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" ... in diameter. The star is perfectly in the centre, and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars ; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and... "
The Principles of Hydrostatics: Designed for the Use of Students in the ... - Page 267
by Samuel Vince - 1820 - 151 pages
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Studies in Astronomy

John Ellard Gore - 1904 - 314 pages
...there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars ; nor can there be doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star,...not much less in brightness, and in the same field with the above, was perfectly free from any such appearance." This object will be found about 2° north...
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The Library of Original Sources: Advance in knowledge, 1650-1800

Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 484 pages
...and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars ; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star not much less in brightness, and in the...
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Astronomical Essays Historical and Descriptive

John Ellard Gore - 1907 - 412 pages
...and the atmosphere is so delicate, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars, nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star, not much less in brightness and in the...
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 74

Royal Astronomical Society - 1914 - 836 pages
...and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars, nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star."t At Birr Castle, between the years 1852 and 1873,...
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Classics of Modern Science (Copernicus to Pasteur)

William S. Knickerbocker - 1927 - 410 pages
...there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars ; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star not much less in brightness, and in the same field with the above, was perfectly free from any such appearance. This last object is so decisive in every...
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Colours of the Stars

David Malin, Paul Murdin - 1984 - 214 pages
...centre and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star.' Within two months of his observation Herschel reversed...
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Planetary Nebulae: A Study of Late Stages of Stellar Evolution

Stuart R. Pottasch - 1983 - 344 pages
...centre, and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint and equal throughout that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star". Figure 1-1 - The planetary nebula NGC 3132 (PK 165-15°!)....
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Modern Theories of the Universe: From Herschel to Hubble

Michael J. Crowe - 1994 - 468 pages
...and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star not much less in brightness, and in the...
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The Library of Original Sources: Volume VI (Advance in Knowledge 1650-1800)

Oliver J. Thatcher - 2004 - 466 pages
...and the atmosphere is so diluted, faint, and equal throughout, that there can be no surmise of its consisting of stars ; nor can there be a doubt of the evident connection between the atmosphere and the star. Another star not much less in brightness, and in the...
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The Herschel Objects and How to Observe Them

James Mullaney - 2007 - 180 pages
...and the atmosphere is so faint and delicate and equal throughout that there can be no surmise of it consisting of stars; nor can there be a doubt of the...evident connexion between the atmosphere and the star." Thus he recognized for the first time the existence of "a shining fluid of a nature totally unknown...
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