Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Volume 9Astronomical Society of the Pacific., 1897 |
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Page v
... Mars , by W.W. CAMP- BELL . Abstract from S. F. Chronicle . 108 109 Minutes of the Meeting of the Directors , March 27 , 1897 . Report of the Library Committee . · • . 113 113 Minutes of the Annual Meeting of the Society , March 27 ...
... Mars , by W.W. CAMP- BELL . Abstract from S. F. Chronicle . 108 109 Minutes of the Meeting of the Directors , March 27 , 1897 . Report of the Library Committee . · • . 113 113 Minutes of the Annual Meeting of the Society , March 27 ...
Page 24
... Mars is still a prominent object in the western sky in the evening , and does not set until after midnight . During the * DE MARCHI , 7. c . p . 166 . month it moves about fifteen degrees eastward from the con- 24 Publications of the ...
... Mars is still a prominent object in the western sky in the evening , and does not set until after midnight . During the * DE MARCHI , 7. c . p . 166 . month it moves about fifteen degrees eastward from the con- 24 Publications of the ...
Page 25
... Mars still sets after midnight . During the month it moves about seventeen degrees eastward in the constellation Gemini , and at the close is south of Castor and Pollux ( a and ß Gemin- orum ) , the distance from the nearer star not ...
... Mars still sets after midnight . During the month it moves about seventeen degrees eastward in the constellation Gemini , and at the close is south of Castor and Pollux ( a and ß Gemin- orum ) , the distance from the nearer star not ...
Page 27
... MARS . Mar. 1. 5 21 II . 5 39 21. 5 59 31. 6 20 +25 39 +25 44 +25 41 10 26 II 7 A. M. 6 42 P. M. 2 17 A. M. 10 46 6 21 1 56 6 I I 36 +25 29 ΙΟ 9 5 43 I 17 JUPITER . Mar. I. IO 27 7 5 9 P.M. 11 47 P. M. 6 25 A. M. II . 10 23 21 . IO 18 + ...
... MARS . Mar. 1. 5 21 II . 5 39 21. 5 59 31. 6 20 +25 39 +25 44 +25 41 10 26 II 7 A. M. 6 42 P. M. 2 17 A. M. 10 46 6 21 1 56 6 I I 36 +25 29 ΙΟ 9 5 43 I 17 JUPITER . Mar. I. IO 27 7 5 9 P.M. 11 47 P. M. 6 25 A. M. II . 10 23 21 . IO 18 + ...
Page 29
... MARS . II 33 A. M. 6 37 Apr. 1 . 6 22 +25 28 ΙΟ 7 A. M. 5 41 P.M. I 15 A. M. II . 6 44 +25 4 9 51 5 24 12 57 21. 7 7 +24 27 9 37 5 7 12 37 May 1 . 7 30 +2338 9 15 4251 12 17 JUPITER . Apr. 1 . 10 15 +12 18 2 51 P.M. 9 33 P.M. 4 15 A. M. ...
... MARS . II 33 A. M. 6 37 Apr. 1 . 6 22 +25 28 ΙΟ 7 A. M. 5 41 P.M. I 15 A. M. II . 6 44 +25 4 9 51 5 24 12 57 21. 7 7 +24 27 9 37 5 7 12 37 May 1 . 7 30 +2338 9 15 4251 12 17 JUPITER . Apr. 1 . 10 15 +12 18 2 51 P.M. 9 33 P.M. 4 15 A. M. ...
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Common terms and phrases
aperture April Arcturian Astronomical Society Atlas atmosphere August Board of Directors bright BRUCE Medal C. D. PERRINE Capellan carbonic acid catalogue comet Comet-Medal Committee Committee-Messrs constellation December Decl Declination degrees eastward diameter dome eclipse EDWARD equatorial F. R. ZIEL feet Greenwich Hamilton Harvard College Observatory HOLDEN inches instruments interstellar medium January July June Jupiter latitude LEWIS SWIFT Library Lick Observatory longitude magnitude March Mars meeting Mercury meridian Messrs meteor minutes Miss O'HALLORAN MOLERA month Moon morning star motion Mount Hamilton moves nebulæ Neptune November Oakland observations October Pacific penumbra photographic planets plates President prisms Prof Professor proper-motion Publications quantity of carbonic R. G. AITKEN San Francisco Saturn SCHAEBERLE Secretary seen Sept September Shadow touching Sirian solar spectra spectroscope sun-spot telescope tion Transit umbra University Observatory Uranus Venus W. H. S. MONCK WILLIAM ALVORD Yerkes Observatory Yerkes telescope ΙΟ