Page:A short history of astronomy(1898).djvu/159

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§ 86]
The Motion of the Planets
113

the epicycle being always in the direction of the sun, the ratio of the sizes of the epicycle and deferent being fixed, but the actual dimensions being practically arbitrary. Ptolemy preferred on the whole to regard the epicycles of both these planets as lying between the earth and the sun. The idea of making the sun a centre of motion having once been accepted, it was an obvious simplification to make the centre of the epicycle not merely lie in the direction of the sun, but actually be the sun. In fact, if the planet

Fig. 43.—The orbits of Venus and of the earth.

in question revolved round the sun at the proper distance and at the proper rate, the same appearances would be produced as by Ptolemy's epicycle and deferent, the path of the planet round the sun replacing the epicycle, and the apparent path of the sun round the earth (or the path of the earth round the sun) replacing the deferent.

In discussing the time of revolution of a planet a distinction has to be made, as in the case of the moon (chapter ii., § 40), between the synodic and sidereal periods of revolution. Venus, for example, is seen as an evening star