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The sun, its planets and their satellites : a course of lectures upon the solar system ... / by Edmund Ledger
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INDEX.

Aberration of light, 93.

Adams, Prof., discovery of Neptune , 410,4J4.

JEthra, minor planet, orbit of, 207, 273.

Airy, Sir G-. B., Harton colliery experi-ment, 217 ; rotation of Jupiter , 310 ;solar prominences, 32.

Apogee, the Sun when in, 228.

Arctic latitudes, attained by explorers,190.

Artillery experiments, and the Earth srotation, 200.

Asteroids, 2(5(5 (see Planets , Minor).

Astronomy, nautical, and Gresham Col­ lege , 93.

Atmosphere, lunar, 79 ; of Venus , 105.

Aurora, the, and Sun -spots, 39.

Baily, Mr., the Cavendish experiment, 214.

Ball, the Messrs., and Saturn s ring, 3(57.

Beck and Co., Messrs., stereographs of theMoon , 81.

Bianchini, observations of Venus , 1(53.

Bodes so-called law of planetary dis-tances, 123 ; its application to Uranus ,3915; to Neptune . 314; to Jupiter ssatellites. 329 ; to Saturn s, 518(5.

Bond, Prof., discovery of Saturn s ring C,3(58 ; disappearances of Saturn s rings,372.

Calendar, the, and the Moon , 94.

Carlos, Rev. E. S., his translation of theSidereal Messenger , 321.

Carrington, observations of Sun -spots, 33.

Cassini (I), J. D., apparent paths of theplanets, 101 j observations of Venus ,1(53; rotation of Jupiter , 311 ; duplicityof Saturn s ring, 3(57.

Cavendish experiment, the, 20821(5.

Centrifugal force, 203.

Ceres , minor planet, colour of light of,278 ; discovered, 2(59 ; distance of, 207 ;size of, 278.

Chart of Mars (see frontispiece).

Chemical elements, dissociation of, 2(5,45.

Christie, Mr. (Astronomer Royal), tran-sit of Mercury in May 1878, 151.

Colbert, Prof., sizes of Jupiter s satellites,32(5.

Comets, affected by planets, 41(5 ; be-longingtothesolar system,424; cometsand nltra-Neptunean planets, 41(5.

Commercial panics and Sun -spots, 40.

Conic sections, 281.

Conjunction, inferior and superior, 125.

Copernican theory, the, 117,118; tested,127, 324 ; and Jupiter s satellites, 324.

Corder, Mr., drawings of Jupiter , 309.

Corona, the, 43; Mercury seen on the. 153.

Corporation of London , the, library of,l 15.

Crabtree, William, 4.

Craters, lunar (see Moon ).

Creswick, Mr., transit of Mercury, 151.

Croll, Dr., Climate and Time, 187.

Crystal spheres, 11(5.

Cycles and epicycles, of Ptolemy , 107 ; ofMars , Jupiter , and Saturn , 110 ; ofVenus and Mercury, 107.

Cyclones, upon the Sun , 35.

Darwin, Mr., on prehistoric tides, 92.

Day, the, its length, 175; secular change| in, 225 ; sidereal and solar, 222, 228.

Daylight observations of Venus , 157,102.

Dawes, Mr., discovers Saturn s ring C,3(58.

Dearborn Observatory, observations ofJupiter at, .308, 312, 317.

Declination, 134.

Deiinos, satellite of Mars , 257.

De U Rue, drawing of Jupiter , 304; ofSaturn , 358, 3(59.

Denning, Mr., rotation of spots on Jupi­ ter , 312; announces the Great RedSpot , 300.

Diameter, the, of the Earth , 228.

Distances, of the planets, 117 ; Bodes so-called law of, 123 ; method of lunar, 93.

Duponchel, M., the Sun -spot period, 557.

Earth , the, axis of, its inclination, 228;centre of gravity of, and of the Moon ,54 ; centrifugal effect of rotation of,205, 220 ; deusitv of, 210, 228; itsday, 222, 225, 228 ; its diameters, 228;eccentricity of its orbit, secular changein the, 188 ; flattened at the poles, 195;fluid in the past, 207 ; gravity upon,diminished at the equator, 205 ; heat,internal, of, 218; interior of, 220;maguetism of, and Sun -spots, 39 ; near-est to the Sun , when, 189, 228 ; rotationof, proofs of, 197 ; seasons of, 17.3, 228 ;seen from the Moon , 80 ; shape of, 193 ;solidity of, 219 ; tides upon, 55 ; volumeof, 228; weight of, methods of deter-mining, 207, 228.

Easter and the Moon , 94.

Eccentricities, of the orbits of theplanets, 120; of those of the minorplanets, 273.

Eclipses, lunar, 82 ; frequency of, 89;number in any year, 87.

Eclipses, solar, 87 ; of August 17th,18(58, 92 ; of July 29th, 1878, 28; of