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All About Our World

A History of Science, V 3
Henry Smith Williams

Page 2 of 525


BOOK III 

CHAPTER I.  THE SUCCESSORS OF NEWTON IN ASTRONOMY 

The work of Johannes Hevelius--Halley and Hevelius--Halley's
observation of the transit of Mercury, and his method
of determining the parallax of the planets--Halley's observation
of meteors--His inability to explain these bodies--The important
work of James Bradley--Lacaille's measurement of the arc of the
meridian--The determination of the question as to the exact shape
of the earth--D'Alembert and his influence upon science-
-Delambre's History of Astronomy--The astronomical work of Euler. 

CHAPTER II.  THE PROGRESS OF MODERN ASTRONOMY 

The work of William Herschel--His discovery of Uranus--His
discovery that the stars are suns--His conception
of the universe--His deduction that gravitation has caused
the grouping of the heavenly bodies--The nebula, hypothesis,

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