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      A Transit of Venus Possibly Misinterpreted as an Unaided-Eye Sunspot Observation in China on 9 December 1874

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          Abstract

          Large sunspots can be observed with the unaided eye under suitable atmospheric seeing conditions. Such observations are of particular value because the frequency of their appearance provides an approximate indication of the prevailing level of solar activity. Unaided-eye sunspot (UES) observations can be traced back well before the start of telescopic observations of the Sun, especially in the East Asian historical records. It is therefore important to compare more modern, UES observations with the results of telescopic sunspot observations, to gain a better understanding of the nature of the UES records. A previous comparison of Chinese UES records and Greenwich photo-heliographic results between 1874 and 1918 indicated that a few of the UES were apparently not supported by direct photographic evidence of at least one sunspot with a large area. This article reveals that one of the Chinese unaided-eye observations had possibly captured the transit of Venus on 9 December 1874. The Chinese sunspot records on this date are compared with Western sunspot observations on the same day. It is concluded that sunspots on the solar disk were quite small and the transit of Venus was probably misinterpreted as a sunspot by the Chinese local scholars. This case indicates that sunspots or comparable "obscuring" objects with an area as large as 1000 millionths of the solar disk could easily have been seen with the unaided eye under suitable seeing conditions. It also confirms the visibility of sunspots near the solar limb with the unaided eye. This study provides an explanation of the apparent discrepancy between the Chinese UES observation on 9 December 1874 and the Western sunspot observations using telescopes, as well as a basis for further discussion on the negative pairs in 1900 and 1911, apparently without sufficiently large area.

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          Most cited references30

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          Revisiting the Sunspot Number

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            Report of the IAU Working Group on Cartographic Coordinates and Rotational Elements: 2009

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              Digitization of Sunspot Drawings by Staudacher in 1749 – 1796

              R. Arlt (2008)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                07 August 2019
                Article
                10.1007/s11207-019-1504-9
                1908.02452
                a0654933-4842-4ec5-a1b4-442240f27b67

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                Solar Physics, 2019
                main text 14 pages, appendices 4 pages, and references 5 pages, and 4 figures: accepted for publication in Solar Physics
                astro-ph.SR physics.hist-ph

                History of physics,Solar & Stellar astrophysics
                History of physics, Solar & Stellar astrophysics

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