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" ... approaches the horizon. It does not, on the other hand, seem at all unlikely, owing to the high temperature which we must suppose the sun's atmosphere to possess, that such vapours should be present in it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum... "
A Dictionary of chemistry and the allied branches of other sciences v. 5, 1868 - Page 382
by Henry Watts - 1868
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Researches on the solar spectrum, and the spectra of the ..., Volume 2, Part 1

Gustav Robert Kirchhoff - 1862 - 62 pages
...it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...in any question of natural science. As soon as the presence of one terrestrial element in the solar atmosphere was thus determined, and thereby the existence...
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Littell's Living Age, Volume 75

1862 - 648 pages
...in it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapor in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science." (Kirchhoff. Researches, etc., p. 20). This statement is not one jot more positive than the facts warrant....
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The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 116

1862 - 620 pages
...it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science.' (Kirchhoff. Researches, $c., p. 20.) This statement is not one jot more positive than the facts warrant....
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Annual of Scientific Discovery: Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and Art

1863 - 376 pages
...in it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapor in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science." — Kirchhoff ; Researches, etc., p. 20. This statement is not one jot more positive than the facts...
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The Second Step in Chemistry, Or the Student's Guide to the Higher Branches ...

Robert Galloway - 1864 - 808 pages
...Hence the observations of tie solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of metallic vapours m the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of certainty as we can obtain in any question of natural science." Barium, copper, and zinc appear to be present only in small...
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Lessons in Elementary Chemistry

Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1866 - 420 pages
...with the bright lines of terrestrial metals, we arrive at a knowledge of the occurrence of such metals in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of certainty as we are able to attain to in any question of physical science. The metals hitherto detected in the sun's...
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Light: Its Influence on Life and Health

Forbes Winslow - 1867 - 332 pages
...present in it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of certainty as can be attained in any question of natural science.* The important results thus obtained regarding...
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Spectrum Analysis -- Six Lectures

Henry E. Roscoe - 1869 - 372 pages
...it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science." This statement is, I believe, not one jot more positive than the facts warrant. For to what does any...
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Spectrum Analysis: Six Lectures, Delivered in 1868, Before the Society of ...

Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1870 - 514 pages
...it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science." This statement is, I believe, not one jot more positive than the facts warrant. For what does any evidence...
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Spectrum analysis, 6 lects

sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1869 - 396 pages
...it. Hence the observations of the solar spectrum appear to me to prove the presence of iron vapour in the solar atmosphere with as great a degree of...we can attain in any question of natural science." This statement is, I believe, not one jot more positive than the facts warrant. For to what does any...
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