Page:Sir William Herschel, his life and works (1881).djvu/244

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222
Bibliography.
Observations on the two lately discovered celestial bodies [Ceres and Pallas].
Phil. Trans., 1802, pp. 213-232.
Nicholson Journal, IV. (1808), pp. 120-130, 142-148.
Catalogue of five hundred new nebulæ, nebulous stars planetary nebulæ, and clusters of stars, with remarks on the construction of the heavens.
Phil. Trans., 1802, pp. 477-528.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1807, p. 113.
Observations of the transit of Mercury over the sun's disk, to which is added an investigation of the causes which often prevent the proper action of mirrors.
Phil. Trans., 1803, pp. 214-232.
Account of the changes which have happened during the last twenty-five years in the relative situation of double stars, with an investigation of the cause to which they are owing.
Phil. Trans., 1803, pp. 339-382.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1808, pp. 154-178.
Continuation of the account of the changes that have happened in the relative situation of double stars.
Phil. Trans., 1804, pp. 353-384.
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1808, p. 226.
Aus einem Schreiben des Herrn Doctor Herschel, datirt Slough, bey Windsor, den 31. May, 1804.
[Relates to his theory of the relation between the solar radiation and the price of wheat.]
Bode's Jahrbuch, 1808, p. 226.
Phil. Trans., 1805, pp. 31-70.