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قراءة كتاب Astronomical Discovery

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Astronomical Discovery

Astronomical Discovery

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

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II. Portrait of A. Graham   " " 22 III. Portrait of U. J. Le Verrier   " " 60 IV. Portrait of J. G. Galle   " " 60 V. Corner of the Berlin Map by the use of which Galle found Neptune   " " 82 VI. Astronomers Royal   Frontispiece VII. Great Comet of Nov. 7, 1882   To face page 122 VIII. The Oxford New Star   " " 142 IX. Nebulosity round Nova Persei   " " 146 X. Sun-spots at Greenwich, Feb. 18 and 19, 1894   " " 158 XI. Sun-spots at Greenwich, Feb. 20 and 21, 1894   " " 162 XII. Number of Sun-spots compared with Daily Range of Magnetic
Declination and Daily Range of Magnetic Horizontal Force
  " " 164 XIII. Greenwich Magnetic Curves, 1859-60   " " 166 XIV. Greenwich Magnetic Curves, 1841-1860   " " 166 XV. Sun-spots and Turns of Vane   " " 170

 

 


ERRATA

Page 133, line 27, for “200 stars” read “200 stars per hour.”
" 145, See note on page 220.
" 146, bottom of page. This nebulosity was first discovered by
Dr. Max Wolf of Heidelberg. See Astr. Nachr. 3736.
" 181, line 17, for “observation” read “aberration.”

 

 


ASTRONOMICAL DISCOVERY

 

 

CHAPTER I

URANUS AND EROS

Popular view of discovery.

Discovery is expected from an astronomer. The lay mind scarcely thinks of a naturalist nowadays discovering new animals, or of a chemist as finding new elements save on rare occasions; but it does think of the astronomer as making discoveries. The popular imagination pictures him spending the whole night in watching the skies from a high tower through a long telescope, occasionally rewarded by the finding of something new, without much mental effort. I propose to compare with this romantic picture some of the actual facts, some of the ways in which discoveries are really made; and if we find that the image and the reality differ, I hope that the romance will nevertheless not be thereby destroyed, but may adapt itself to conditions more closely resembling the facts.

Keats’ lines.

The popular conception finds expression in the lines of Keats:—

Then felt I like some watcher of the skies
When a new planet swims into his ken.

Keats was born in 1795, published his first volume of poems in 1817, and died in 1821. At the time when he wrote the discovery of planets was comparatively novel in human experience. Uranus had been found by William Herschel in 1781, and in the years 1800 to 1807 followed the first four minor planets, a number destined to remain without additions for nearly forty years. It would be absurd to read any exact allusion into the words quoted, when we remember the whole circumstances under which they were written; but perhaps I may be forgiven if I compare them especially with the actual discovery of the planet Uranus, for the reason that this was by far the largest of the five—far larger than any other planet known except Jupiter and Saturn, while the others were far smaller—and that Keats is using throughout the poem metaphors drawn from the first glimpses of “vast expanses” of land or water. Perhaps I may reproduce the whole

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