwin, Erasmus 100
dAuteroche, Jean-Baptiste C. 45
Deimos (satellite) 118
Delambre, Jean-Baptiste 10001
Delisle, Joseph-Nicolas 160
Denning, William F. 122
dEpinays,
Louise-Florence 45
Derham, William 2425, 28
Descartes, Rene 9, 125
Dick, Thomas 49, 10305, 15758
Dionis du Sejour, Achille-Pierre 93,
151
Dollond, John 31, 164
Dunn, Samuel 57
Index
Dymond, Joseph 58
Eames, John 78
Earth, second moon ix, 109, 118,
13340, 144
Ehrenberg, Andreas 27
Enceladus (satellite) 3
Encyclopedie 3233, 36, 53, 79, 99
Ende, Ferdinand A. 110
Epine 46
Erhardt 33
Erxleben, Johann 99
Euler, Leonhard 46, 8990, 160
existential statements 150
extraterrestrials. See: pluralism
Fabricius, David 80
Farley, John 133
Fatio, Niccolo 20
Faure, Georges le 132
Ferguson, James 4142
Ferner, Bengt 43, 57
Feyerabend, Paul 144
Fischer, Ernst G. 151
Flammarion, Camille 11921, 132,
139
Fleischer, Esaias 99
uids, celestial 24, 146
Fontana, Francesco viii, 16, 18, 19,
2223, 119, 145, 158;
observations 7-12, 127
Fontenelle, Bernard 25, 29, 73
Fort, Charles H. 144
Fouchy, J. P. Grandjean de 43, 5253,
57
Frederick II 71, 87, 14546
Frege, Gottlob 117
Galiani, Ferdinand 4546
Galilei, Galileo 3, 5, 810;
and Fontana 89
Index
Gassendi, Pierre 1213, 2627
Gehler, Johann S. 97
Geierbrand, Hareneus. See: Ehrenberg
ghosts, telescopic 6, 68, 80, 86, 97,
122. See also: illusions, optical
Gmelin, Leopold 99
Gore, John E. 140
Gragny, Henry de 132
Gregory, David 2123, 37
Grimaldi, Francesco M. 12, 19, 157
Guericke, Otto von 1417, 19, 109,
158
Guillemin, Amedee V. 13435, 163
195
Horrebow, Christian 6061, 6367,
87, 90, 146, 159;
and Hell 67
Horrebow, Peder 64, 159
Horrebow, Peder Nielsen 60
Horrocks, Jeremiah 39
Houzeau, Jean-Charles 101, 12225,
146, 159;
planet Neith 12324
Humboldt, Alexander von ix, 101,
110
Hunt, Gary 141
Hussey, Thomas J. 102
Hutton, Charles 99
Huygens, Christiaan 3, 7, 10, 12, 18
19, 125, 149
Iapetus (satellite) 3
illusions, atmospheric 115, 146
illusions, optical 54, 67, 76, 7987,
10002, 141;
Boscovich 8586;
Hell 8184.
See also: ghosts, telescopic
Johnsen, Ejolvor 66
Jungnitz, Longinus A. 84, 145
Jupiter, satellites of 34, 9, 148
K
astner, Abraham G. 89, 145
Kaiser, Frederik 34
Kant, Immanuel 47, 49, 7273, 145
Kepler, Johannes 3, 5, 910, 39
Keplers third law 51, 53
Kindermann, Eberhard C. 2930
Kircher, Athanasius 1314
Klein, Hermann J. 103, 131
Koch, Julius A. 112
Kuiper, Gerard 153
196
Lacaille, Nicolas-Louis de 5253, 56,
82
Lagrange, Joseph-Louis 44, 8990
Lagrange, Louis 44, 48, 85, 15960;
observations 44
Lalande, Joseph J. 44, 51, 60, 7980,
92, 95, 97, 16061;
and Baudouin 5254;
black drop eect 40;
and Short 3233
Lambert, Johann H. ix, 68, 73, 76,
84, 8793, 95, 161;
theory of Venus moon 9092
Lambert, S. J. 127
Lamont, Johann 153
Laplace, Pierre Simon 93, 107
Lassell, William 118, 148, 15354
Leadbeater, Charles W. 143
Lemonnier, Pierre C. 52, 54
Lescarbault, Edmond 109
Leverrier, Urbain J. J. 109, 134, 163
Lichtenberg, Georg C. 99
Liesganig, Joseph 56
Littrow, Karl L. 13
Lobkowitz, Caramuel 27
Locke, John 34
Lomonosov, Mikhail V. 95
