Contributions to Solar Physics: I. A Popular Account of Inquiries Into the Physical Constitution of the Sun, with Special Reference to Recent Spectroscopic Researches; II. Communications to the Royal Society of London, and the French Academy of Sciences, with NotesMacmillan and Company, 1874 - 676 |
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Strona xx
... bright lines of iron with some of the Fraunhofer lines . 83. The telluric lines 84. The spectroscope attached to the telescope for solar work FIG . 109 Total eclipse , September 1858 . ( Lias ) 110. Total eclipse , 1860. ( Rays ob ...
... bright lines of iron with some of the Fraunhofer lines . 83. The telluric lines 84. The spectroscope attached to the telescope for solar work FIG . 109 Total eclipse , September 1858 . ( Lias ) 110. Total eclipse , 1860. ( Rays ob ...
Strona 71
... lines of different intensity , the former consisting only of three or four thin bands of light , located in the green portion of the spectrum . On the absorption - hypothesis there would be none of these bright lines ; we should get a ...
... lines of different intensity , the former consisting only of three or four thin bands of light , located in the green portion of the spectrum . On the absorption - hypothesis there would be none of these bright lines ; we should get a ...
Strona 116
... bright lines , scattered here and there along the space that would be covered by the band of coloured light if we were looking at a candle . In the fact that these bright lines vary with every substance which we can examine we have the ...
... bright lines , scattered here and there along the space that would be covered by the band of coloured light if we were looking at a candle . In the fact that these bright lines vary with every substance which we can examine we have the ...
Strona 117
... bright lines only , and these bright lines are different for different substances . 3. When light from a solid or liquid incandescent body passes through a gas , the gas absorbs those particular rays of light of which its own spectrum ...
... bright lines only , and these bright lines are different for different substances . 3. When light from a solid or liquid incandescent body passes through a gas , the gas absorbs those particular rays of light of which its own spectrum ...
Strona 118
... bright or brighter than the prominences ; they are , therefore , " put out , " as the stars are in daytime . But mark what will happen if they really be built up of gas , and their light in the ... bright lines to 118 SOLAR PHYSICS .
... bright or brighter than the prominences ; they are , therefore , " put out , " as the stars are in daytime . But mark what will happen if they really be built up of gas , and their light in the ... bright lines to 118 SOLAR PHYSICS .
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absorption angle Ångström appearance astronomers Balfour Stewart barium bright lines brilliant centre CHAP chro chromosphere cloud coincident colour Comptes Rendus continuous spectrum corona cyclone dark lines disc dispersion distance edge energy envelope evidence F line fact faculæ Father Secchi Faye Frankland Fraunhofer lines gaseous give glass heat height Herschel hydrogen hydrogen lines incandescent instrument j'ai Janssen Kirchhoff les raies less light limb Lockyer luminous magnesium masses ment method moon motion nearly nences NOTE observed PAPER penumbra period phenomena photographs photosphere polariscope polarization portion position prism prominences protuberances question radiation raie rays red flames referred refraction refrangible region remark Respighi rotation Royal Society seen side slit sodium solar atmosphere solar spectrum spectra spectroscope sphere spots stratum substance sun-spots sun's atmosphere surface taches telescope temperature tion total eclipse tube umbra vapour violet visible wave-length
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 98 - Yet still, from time to time, vague and forlorn, From the soul's subterranean depth upborne As from an infinitely distant land, Come airs, and floating echoes, and convey A melancholy into all our day.
Strona 205 - I am purposing them, to be considered of and examined, an account of a philosophical discovery which induced me to the making of the said telescope ; and I doubt not but will prove much more grateful than the communication of that instrument ; being in my judgment the oddest, if not the most considerable detection which hath hitherto been made in the operations of nature.
Strona 559 - The heat required to act upon such a compound as a salt of calcium so as to render its spectrum visible, dissociates the compound according to its volatility ; the number of true metallic lines which thus appear is a measure of the quantity of the metal resulting from the dissociation, and as the metal lines increase in number, the compound bands thin out.
Strona 227 - If the hydrogen-lines were invariably observed to broaden out on both sides, the idea of movement would require to be received with great caution ; we might be in presence of phenomena due to greater pressure, both when the lines observed are bright or black upon the sun ; but when they widen out, sometimes on one side, sometimes on the other, and sometimes on both, this explanation appears to be untenable, as Dr. Frankland and myself in our researches at the College of Chemistry have never failed...
Strona 475 - ... to the central umbra, are thus supposed to be due to the same cause, namely, the presence to a greater or less extent of a relatively cooler absorbing atmosphere.
Strona 139 - The line A that bounds the red side of the spectrum is somewhat confused, which seems in part owing to want of power in the eye to converge red light. The line B, between red and green, in a certain position of the prism, is perfectly distinct; so also are D and E, the two limits of violet. But C, the limit of green and blue, is not so clearly marked as the rest ; and there are also, on each side of this limit, other distinct dark lines, / and g, either of which, in an imperfect experiment, might...
Strona i - CONTRIBUTIONS TO SOLAR PHYSICS. By J. NORMAN LOCKYER, FRSI A Popular Account of Inquiries into the Physical Constitution of the Sun, with especial reference to Recent Spectroscopic Researches. II. Communications to the Royal Society of London and the French Academy of Sciences, with Notes. Illustrated by 7 Coloured Lithographic Plates and 175 Woodcuts. Royal 8vo. cloth, extra gilt, price 3u.
Strona 437 - ... red flames" which total eclipses have revealed to us in the sun's atmosphere, although they escape all other methods of observation at other times?
Strona 248 - A faint continuous spectrum, without any traces of dark lines in it, was also visible, evidently due to the corona. Its light, tested by a tourmaline applied next to the eye, proved to be very strongly polarized in a plane passing through the centre of the sun. I am not sure, however, but that this polarization, as suggested by Professor Pickering, may have been produced by the successive refractions through the prisms. This explanation at once removes the difficulty otherwise arising from the absence...
Strona 559 - ... the spectrum of the compound consists in the main of channelled spaces and bands, which increase in like manner. In short, the molecules of a simple body and a compound one are affected in the same manner by quantity in so far as their spectra are concerned ; in other words, both spectra have their long and short lines...