10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «TELESCOPIST»
Discover the use of
telescopist in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
telescopist and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Amateur
Telescopist's Handbook
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2
The Amateur
Telescopist's Handbook
Although occasionally there may be certain imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made available for future generations to enjoy.
Gibson Frank M 1857, 2013
3
The Popular Science Review: A Quarterly Miscellany of ...
For such observations (as, indeed, for all delicate star observations) moonless
nights must be selected, the opinion expressed by Homer of moonlit nights *
being quite contrary to that held by the telescopist. Of nebulae and star- clusters
there ...
James Samuelson, Henry Lawson, William Sweetland Dallas, 1866
4
The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art
When at his nearest he is seen under most favorable conditions, and the
enormous dimensions of his belts render them very obvious and very beautiful
features for the scrutiny of the telescopist. But then he is some 370 millions of
miles from ...
5
Psychodynamic Psychotherapy: Learning to Listen from ...
An astronomer does not refer to himself as a ”telescopist." A telescope is a merely
a tool he uses to discover and create worlds of meaning. Different tools allow him
to discover and create different worlds. To say one is a self psychologist or a ...
We cannot properly speak of a hole as breaking into pieces; though Wollaston's
description is natural enough to the telescopist, to whom the spots have in
general rather the appearance of real bodies than of vast cavernous openings.
John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele, 1870
7
The Gentleman's Magazine
And this telescopist was a French official one, imperially appointed to the sky-
searching task. His eyrie was at Marseilles, but his headquarters were at Paris.
The comet he found was a poor little thing to look at; certainly not "A Mazing star,
...
8
A Dictionary of Science: Comprising Astronomy, Chemistry, ...
It contains few conspicuous stars, but many objects of great interest to the
telescopist, a large proportion of its lucidae being double. Lyra. (The Lyre.) One
of Ptolemy's northern constellations. Though not of great extent, this constellation
is a ...
George Farrer Rodwell, 1873
The telescopist can see the lunar mountains lit up by the sun's rays, when the
valleys around are in darkness; for, outside the boundary line, between the light
and the dark portions, he sees spots and streaks of white light, which he
recognises ...
... really had altered remarkably in appearance, even before that gradual process
of change which, by restoring his usual aspect, enabled every telescopist to
assure himself that there had been no illusion in the earlier observations. VOL. IT.