The Geography of the Heavens, and Class Book of Astronomy: Accompanied by a Celestial Atlas |
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Page iv
... magnitudes and places , and be accompanied , at the same time , with such fami- liar exercises and illustrations , adapted ... magnitude and ar- rangement , and that when all this was done , I had indeed given the pupil a few additional ...
... magnitudes and places , and be accompanied , at the same time , with such fami- liar exercises and illustrations , adapted ... magnitude and ar- rangement , and that when all this was done , I had indeed given the pupil a few additional ...
Page xv
... magnitude and splendour - planetary globes a thousand times larger than the earth - magnificent rings which would nearly reach from the earth to the moon , and would enclose within their vast circumference 500 worlds as large as ours ...
... magnitude and splendour - planetary globes a thousand times larger than the earth - magnificent rings which would nearly reach from the earth to the moon , and would enclose within their vast circumference 500 worlds as large as ours ...
Page xvi
... magnitude to magnitude , till the mind acquire an ample conception of such august objects to dive into the depths of infinite space zvĂ INTRODUCTION .
... magnitude to magnitude , till the mind acquire an ample conception of such august objects to dive into the depths of infinite space zvĂ INTRODUCTION .
Page xxi
... magnitude , motion , splendour , colour and diversity of surface - evidently indicating , that every world has its peculiar scenes of beauty and grandeur . But , as no one will be so presumptuous as to assert , that the bound- aries of ...
... magnitude , motion , splendour , colour and diversity of surface - evidently indicating , that every world has its peculiar scenes of beauty and grandeur . But , as no one will be so presumptuous as to assert , that the bound- aries of ...
Page 25
... magnitudes , six classes ; the brightest being called stars of the first magnitude , the next brightest , stars of the second magnitude , and so on to the sixth class , which consists of the smallest stars visible to the naked eye . In ...
... magnitudes , six classes ; the brightest being called stars of the first magnitude , the next brightest , stars of the second magnitude , and so on to the sixth class , which consists of the smallest stars visible to the naked eye . In ...
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Common terms and phrases
3d magnitude 4th magnitude ancient angle appear Arcturus Argo Navis Aries astronomers Auriga axis Beta brightest called Cassiopeia celestial centre Cepheus circle cluster colure comet constellation Cor Caroli declination degree Denebola diameter direction distinguished diurnal motion Earth east ecliptic equal equator equinoctial figure fixed stars Gamma globe head heavenly bodies heavens Hercules Herschel horizon Jupiter latitude length Libra light longitude luminous Mars mean distance Mercury meridian millions of miles minutes Moon Moon's motion naked eye nearly nebulæ night node north pole northern hemisphere o'clock observed orbit Orion parallax passing perihelion period Perseus phenomena planets Pleiades polar star principal star represented revolution revolve right ascension rise satellites Saturn seasons seen side sidereal Sirius situated small stars solar system solstice southern spots square Sun's supposed surface Taurus telescope tion triangle Ursa Venus vernal equinox Virgo visible whole number Zeta Zodiac