THE SAND-RECKONER *
83
ns as to the
heir relation
portunity of
tys, to prove
DO stades; in
jut ten times
s diameter of
takes to he
it of the sun.
lun to be nine
twelve times,
r than 18 but
will again be
ot more. The
i ratio of the
Here he seizes
of the fixed
loses the earth
portion to the
phere bears to
nnatical sense,
nfinite in size,
jO get another
Aristarchus’s
e centre, being
ny other mag-
terpretation of
we conceive a
een the centre
A fixed stars).
a; Aristarchus
ihat the size of
,t of the sphere
f Archimedes’s
and, in making
he was taking
ving his hypo-
Archimedes has, lastly, to compare the diameter of the sun
with the circumference of the circle described by its centre.
Aristarchus had made the apparent diameter of the sun T -| ff th
of the said circumference ; Archimedes will prove that the
said circumference cannot contain as many as 1,000 sun’s
diameters, or that the diameter of the sun is greater than the
side of a regular chiliagon inscribed in the circle. First he
made an experiment of his own to determine the apparent
diameter of the sun. With a small cylinder or disc in a plane
at right angles to a long straight stick and moveable along it,
he observed the sun at the moment when it cleared the
horizon in rising, moving the disc till it just covered and just
failed to cover the sun as he looked along the straight stick.
He thus found the angular diameter to lie between j^R and
2js-gR, where R is a right angle. But as, under his assump
tions, the size of the earth is not negligible in comparison with
the sun’s circle, he had to allow for parallax and find limits
for the angle subtended by the sun at the centre of the earth.
This he does by a geometrical argument very much in the
manner of Aristarchus.
Let the circles with centres 0, C represent sections of the sun
and earth respectively, E the position of the observer observing
g 2