[Across the Zodiac by Percy Greg]@TWC D-Link bookAcross the Zodiac CHAPTER II - OUTWARD BOUND 38/39
At last the solution of the problem flashed upon me, suggested by the very extravagance of the contradictions.
Not only did the barycrite contradict the discometer and the reckoning but it contradicted itself; since it was impossible that under one continuous impulsation I should have traversed 28-1/2 radii of the Earth in the first eighteen hours and no more than 4-1/2 in the next four and a half hours.
In truth, the barycrite was effected by two separate attractions,--that of the Earth and that of the Sun, as yet operating almost exactly in the same direction.
At first the attraction of the former was so great that that of the Sun was no more perceived than upon the Earth's surface.
But as I rose, and the Earth's attraction diminished in proportion to the square of the distance from her centre--which was doubled at 8000 miles, quadrupled at 16,000, and so on--the Sun's attraction, which was not perceptibly affected by differences so small in proportion to his vast distance of 95,000,000 miles, became a more and more important element in the total gravity. If, as I calculated, I had by 19h.
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