Lowell, Percival 148
Luplau Janssen, Carl ix
Lynn, W. T. 128
Index
Mars, satellites of 5, 9, 2429, 70, 72,
76, 104, 10708;
discovery 11718, 137
Martin, Benjamin 7375, 145
Martinet, Johannes F. 7476, 156
Maskelyne, Nevil 5758
Mattison, Hiram 105
Maunder, Edward W. 124, 148
Maupertuis, Pierre-Louis M. 72, 160
Mayer, Andreas 3536, 87, 162
Mayer, Christian 36
Mayer, Simon 3
Mayer, Tobias 36, 50
Meeus, Jean 141
Mercury 25, 143, 71;
moon of Venus 137, 143;
perihelion anomaly 109;
phases of 27;
transits 12, 39, 158
Mersenne, Marin 89, 11
Messier, Charles 48, 50, 5455, 58
59, 83
meteors 123, 133-34, 163
Michell, John 114
Mimas (satellite) 3
Mirabeau, Honore 45
Mira Ceti (star) 80, 123
Miranda (satellite) 153
mock suns 12527
Montaigne, Jacques L. 44, 46, 49, 51,
62, 7879, 162;
comets 46, 5455, 123
Montbarron 5850, 16263
Montmor, Habert de 18
Montucla, Jean-Etienne
45, 51, 97
Moon, satellite of 13738
moons. See: satellites
Moore, Patrick 141
Moss, Thomas 47
Index
natural theology 24, 27, 35, 69, 73
76, 103, 106, 157
nebular hypothesis 107
Needham, John T. 72
Neith (planet) 119, 12325, 144, 146,
159
Neptune 102, 154;
ring 148
Newcomb, Simon 81, 158
Newton, Isaac 3, 51, 91, 155
Niesten, Leopold 127
Noel, Alexander-Jean 45
N-rays 144, 147
numerology 1819, 12325
Oberon (satellite) 15153
observations, false 82, 14748
observatories:
Avignon 42;
Brera 44, 156, 160;
Brussels 122, 127, 129, 159, 165;
Copenhagen 5961, 65;
Daramona 127;
Dorpat 101;
Greifswald 35, 162;
Leiden 42;
Lick 139;
Lilienthal 96, 164;
Marseilles 44, 159;
Munich 153;
Paris 1920, 24, 102, 141, 157,
160;
Pulkovo 153;
Toulouse 133, 163;
U.S. Naval (Washington D.C.) 125;
Vard 66;
Vienna 13, 80, 158
Ockhams razor 150
Oeder, Johann L. 33
Olbers, Heinrich W. 54, 106, 162
197
Pamphili, Camillo 9
parallax, solar 40, 50
paraselenae 125
parhelia. See: mock suns
Parsons, William. See: Rosse
Pauly 45
perfect numbers 18, 149
Petit, Frederic 13335, 144, 163
Pezenas, Esprit 44, 159
Phobos (satellite) 118, 142
Phoebe (satellite) 137
physico-theology. See: natural theology
Piazzi, Giuseppe 150
Picard, Jean 19
Pickering, Edward C. 13738
Pickering, William H. 13739
Pingre, Alexandre-Guy 57
Pioneer-Venus 1 141
Pirovano, Rudolph 139
planets, intramercurial 14, 16, 109
10, 12223
plenitude, principle of 42, 68, 92, 104,
156
pluralism 5, 34, 92, 9597, 10306,
11921, 138, 157. See also:
Venusians
Pluto 138
Pons, Jean Louis 123
Popper, Karl 150
Prince, Leeson 47, 128
Proctor, Richard A. vii, 10607, 153
Puteanus, Erycus 26
quasi-satellite 5
Quetelet, Adolphe 122
Quietanus, Johannes R. 12
Reccard, Gotthilf C. 48, 72
Rhea (satellite) 3
198
Rheita, Anton M. Schyrlaeus de 10,
2527, 129, 145
Rheticus, Georg J. 149
Riccioli, Giambattista 1213, 19, 27,
157
Rigollet, Roget 141
Roedkir, Peder 6067, 90, 112, 129,
141, 159, 163
Rohl, Lampert H. 36, 78, 162
Rmer, Ole 1920, 60, 157
Rosse, Lord 105, 108
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 45
Sainovics, Johann 80
satellites 4, 17, 141;
articial 141-42;
name 3;
number of 34, 18, 28, 10708,
14950.
