The Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, Volumes 13 à 14Royal Astronomical Society of Canada., 1919 List of officers and members for 1909, 1914, 1919, 1931, separately paged are included in v. 2, 8, 13, 25, respectively. |
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Page 2
... Magnetic Observations , October , 1918 Earthquake Records at Toronto and Victoria , B.C. , No. 1 Otto Klotz I R. M. Motherwell 16 A. F. H. W. T. B. C. 20 888 18 Sir F. S. W. E. W. J. 21 23 November , 1918 J. Y. 25 J. R. C. 27 30 31 31 ...
... Magnetic Observations , October , 1918 Earthquake Records at Toronto and Victoria , B.C. , No. 1 Otto Klotz I R. M. Motherwell 16 A. F. H. W. T. B. C. 20 888 18 Sir F. S. W. E. W. J. 21 23 November , 1918 J. Y. 25 J. R. C. 27 30 31 31 ...
Page 10
... magnetic field outfit , for the contem- plated magnetic survey of Canada under the direction of the Chief Astronomer , was ordered for 1,400 marks from Tesdorpf , Stutt- gart . On February 14 , 1901 , the Deputy informed the Chief ...
... magnetic field outfit , for the contem- plated magnetic survey of Canada under the direction of the Chief Astronomer , was ordered for 1,400 marks from Tesdorpf , Stutt- gart . On February 14 , 1901 , the Deputy informed the Chief ...
Page 19
... magnet and the magnetic needle ; Flam- stead , who made the first British catalogue of the stars ; Hevelius . of Danzig ; Gassendi , who wrote of the transit of Mercury , and in 1631 was the first to observe one ; Huyghens , who was ...
... magnet and the magnetic needle ; Flam- stead , who made the first British catalogue of the stars ; Hevelius . of Danzig ; Gassendi , who wrote of the transit of Mercury , and in 1631 was the first to observe one ; Huyghens , who was ...
Page 22
... MAGNETIC OBSERVATIONS OCTOBER , 1918 During the month of October. November November STATION STATION Highest Lowest Highest Lowest Yukon Kenora Dawson 52 22 -22 Kinmount 58 British Columbia Kingston 56 Atlin 40 I Kitchener 16 Agassiz ...
... MAGNETIC OBSERVATIONS OCTOBER , 1918 During the month of October. November November STATION STATION Highest Lowest Highest Lowest Yukon Kenora Dawson 52 22 -22 Kinmount 58 British Columbia Kingston 56 Atlin 40 I Kitchener 16 Agassiz ...
Page 23
... magnetic field . In the accompanying table is given a summary of the larger disturbances which occurred during the month . Greenwich Mean Time Range Agincourt Beginning ... MAGNETIC OBSERVATIONS Lat . 43 ° 47 ' N Magnetic Observations 23.
... magnetic field . In the accompanying table is given a summary of the larger disturbances which occurred during the month . Greenwich Mean Time Range Agincourt Beginning ... MAGNETIC OBSERVATIONS Lat . 43 ° 47 ' N Magnetic Observations 23.
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Journal de la Société Royale D'astronomie Du Canada, Volumes 48 à 49 Royal Astronomical Society of Canada Affichage du livre entier - 1895 |
Journal de la Société Royale D'astronomie Du Canada, Volume 102 Royal Astronomical Society of Canada Affichage d'extraits - 2008 |
The Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, Volume 54 Royal Astronomical Society of Canada Affichage d'extraits - 1960 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
A. F. Miller Agincourt ancient appear April Astrophysical atom bright C. A. CHANT calendar Canada centre Chief Astronomer Comm Copernicus Date dead DeLury determined Director distance Dominion Astrophysical Observatory Dominion Observatory earth eclipse electrons Elvins galactic system galaxy globular clusters Haliburton haze Highest Lowest hydrogen hydrogen lines inches J. S. PLASKETT JOURNAL June latitude light lines longitude magnetic magnitude mass mean Meanook measured Meteorological Service Micros mirror month Montreal MONTREAL CENTRE moon motion Nova November observations obtained Ontario orbit Ottawa OTTAWA CENTRE OTTO KLOTZ paper period photographic planets plates Pleiades position President primitive Prof Professor Provinces Quebec radial velocity radiation recorded rotation ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY SIR FREDERIC STUPART SOCIETY OF CANADA solar spectra Spectroscopic Binary spectrum spiral nebulae stars stations stellar Street sun's surface telescope temperature theory tion University of Toronto Victoria Winnipeg
Fréquemment cités
Page 361 - Man could direct his ways by plain reason, and support his life by tasteless food; but God has given us wit, and flavour, and brightness, and laughter, and perfumes, to enliven the days of man's pilgrimage, and to " charm his pained steps over the burning marie.
Page 345 - Seest thou a man diligent in his business.* he shall stand before kings; he shall not stand before mean men.
Page 362 - No competent thinker, with the whole of the available evidence before him, can now, it is safe to say, maintain any single nebula to be a star system of co-ordinate rank with the Milky Way.
Page 65 - they do, according to their manner, worship the hosts of heaven, and believe particular constellations rule natural causes. For such they have names, and sing and dance to gain the favour of the Pleiades (MormodellicK), the constellation worshipped by one body as the giver of rain; but if it should be deferred, instead of blessings curses are apt to be bestowed upon it.
Page 362 - Regions, in which tho' visibly luminous spaces, no one star or particular constituent body can possibly be distinguished; those in all likelihood may be external creation, bordering upon the known one, too remote for even our telescopes to reach.
Page 67 - ... than in the ripening of the year, which was regarded as a kind of annual acknowledgment to the gods. When the prayers were finished at the marae, and the banquet ended, a usage prevailed much resembling the popish custom of mass for souls in purgatory. Each individual returned to his home, or to his family marae, there to offer special prayers for the spirits of departed relatives...
Page 59 - This startling fact at once drew my attention to the question, How was this uniformity in the time of observance preserved, not only in far distant quarters of the globe, but also through that vast lapse of time since the Peruvian and the Indo-European first inherited this primeval festival from a common source?
Page 83 - FOR all we have and are, For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war, The Hun is at the gate! Our world has passed away, In wantonness o'erthrown. There is nothing left to-day But steel and fire and stone! Though all we knew depart, The old Commandments stand: — ' In courage keep your heart, In strength lift up your hand.
Page 103 - A Solemnity was kept, says he, on the Eve of " the first of November as a Thanksgiving for the " safe -Ingathering of the Produce of the Fields. " This I am told, but have not seen it, is observed . '* in Buchan, and other Countries, by having Hal" low-Eve-Fires kindled on some rising Ground.
Page 466 - What has nature to do with the coordinate systems that we propose and with their motions? Although it may be necessary for our descriptions of nature to employ systems of coordinates that we have selected arbitrarily, the choice should not be limited in any way so far as their state of motion is concerned. (General theory of relativity.) The application of this general theory of relativity was found to be in conflict with a well-known experiment, according to which it appeared that the weight and...