A Transit of Venus Possibly Misinterpreted as an Unaided-Eye Sunspot Observation in China on 9 December 1874
Hisashi Hayakawa, Mitsuru S\^oma, Kiyotaka Tanikawa, David M. Willis,, Matthew N. Wild, Lee T. Macdonald, Shinsuke Imada, Kentaro Hattori, and F., Richard Stephenson

TL;DR
This study investigates a historical Chinese sunspot record from 1874, revealing it was likely a misinterpreted observation of the Venus transit, highlighting challenges in interpreting ancient solar observations.
Contribution
The paper identifies a probable misinterpretation of a Venus transit as a sunspot in Chinese records, clarifying discrepancies between historical and modern observations.
Findings
Chinese unaided-eye observation possibly recorded Venus transit as a sunspot
Sunspots with areas up to 1000 millionths of the solar disk can be seen unaided under suitable conditions
Provides explanation for discrepancies between Chinese and Western sunspot records in 1874
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…
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