... of intensity, rather than the presence or absence, of the same components of the blended line in passing from one stellar type to another. It also showed that, considering the origins of the variable lines, the physical conditions in the stars as... The Astrophysical Journal - Page 1271911Full view - About this book
| 1906 - 412 pages
...comparison is the very strong indication that the physical conditions in the stars as we pass from the F to the Mb type vary roughly in the same direction as from the Sun 1 In preparing this manuscript I note that Slipher has called attention to the fact that this line... | |
| Astronomical Society of the Pacific - 1913 - 366 pages
..."comparison With sun-spot lines indicate strongly that physical conditions as we pass from F to the M type vary roughly in the same direction as from the Sun to sun-spots." We shall refer to this again. PARKHURST and JORDAN* have followed up a different line of... | |
| 1907 - 776 pages
...strongly indicate that the physical conditions in the stars, as we pass from the F to the Mb class, vary roughly in the same direction as from the sun to the sun-spots. No one type has been found in which the conditions are exactly the same as in the sun-spots, though... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1907 - 1076 pages
...lines, the physical conditions in the stars as we pass from the F (Procyonian) to the Mb (Antarian) type vary roughly in the same direction as from the sun to the sun-spots, a conclusion confirming that arrived at by Sir Norman Lockyer (Proc. Roy. Soc., vol. Ixxiv., p. 53)... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1907 - 1068 pages
...lines, the physical conditions in the stars as we pass from the F (Procyonian) to the Mb (Antarian) type vary roughly in the same direction as from the sun to the sun-spots, a conclusion confirming that arrived at by Sir Norman Lockyer (Proc. Roy. Soc., vol. Ixxiv., p. 53)... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1907 - 692 pages
...lines, the physical conditions in the stars as we pass from the F (Procyonian) to the Mb (Antarinn) type vary roughly in the same direction as from the sun to the sun-spots, a conclusion confirming that arrived at by Sir Norman Lookyer (Proc. Roy. Soc., vol. Ixxiv., p. 53)... | |
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