Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
VIII - THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
Summary
Perhaps an apology is due to the reader for my venturing to devote a chapter to my own efforts in the scientific line. If so, I scarcely know what apology to make, unless it is that one naturally feels interested in matters relating to his own work, and hopes to share that interest with his readers, and that it is easier for one to write such an account for himself than for any one else to do it for him.
Having determined to devote my life to the prosecution of exact astronomy, the first important problem which I took up, while at Cambridge, was that of the zone of minor planets, frequently called asteroids, revolving between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It was formerly supposed that these small bodies might be fragments of a large planet which had been shattered by a collision or explosion. If such were the case, the orbits would, for a time at least, all pass through the point at which the explosion occurred. When only three or four were known, it was supposed that they did pass nearly through the same point. When this was found not to be the case, the theory of an explosion was in no way weakened, because, owing to the gradual changes in the form and position of the orbits, produced by the attraction of the larger planets, these orbits would all move away from the point of intersection, and, in the course of thousands of years, be so mixed up that no connection could be seen between them.
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- The Reminiscences of an Astronomer , pp. 195 - 233Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903