Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
While at night almost all optical effects of the atmosphere have to be investigated by using stellar images, the solar observer has at his disposal the solar disk of about half a degree in diameter, covered all over with low contrast details of about 1″, the granules, and confined to the sky by a sharp limb. This enables him to observe all effects occuring within the area of the Sun simultaneously, to follow even the propagation of certain atmospheric effects across the disk. On the other hand he has only the Sun and cannot — as night astronomers might do — extend his observations to all directions in the sky.