14/52 I note that it is in the constellation Sagittarius in a certain position with reference to a familiar group of stars in that constellation, and when I look at the heavens, there, in the place thus indicated, Jupiter stands revealed. 6 .-- FROM RIGHT ASCENSION 20 HOURS TO 24 HOURS (0 II.); DECLINATION 10 deg. SOUTH.] The reader will readily perceive that, in a precisely similar manner, any planet can be located, at any time of the year, and at any point in its course about the heavens. But it may turn out that the place occupied by the planet is too near the sun to render it easily, or at all, visible. |