An Elementary Treatise on Astronomy: Adapted to the Present Improved State of the Science, Being the Fourth Part of a Course of Natural Philosophy, Compiled for the Use of the Students of the University at Cambridge, New EnglandHilliard, Metcalf, and Company, 1827 - 420 sider |
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An Elementary Treatise on Astronomy: Adapted to the Present Improved State ... John Farrar Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1834 |
An Elementary Treatise on Astronomy: Adapted to the Present Improved State ... John Farrar Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1834 |
An Elementary Treatise on Astronomy: Adapted to the Present Improved State ... John Farrar Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1827 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
altitude angle apparent diameter Astron astronomers calculate called celestial sphere centre circle circle of latitude comets consequently consider declination deduced described determine direction disc diurnal motion earth ecliptic effect epoch equal equator equinoctial point expression fixed ecliptic formulas heavenly body heavens horary horizon horizontal parallax inclination inequalities instant interval Jupiter latitude laws laws of Kepler light longitude luminous particle lunar manner Mars mean distance mean motion Mercury meridian moon moon's nearly node nutation obliquity observations obtain opposite parallax parallel passing perigee perihelion period perpendicular phenomena planetary planets pole position preceding precession proper motion quantity radius ratio refraction respect retrograde right ascension rotation satellites Saturn seen semidiameter shadow sidereal day sidereal revolution sines solar solstice spherical stars straight line sun's suppose surface take place tang telescope terrestrial tion triangle true Uranus variations velocity Venus vernal equinox vertical visual ray zenith distance
Populære avsnitt
Side 354 - ... must appear to recede from each other, while those in the opposite region would seem gradually to approach, in the same manner as when walking through a forest, the trees toward which we advance are constantly separating, while the distance of those which we leave behind is gradually contracting. The proper motion of the stars, therefore, in opposite regions, as ascertained by a comparison of ancient with modern observations, ought to correspond with this hypothesis ; and Sir W.
Side 251 - Jth of the celestial hemisphere, after which it begins to return ; and as we can ordinarily discern it with the naked eye only when the sun is below the horizon, it is visible only for a certain time immediately after sunset. By and by it sets with the sun, and then we are entirely prevented from seeing it by the sun's light. But after a few days, we perceive, in the morning, near the eastern horizon, a bright star which was not visible before. It is seen at first only a few minutes before sunrise,...
Side 306 - That every planet moves so that the line drawn from it to the sun describes about the sun areas proportional to the times, 2.
Side 124 - That node where the planet passes from the south to the north side of the ecliptic, is called the ascending node ; and the other is the descending node.
Side 354 - Lemonnier and Cassini, and were completely confirmed by Tobias Mayer, who compared the places of eighty stars as determined by Roemer with his own observations, and found that the greater part of them had a proper motion. He likewise suggested that the change of place he had observed among these stars might arise from a progressive motion of the sun towards one quarter of the heavens. La Lande deduced a similar opinion from the...
Side 21 - The general law or fact, in nature, so far as we can observe, is that all bodies attract each other in the direct ratio of their masses, and in the inverse ratio of the squares of the distances.