Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 68; Volumes 1907-1908Priestley and Weale, 1908 Includes lists of additions to the society's library, usually separately paged. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 65
Page 33
... discussion of these residuals gives the following differences from Dr. Hermann Struve's elements in the sense Tabular - Observed : du - 1 ° 03 dN = -0 ° 98 dI giving for the epoch 1907'2 = -0 ° 18 da = " · 008 a = 16 " 279 N = 188 ° 68 ...
... discussion of these residuals gives the following differences from Dr. Hermann Struve's elements in the sense Tabular - Observed : du - 1 ° 03 dN = -0 ° 98 dI giving for the epoch 1907'2 = -0 ° 18 da = " · 008 a = 16 " 279 N = 188 ° 68 ...
Page 64
... discussion of results , and the other relates to the introduction of new ideas and to the beginnings of the new methods which will make the astronomy of the future . I think we will all admit that the introduction of new ideas is quite ...
... discussion of results , and the other relates to the introduction of new ideas and to the beginnings of the new methods which will make the astronomy of the future . I think we will all admit that the introduction of new ideas is quite ...
Page 65
... discuss all phases of this large problem ; I shall mention only a few of them , and approach it from a single direction . But before taking up the details of this discussion , perhaps I may be permitted to say that the conception that ...
... discuss all phases of this large problem ; I shall mention only a few of them , and approach it from a single direction . But before taking up the details of this discussion , perhaps I may be permitted to say that the conception that ...
Page 67
... discuss the question somewhat more specifically , and in doing so I shall confine myself almost entirely to observa- tions of the Sun , although one might attack the subject from many other directions . The first point is this . Suppose ...
... discuss the question somewhat more specifically , and in doing so I shall confine myself almost entirely to observa- tions of the Sun , although one might attack the subject from many other directions . The first point is this . Suppose ...
Page 77
... discuss them in detail . I may remark in passing that with a Littrow spectrograph , or any long focus spectrograph , and a fixed solar image , one can undertake other work of various kinds , such as a determination of the solar rotation ...
... discuss them in detail . I may remark in passing that with a Littrow spectrograph , or any long focus spectrograph , and a fixed solar image , one can undertake other work of various kinds , such as a determination of the solar rotation ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
angle appear Astrographic axis bright brighter Cape Catalogue centre coefficient colour column comet comparison stars computed corrections correlation curve cyanogen David Gill deduced determination distance Double Stars drift E. E. Barnard Earth eclipse epoch equation equatorial faint formula give given Greenwich groups heliometer instrument Julian Day Jupiter latitude lens Lick Observatory limb lines longitude magnitude Max Wolf mean measures meridian method Monthly Notices Moon nebula nucleus number of stars observations obtained orbit outer condensation paper parallax Paris perihelion perihelion passage period perturbations photographs planet plates position present Professor proper motion reduced reflector refraction refractor region right ascension ring Royal Observatory satellite Saturn seen Sept solar spectra spectral class spectroheliograph spectroscope spectrum spot stellar sun-spot Sun's surface Table telescope tion variable Yerkes Observatory zone ΙΟ