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FIG. 24.—SPOT OF MARCH 31, 1875. (FROM AN ORIGINAL DRAWING BY S.P. LANGLEY.)

“Vaporous,” we call them, for want of a better word, but without meaning that it is like the vapor of our clouds. There is no exact terrestrial analogy for these extraordinary forms, which are in fact, as we shall see later, composed of iron and other metals—not of solid iron nor even of liquid, but iron heated beyond even the liquid state to that of iron-steam or vapor.

With all this in mind, let us return to the question, “Are the spots, these gigantic areas of disturbance, comparable to whirlpools or to volcanoes?” It may seem unphilosophical to assume that they are one or the other, and in fact they may possibly be neither; but it is certain that the surface of the sun would soon cool from its enormous temperature, if it were not supplied with fresh heat, and it is almost certain that this heat is drawn from the interior. As M. Faye has pointed out,ssss1 there must be a circulation up and down, the cooled products being carried within, heated and brought out again, or the sun would, however hot, grow cold outside; and, what is of interest to us, the earth would grow cold also, and we should all die. No one, I believe, who has studied the subject, will contradict the statement that if the sun’s surface were absolutely cut off from any heat supply from the interior, organic life in general upon the earth (and our own life in particular) would cease much within a month. This solar circulation, then, is of nearly as much consequence to us as that of our own bodies, if we but knew it; and now let us look at the spots again with this in mind.

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