200 
The Birth and Evolution 
[April, 
the central point of gravitation by G, the interior one by 7, 
the exterior one by g). The largest masses of both systems, 
the central and the inner one, are between G and 7 ; thus 
nothing is altered in the sense of rotation. It is otherwise 
with the exterior system, separated by remaining behind in 
revolution, whose outward larger portion moves more slowly 
than the inner one, the former being projected by the larger 
Jupiter and re-attradted by the smaller Saturn. The sepa- 
ration resembles a shock still in the sense of translation 
between G and g, but between smaller masses matter will 
revolve with a velocity corresponding to its position, but in 
an opposite sense ; A will comparatively stay behind in 
elongation (and we may ask if the result should not be a 
double undulatory rotation, an access to rotate forward and 
a real backward rotation ?)* 
We thus have absolute forward rotation of g in the sense 
of general transport — 
— 68 -' 5 - =36. 
I72XI*I02 
A, 36 ^(ri02 x 1*05) =39 ; Neptune, 36 ^(1*22) = 40 ; 
Uranus, 36 x (ri x 1*05) = 41*6 ; B, 36 x 1*22 = 43*6 
revolutions during one revolution of the Sun. 
Doubts of the probability of this development may give 
way before an examination of the excentricities of orbits. 
They are — 
Mercury 0*20561 Jupiter 0*048162 Uranus 0*0466108 
Venus... 0*00686 Saturn 0*056150 Neptune 0*0087194 
Earth... 0*016729 A 0*0038894 
Mars ... 0*093216 B 0*11366 
Whoever recolledts how these bodies formed in groups 
will recognise the relation with excentricities, and how the 
points of gravitation and mean distances of planets are 
quantities round which they unroll centrifugally and roll up 
centripetally. 
We have for the central poles — Jupiter, 0*04816 ; Saturn, 
0*05615. We have — 
o , Q5 6i 5 _ 
0*04815 
a 
'22 
1*025 
1*107 x ro 5 
1-167, 
2 
* This view requires correction. — Reich. 
