Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical SocietyPriestly and Weale, 1861 |
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Page 34
... Mercury . Prof. 34 , 35 We , in fact , have — 17 m2 e ' 99 27-29 ' + 355 m2 é 36 , 37 ,, 27-29 ′ I I = 1 + m2 " " 24+ 29 ' - 3 m2 e " 9 25+ 29 ' + 32 m2 e cos g and dv = f into as follows , viz .: + m2 +1 m2 e e ' - m2 é 11 2 % 17 28 ...
... Mercury . Prof. 34 , 35 We , in fact , have — 17 m2 e ' 99 27-29 ' + 355 m2 é 36 , 37 ,, 27-29 ′ I I = 1 + m2 " " 24+ 29 ' - 3 m2 e " 9 25+ 29 ' + 32 m2 e cos g and dv = f into as follows , viz .: + m2 +1 m2 e e ' - m2 é 11 2 % 17 28 ...
Page 37
... Mercury , Nov. 11 , 1861 . ( Extract of a Letter from Father Secchi to the Astronomer Royal , dated Rome , Nov. 16 , 1861. ) The passage of Mercury on the solar disk has been observed here under very good circumstances , but almost by a ...
... Mercury , Nov. 11 , 1861 . ( Extract of a Letter from Father Secchi to the Astronomer Royal , dated Rome , Nov. 16 , 1861. ) The passage of Mercury on the solar disk has been observed here under very good circumstances , but almost by a ...
Page 40
... Mercury , November 11 , 1861 , made at the Observatory , Durham . By Prof. T. Chevallier . The weather was very favourable , at Durham , for observing the transit of Mercury on the 11th of November . At sunrise the eastern part of the ...
... Mercury , November 11 , 1861 , made at the Observatory , Durham . By Prof. T. Chevallier . The weather was very favourable , at Durham , for observing the transit of Mercury on the 11th of November . At sunrise the eastern part of the ...
Page 43
Mr. BAXENDELL : on the Transit of Mercury . Mr. KNOTT : on the Variable Star R Vulpecula . 42 , 43 rather impressed with the idea that the figure of Mercury was not quite round , but slightly elongated , and that there was also a slight ...
Mr. BAXENDELL : on the Transit of Mercury . Mr. KNOTT : on the Variable Star R Vulpecula . 42 , 43 rather impressed with the idea that the figure of Mercury was not quite round , but slightly elongated , and that there was also a slight ...
Page 64
... is a sphere o42 inch in diameter , when 10 ° . = 10 μ C Suppose the glass of the bulb to be th of an inch thick , there would be 0108 cubic inch glass and 0287 cubic inch 64 , 65 mercury heated 30045 in 100 seconds .
... is a sphere o42 inch in diameter , when 10 ° . = 10 μ C Suppose the glass of the bulb to be th of an inch thick , there would be 0108 cubic inch glass and 0287 cubic inch 64 , 65 mercury heated 30045 in 100 seconds .
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Common terms and phrases
2r+g Airy Alhazen Annex appears April Astronomer Royal bright Calculation CAYLEY clock Comet computed corrected crater Decl declination diameter difference distance Ditto ditto edge Ephemeris equations Equatoreal error excentricity eye-piece Greenwich inches aperture instrument July June Jupiter Jupiter's Satellites latitude light limb longitude Lunar m² e m² n² Mars Mean Solar measures Memoir meridian Minor Planets Monthly Notices Moon Moon's Mean Motion N.P.D. from Observation Nautical Almanac nearly Nebula nucleus Number of Observations obtained Occultation orbit parallax perihelion photographs Prof R.A. from Observation Radcliffe Catalogue radiation Right Ascension ring Royal Observatory Saturn Secular Acceleration shadow Sirius Small Planets Society Solar Eclipse soleil stars Struve Sun's disk surface T. W. Webb taches telescope term thermometer tion Transit of Mercury Ursa Variable Variable Stars W. R. Dawes Weisse