Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- SUPPLEMENT
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PRINCIPAL AUTHORITIES
- Errata
- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy
- BOOK I A SKETCH OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- BOOK II ECLIPSES AND THEIR ASSOCIATED PHENOMENA
- BOOK X METEORIC ASTRONOMY
- APPENDICES
- APPENDIX I The Nomenclature of the Minor Planets
- APPENDIX II A Catalogue of Eclipses
- APPENDIX III A Catalogue of all the Comets whose Orbits have hitherto been computed
- APPENDIX IV A Catalogue of Comets Recorded, but not with sufficient Accuracy to enable their Orbits to be calculated
- APPENDIX V A Catalogue of Stars, Clusters, and Nebulæ which can be observed with greater or less facility in small Telescopes
- APPENDIX VI A Catalogue of Variable Stars
- APPENDIX VII Star Catalogues
- APPENDIX VIII List of Observatories
- INDEX TO SUBJECTS
- INDEX TO NAMES
- Plate section
APPENDIX III - A Catalogue of all the Comets whose Orbits have hitherto been computed
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- SUPPLEMENT
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PRINCIPAL AUTHORITIES
- Errata
- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy
- BOOK I A SKETCH OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
- BOOK II ECLIPSES AND THEIR ASSOCIATED PHENOMENA
- BOOK X METEORIC ASTRONOMY
- APPENDICES
- APPENDIX I The Nomenclature of the Minor Planets
- APPENDIX II A Catalogue of Eclipses
- APPENDIX III A Catalogue of all the Comets whose Orbits have hitherto been computed
- APPENDIX IV A Catalogue of Comets Recorded, but not with sufficient Accuracy to enable their Orbits to be calculated
- APPENDIX V A Catalogue of Stars, Clusters, and Nebulæ which can be observed with greater or less facility in small Telescopes
- APPENDIX VI A Catalogue of Variable Stars
- APPENDIX VII Star Catalogues
- APPENDIX VIII List of Observatories
- INDEX TO SUBJECTS
- INDEX TO NAMES
- Plate section
Summary
A new comet having been discovered, the first thing an astronomer does, is to obtain 3 observations of it, whereby he may compute the elements of the orbit. He then examines a catalogue of comets, to see if he can identify the newly-found stranger with any that have been before observed. The value of a complete catalogue is therefore obvious, and as nothing of the kind has, as far as we are aware, been published for some years, we have been led to compile a new one.
In the preparation of the following, care has been taken that only the most reliable orbits that were to be obtained should be inserted, the general rule being to prefer the one which was derived from the longest arc, other things being satisfactory. Among the authorities consulted may be mentioned Pingré, Hussey, Olbers, Cooper, Hind, Arago, and others.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy , pp. 420 - 454Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1861