A New System of Practical Astronomy: Made Plain and Easy to Those who Have Not Studied Mathematics : Containing the Elementary Principles of the Science, All the Rules and Tables Necessary for Making All the Calculations for an Almanac ... |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... APOGEE ; and the nearest point the PERIGEE . These points are diametrically opposite to each other , six signs apart ; a right line from one to the other is called the Line of the Apsides . When the Creator launched the planets from his ...
... APOGEE ; and the nearest point the PERIGEE . These points are diametrically opposite to each other , six signs apart ; a right line from one to the other is called the Line of the Apsides . When the Creator launched the planets from his ...
Page 10
... apogee to the perigee ; and to become continually slower from the perigee to the apogee ; being slowest of all in the apogee , and swiftest of all in the perigee . The reason of this is , the nearer any body is to the sun or earth , the ...
... apogee to the perigee ; and to become continually slower from the perigee to the apogee ; being slowest of all in the apogee , and swiftest of all in the perigee . The reason of this is , the nearer any body is to the sun or earth , the ...
Page 11
... apogee or perigee to the same again , is 5h . 35m . 35.0798 . longer than in going round from any point of the ecliptic to the same again ; consequently the apogee and perigee , each revolution , move as much for- ward as the moon moves ...
... apogee or perigee to the same again , is 5h . 35m . 35.0798 . longer than in going round from any point of the ecliptic to the same again ; consequently the apogee and perigee , each revolution , move as much for- ward as the moon moves ...
Page 12
... apogee to his perigee , his mean place being before his true place , it is evident that the moon will overtake him , or be opposite to him , sooner , or in less time , than she could if his motion were uniform and equal ; and when his ...
... apogee to his perigee , his mean place being before his true place , it is evident that the moon will overtake him , or be opposite to him , sooner , or in less time , than she could if his motion were uniform and equal ; and when his ...
Page 28
... apogee to its apo- gee again , is 365 days , 6 hours , 13 minutes , 58.8 seconds , which is 25 minutes 9.8 se- conds longer than a mean solar year . Cycles and periods are explained in the Glossary . AN EXPLANATION OF LEAP - YEAR ...
... apogee to its apo- gee again , is 365 days , 6 hours , 13 minutes , 58.8 seconds , which is 25 minutes 9.8 se- conds longer than a mean solar year . Cycles and periods are explained in the Glossary . AN EXPLANATION OF LEAP - YEAR ...
Common terms and phrases
altitude angle aphelion apogee appear argument astronomers cask centre circle diameter difference diurnal motion divide dominical letter draw ecliptic Epact equal equator equinox fixed star Frustum Full Moon given side heavenly bodies heavens horizon Horizontal Parallax Hourly Motion inferior planets Jupiter Leap leap-year length less logarithm longitude and anomaly lunation mean longitude mean motion Mean New Moon meridian miles minutes month Moon's Ascending Node moon's mean anomaly moon's orbit moves round nearest noon number of days number of degrees numbers for March opposite Parallax perigee perpendicular point of aries pole PROB quotient radius remainder revolve round right ascension right line round the earth round the sun RULE Saturn secant seen Semidiameter Semidiurnal arc signs sine solar station subtract sun and moon sun's declination sun's mean anomaly sun's place Table tangent triangle true Longitude true syzygy Venus vernal equinox
Popular passages
Page 33 - No objection, says he, ariseth to that great luminary being inhabited ; vegetation may obtain there, as well as with us. There may be water and dry land, hills and dales, rain and fair weather, and as the light, so the season, must be eternal, consequently it may easily be conceived to be by far the most blissful habitation of the whole system.
Page 9 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds.
Page 36 - ... below, seem to bid defiance to the laws of gravitation. Around the base of these frightful eminences, are strewed numerous loose and unconnected fragments, which time seems to have detached from their parent mass ; and when we examine the rents and ravines which accompany the over-hanging cliffs, we expect every moment that they are to be torn from their base, and that the process of destructive separation which we had only contemplated in its effects, is about to be exhibited before us in tremendous...
Page 40 - ... escape all observation, by reason of their paths traversing only that part of the heavens which is above the horizon in the daytime. Comets so circumstanced can only become visible by the rare coincidence of a total eclipse of the sun, a coincidence which happened, as related by Seneca, 60 years before Christ, when a large comet was actually observed very near the sun.
Page 4 - Instead, then, of one sun, and one world only in the universe, as the unskilful in astronomy imagine, that science discovers to us, such an inconceivable number of suns, systems, and worlds, dispersed through boundless space, that if our sun, with all the planets, moons, and comets, belonging to it, were annihilated, they would be no more missed by an eye that could take in the whole creation, than a grain of sand from the seashore ; the space they possess being comparatively so small, that it would...
Page 31 - ... but are variously affected by the action of the sun, which brings them on sooner, when the moon is in her first and third quarters ; and keeps them back later, when she is in her second and fourth. Because in the former case the tide raised by the sun .alone would be earlier than the tide raised...
Page 40 - ... must be at least many thousands. Multitudes, indeed, must escape all observation, by reason of their paths traversing only that part of the heavens which is above the horizon in the day-time.
Page 70 - The tropics are two small circles parallel to the equator at the distance of 23° 28' from it ; the northern, is called the tropic of cancer, and the southern, the tropic of Capricorn.
Page 36 - The climate of the moon must be very extraordinary : the alternation being that of unmitigated and burning sunshine, fiercer than an equatorial noon, continued for a whole fortnight, and the keenest severity of frost, far exceeding that of our polar winters, for an equal time.
Page 3 - that Copernicus, seized with a daring enthusiasm, laid his hands on the cycles and crystal orbs of Ptolemy, and dashed them to pieces. And that with the same noble phrenzy, he took the unwieldy earth, and sent her far from" the centre of the system, to move round the sun with the rest of the planets.