Page:Sir William Herschel, his life and works (1881).djvu/242

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Bibliography.
On the periodical star α Hecrculis; with remarks tending to establish the rotatory motion of the stars on their axes; to which is added a second catalogue of the comparative brightness of the stars.
Phil. Trans., 1796, p. 452.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1809, p. 201.
A third catalogue of the comparative brightness of the stars, with an introductory account of an index to Mr. Flamsteed's observations of the fixed stars, contained in the second volume of the Historia Cœlestis. To which are added several useful results derived from that index.
Phil. Trans., 1797, p. 293.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1810, p. 143.
Observations of the changeable brightness of the satellites of Jupiter, and of the variation in their apparent magnitudes, with a determination of the time of their rotatory motions on their axes. To which is added a measure of the diameter of the second satellite, and an estimate of the comparative size of all the four.
Phil. Trans., 1797, p. 332.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1801, p. 103.
On the discovery of four additional satellites of the Georgium Sidus. The retrograde motion of its old satellites announced, and the cause of their disappearance at certain distances from the planet explained.
Phil. Trans., 1798, p. 47.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1801, p. 231.
A fourth catalogue of the comparative brightness of the stars.
Phil. Trans., 1799, P. 121.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1810, p. 143.
On the power of penetrating into space by telescopes, with a comparative determination of the extent of that power in natural vision, and in telescopes of various sizes and constructions, illustrated by select observations.
Phil. Trans., 1800, pp. 49-85.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1804, p. 231.