Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I THE TELESCOPE, ITS INVENTION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ITS POWERS
- CHAPTER II RELATIVE MERITS OF LARGE AND SMALL TELESCOPES
- CHAPTER III NOTES ON TELESCOPES AND THEIR ACCESSORIES
- CHAPTER IV NOTES ON TELESCOPIC WORK
- CHAPTER V THE SUN
- CHAPTER VI THE MOON
- CHAPTER VII MERCURY
- CHAPTER VIII VENUS
- CHAPTER IX MARS
- CHAPTER X THE PLANETOIDS
- CHAPTER XI JUPITER
- CHAPTER XII SATURN
- CHAPTER XIII URANUS AND NEPTUNE
- CHAPTER XIV COMETS AND COMET-SEEKING
- CHAPTER XV METEORS AND METEORIC OBSERVATIONS
- CHAPTER XVI THE STARS
- CHAPTER XVII NEBULÆ AND CLUSTERS OF STARS
- NOTES AND ADDITIONS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XIII - URANUS AND NEPTUNE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I THE TELESCOPE, ITS INVENTION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ITS POWERS
- CHAPTER II RELATIVE MERITS OF LARGE AND SMALL TELESCOPES
- CHAPTER III NOTES ON TELESCOPES AND THEIR ACCESSORIES
- CHAPTER IV NOTES ON TELESCOPIC WORK
- CHAPTER V THE SUN
- CHAPTER VI THE MOON
- CHAPTER VII MERCURY
- CHAPTER VIII VENUS
- CHAPTER IX MARS
- CHAPTER X THE PLANETOIDS
- CHAPTER XI JUPITER
- CHAPTER XII SATURN
- CHAPTER XIII URANUS AND NEPTUNE
- CHAPTER XIV COMETS AND COMET-SEEKING
- CHAPTER XV METEORS AND METEORIC OBSERVATIONS
- CHAPTER XVI THE STARS
- CHAPTER XVII NEBULÆ AND CLUSTERS OF STARS
- NOTES AND ADDITIONS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Discovery.—While Sir W. Herschel was a musician at Bath he formed the design of making a telescopic survey of the heavens. When engaged in this he accidentally effected a discovery of great importance, for on the night of March 13, 1781, an object entered the field of his 6·3-inch reflector which ultimately proved to be a new major planet of our system. The acute eye of Herschel, directly it alighted upon the strange body, recognized it as one of unusual character, for it had a perceptible disk, and could be neither fixed star nor nebula. He afterwards found the object to be in motion, and its appearance being “hazy and ill-defined” with very high powers he was led to regard it as a comet, and communicated his discovery to the Royal Society at its meeting on April 26, 1781. His paper begins as follows :—
“On Tuesday, March 13, 1781, between 10 and 11 in the evening, while I was examining the small stars in the neighbourhood of H Geminorum, I perceived one that appeared visibly larger than the rest. Being struck with its uncommon magnitude, I compared it to H Geminorum and the small star in the quartile between Auriga and Gemini, and finding it so much larger than either of them suspected it to be a comet. … The power I had on when I first saw the comet was 227.”
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- Information
- Telescopic Work for Starlight Evenings , pp. 215 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1891