Popular Astronomy, Volume 56Goodsell Observatory of Carleton College, 1948 |
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Page 210
... asteroids , 27 Euterpe and 6 Hebe , how- ever , that are well placed ( in Leo ) for observation with suitable ... ASTEROID EPHEMERIDES 210 Asteroid Notes Asteroid Notes.
... asteroids , 27 Euterpe and 6 Hebe , how- ever , that are well placed ( in Leo ) for observation with suitable ... ASTEROID EPHEMERIDES 210 Asteroid Notes Asteroid Notes.
Page 268
... Asteroid Notes By HUGH S. RICE We offer at this time ephemerides of the brightest available asteroids , those of the planets 20 MASSALIA , 511 DAVIDA , and 23 THALIA .. MASSALIA was dis- covered in 1852 by de Gasparis at Naples , DAVIDA ...
... Asteroid Notes By HUGH S. RICE We offer at this time ephemerides of the brightest available asteroids , those of the planets 20 MASSALIA , 511 DAVIDA , and 23 THALIA .. MASSALIA was dis- covered in 1852 by de Gasparis at Naples , DAVIDA ...
Page 274
... asteroids . If the asteroids are , as many believe , the remains of a disrupted planet , which once moved between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter , then the meteorites are , presumably , fragments from that planet . Elements have been ...
... asteroids . If the asteroids are , as many believe , the remains of a disrupted planet , which once moved between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter , then the meteorites are , presumably , fragments from that planet . Elements have been ...
Contents
FEBRUARY 1948 | 144 |
The Planets in March 1948 Raymond H Wilson Jr 36 97 | 176 |
THE PLANETARY THEORY OF NEWTON A PANNEKOEK | 177 |
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achondrites American angle Anyzeski appear asteroids Astronomical Society ataxites atmosphere bodies brightness California century color comet computation craters curve cycle degrees diameter distance Dollond early earth eccentricity eclipse ephemeris fall fireball force Furnas County gravity Greenwich hence Institute of Meteoritics Joel Stebbins July Jupiter Laplace latitude light magnitude Mars mass mathematical maxima maximum means meeting Mercury meteorite falls meteoritic populations Meteoritical Society meteors method Miss moon motion Mount Wilson Observatory nebula Newton Notes nova observations OCCULTATIONS VISIBLE occur octahedrites orbit Pallasite Palomar paper parallax perihelion period phenomena photographic Planetarium planetary planets POPULAR ASTRONOMY precessional present probably Professor radiant record regions reports samples Saturn shadow bands solar spectrum spots Stebbins stellar sunspot surface telescope temperature theory tion University Variable Star variation velocity Venus VISIBLE IN LONGITUDE Washburn Observatory Yerkes Observatory