| sir John Frederick W. Herschel (1st bart.) - 1833 - 500 Seiten
...to atoms by an explosion ; and that more such fragments exist, and may be hereafter discovered. This may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge. (435. ) We shall devote the rest of this chapter to an account of the physical peculiarities and probable... | |
| Sir John Frederick William Herschel - 1833 - 444 Seiten
...to atoms by an explosion ; and that more such fragments exist, and may be hereafter discovered. This may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge. (4:35. ) We shall devote the rest of this chapter to an account of the physical peculiarities and probable... | |
| 1834 - 596 Seiten
...extravagant hypothesis of Olbers respecting the formation of the four ultra-zodiacal planets. ' This may serve as a specimen ' of the dreams in which astronomers, like other speculators, occasion' ally and harmlessly indulge.' — P. 277. The prodigious number of stars which appear in... | |
| Charles Bucke - 1837 - 422 Seiten
...planet, which formerly circulated in that interval ; but has been blown to atoms by an explosion. This may serve as a specimen of the dreams, in which astronomers, like other speculators, may harmlessly indulge." diameters of their three external neighbours, however, are — Uranus, 35,112... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1843 - 290 Seiten
...Been to attend this planet. f By this is meant, not the distance of the planet, but the space or area between the orbits. 607. When these four small planets,...condition from being ascertained. They agree, however, in these;—that their mean distances from the Sun, and their period of revolution around him, are not... | |
| Hiram Mattison - 1849 - 290 Seiten
...favored by Prof.: Nichol, Dr. Brewster, Dr. Dick, and others ; while Sir John Herschel observes that it may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge.* Dr. Dick remarks, that the breaking up of the exterior crust of the earth, at the time of the general... | |
| John Drew - 1853 - 386 Seiten
...although the French astronomers would seem to receive the conjecture as an established truth : " This may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge." The application of Bode's law of the planetary distances would, nevertheless, seem to favour the conclusion.... | |
| Samuel Warren - 1853 - 152 Seiten
...atoms by an explosion ; and that more such fragments exist, and may be hereafter discovered. These may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge."* A dream ? Will it be believed, that within this last seven years, no fewer than TWENTY more of these... | |
| Samuel Warren - 1854 - 112 Seiten
...to atoms by an explosion : and that more such fragments exist, and may be hereafter discovered. This may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers,...speculators, occasionally and harmlessly indulge.' — A dream?— Since the year 1846, TWENTYFIVE such fragments have been discovered ! Whether any such... | |
| Samuel Warren - 1854 - 342 Seiten
...atoms by an explosion ; and that more such fragments exist, and may be hereafter discovered. These may serve as a specimen of the dreams in which astronomers, like other speculators, occasionally and hapmlessly indulge."^ A dream? Will it be believed, that within this last seven years, no fewer than... | |
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