History of Astronomy

History of Astronomy

by Walter W. Bryant

34 chapters10h 0mEnglish1909

About this book

In this book, Walter W. Bryant traces the history of astronomy through the ages. We start at the very beginning, where astronomy was an occupation of priests, move with the help of the Arabs through the middle ages to the (re-) discovery of the heliocentric system by Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, and Galileo. A discussion of Newton and his laws follows as well as a description of the biographies and works of successors like Halley, Herschel, and Bessel. The second half of the book deals with (at the time) recent discoveries with respect to our solar system and the comets, meteors, and stars beyond. (Summary by Ava)

1I Early Notions
688
2II The Eastern Nations of Antiquity
621
3III The Greeks
1216
4IV The Arabs
384
5V The Revival - Copernicus - Tycho Brahe
1152
6VI Kepler - Galileo
856
7VII Newton
653
8VIII Newton's Successors: Laplace
996
9IX Flamsteed - Halley - Bradley - Herschel
1118
10X The Early Nineteenth Century - Neptune
950
11XI Herschel - Bessel - Struve
1401
12XII Comets
739
13XIII The Sun - Eclipses - Parallax
1378
14XIV General Astronomy and Celestial Mechanics
1498
15XV Observatories and Instruments
932
16XVI Adjustment of Observations - Personal Errors
474
17XVII The Sun
1442
18XVIII Solar Spectroscopy
1290
19XIX Solar Eclipses - Spectroscopy
1576
20XX The Moon
820
21XXI The Earth
760
22XXII The Interior Planets
843
23XXIII Mars
1119
24XXIV Minor Planets
677
25XXV The Major Planets
1357
26XXVI The Solar System
596
27XXVII Comets, Meteors, Zodiacal Light
2866
28XXVIII The Stars - Catalogues - Proper Motion - Parallax - Magnitude
2193
29XXIX Double Stars
1202
30XXX Variable Stars
1276
31XXXI Clusters - Nebulae - Milky Way
793
32XXXII Stellar Spectroscopy
1498
33XXXIII Conclusion
540

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