See also: Earth, Jupiter, Mars,
Moon, Saturn, Venus
Saturn
ring 10, 18, 20, 73, 157;
satellites 35, 10, 1819, 26, 138,
157
Scheiner, Christopher 12, 14, 125
Schjellerup, Hans 61
Scheuten, Abraham 84, 90, 110, 163;
observations 55, 129
Schiaparelli, Giovanni 19
Schorr, F. 109, 11214, 119, 164
Schott, Casper 13
Schr
oter, Johann H. 9698, 148, 152,
164
Schudt, Johann J. 27
Schumacher, Heinrich C. 167
Schwabe, Heinrich 60
Schyrle, Johann B. See: Rheita
science ction ix, 29, 13132, 135
Secchi, Pietro A. 114
Index
See, Thomas J. J. 140
Senebier, Jean 149
SETI research 142
Sheehan, William 6
Shklovskii, Iosef 142
Short, James viii, 7, 50, 77, 79, 82,
16465;
observations 2934
Smyth, William H. 92, 103, 107, 153
social constructivism 144
solar atmosphere 35, 78-79, 162. See
also: uids, celestial
Spencer, Herbert 10708
Spill, W. 13839
spiritualism 108, 143
stars, dark 114
Staudacher, Johann C. 58, 91
Stevenson, David 143
Stroobant, Paul ix, 9293, 12831,
147, 165
Struve, Otto W. 153
Stuyvaert, E. 12728
sunspots 14, 60, 88, 110, 146, 159
Swift, Jonathan 2829
Tacquet, Andreas 13
telescopes 22, 59, 81;
Craig 10809;
Fontana 7, 27;
Lagrange 44;
Montaigne 46;
Schr
oter 96;
Short 3132;
Wiesel 14, 26
Tennyson, Alfred 2
Themis (satellite) 138
theosophy 151
Thirion, Julien 125
Thornton, Robert J. 100
Thuillier, Denis 57
Index
Titan (satellite) 3, 7, 51
Titania (satellite) 15153
Titius, Johann D. 70, 156
TitiusBode law 19, 70, 87, 152, 156
Tombaugh, Clyde W. 138
Torricelli, Evangelista 9
Triton (satellite) 154
Tuttle, Hudson 108
Umbriel (satellite) 153
Uranus 11112, 141, 146, 163;
discovery 67, 148;
moons 15154;
ring 106
Urban VIII 34
Van Gogh, Vincent 2
Venus vii, 143;
atmosphere 2223, 40, 9596, 164;
in history 1;
mass vii, 5154, 9193, 161;
mountains 9697, 148, 164;
oceans 22, 148;
poetry 2;
rotation period 19, 24, 95, 127,
157;
similarity to Earth vii, 50, 106,
119;
spots on 10, 1920, 22, 31, 96;
transits (1761, 1769) 36, 3958,
80, 84;
transits (1874, 1882) 122, 127
28.
See also: Venus, satellite of;
Venusians
Venus, satellite of 5, 1517, 40, 143;
Artzt 6263;
Cassini 2022;
Ferguson 4142;
Fontana 1012;
199
Mayer 36;
Montaigne and Baudouin 4452;
Montbarron 58-59;
period of revolution 5051;
radius 52;
Roedkir and Horrebow 6167;
Short 31;
table of observations 42;
UFOs 142
Venusians 92, 9596, 10405, 11921
Verne, Jules ix, 13132, 135, 163
Voiron, M. 152
Voltaire 2829, 7172, 145, 160
Vulcan (planet) 10911
Wales, William 58
Waltemath, Georg 13536
Wargentin, Per W. 48, 8687, 105
Webb, Thomas W. 10203, 11415,
117, 122
Whewell, William 10506
Wiesel, Johannes 1415, 2627
Wilson, William E. 127
Winthrop, John 57
Witchell, Georges 47
Woeckel, Johann 58
Wolf, Johann R. 110
Wolf, Nathanael M. 32
Wol, Christian 2728
Wordsworth, William 2
Wurm, Johann F. 152
Young, Charles 118, 124, 131
Zach, Franz X. von 111
Zahn, Johann 1315, 26
Zenger, Carl V. 128
zodiacal light 2021, 78, 149, 157, 162
Zupus, Johannes B. 27
calcul integral
an encyclopedic appraisal of
18th-century calculus which remained the
standard reference on the subject through much
of the 19th century, in spite of Cauchys reform of
the subject in the 1820s.
Lacroix and the Calculus is the rst major study
It uses the unique and
of Lacroixs large Traite.
massive bibliography given by Lacroix to explore
late 18th-century calculus, and the way it is
reected in Lacroixs account. Several particular
aspects are addressed in detail, including: the
foundations of differential calculus, analytic and
differential geometry, conceptions of the integral,
and types of solutions of differential equations
(singular/complete/general integrals, geometrical
interpretations, and generality of arbitrary
functions).
SNHS 34: Hyrup, J.
Jacopo da Firenzes Tractatus Algorismi and
Early Italian Abbacus Culture (2007)
ISBN 978-3-7643-8390-9
J.
SNHS 23: Ferreiros,
Labyrinth of Thought. A History of Set Theory
and its Role in Modern Mathematics (2001)
ISBN 978-3-7643-5749-8
Epures
darchitecture. De la coupe des pierres a`
la geom
etrie
descriptive XVIXIX si`ecles (1998)
ISBN 978-3-7643-5701-6