Page:A short history of astronomy(1898).djvu/456

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382
A Short History of Astronomy
[Ch. XIII

Mars rotates, so that to the Martians it must rise in the west and set in the east. Lastly, Jupiter's system received an addition after nearly three centuries by Professor Barnard's discovery at the Lick Observatory (September 9th, 1892) of

Fig. 93.—Jupiter and its satellites.

an extremely faint fifth satellite, a good deal nearer to Jupiter than the nearest of Galilei's satellites (chapter vi., § 121).

296. The surfaces of the various planets and satellites have been watched with the utmost care by an army of observers, but the observations have to a large extent remained without satisfactory interpretation, and little is known of the structure or physical condition of the bodies concerned.

Astronomers are naturally most familiar with the surface