by JohnD » Tue Oct 22, 2019 10:22 am
It was abberations in the appearance of the Venusian disk, called the "Black Drop Effect", that led to significant differences in transit times recorded by Cook, the professional navigator and by Green, the professional astronomer, at Tahiti in 1769. Green died on the return voyage, which allowed British astronomers, not least the Astronomer Royal, to blame him, causing Cook dismay and to defned his dead colleague.
We no longer need to measure the transits to know planetary orbits, but how would the moment when the discs become tangent be defined today, when as the video clealry shows, prominences and other disturbances blur the Sun's edge?
John
It was abberations in the appearance of the Venusian disk, called the "Black Drop Effect", that led to significant differences in transit times recorded by Cook, the professional navigator and by Green, the professional astronomer, at Tahiti in 1769. Green died on the return voyage, which allowed British astronomers, not least the Astronomer Royal, to blame him, causing Cook dismay and to defned his dead colleague.
We no longer need to measure the transits to know planetary orbits, but how would the moment when the discs become tangent be defined today, when as the video clealry shows, prominences and other disturbances blur the Sun's edge?
John