Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I RECENT ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THE PLANETARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER II RECENT ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF COMETS
- CHAPTER III ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF FIXED STARS AND NEBULÆ
- SECTION I
- SECTION II
- SECTION III
- SECTION IV
- SECTION V
- CHAPTER IV PROGRESS OF ASTRONOMY IN THE UNITED STATES
- POSTSCRIPT
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I RECENT ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THE PLANETARY SYSTEM
- CHAPTER II RECENT ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF COMETS
- CHAPTER III ADDITIONS TO OUR KNOWLEDGE OF FIXED STARS AND NEBULÆ
- SECTION I
- SECTION II
- SECTION III
- SECTION IV
- SECTION V
- CHAPTER IV PROGRESS OF ASTRONOMY IN THE UNITED STATES
- POSTSCRIPT
Summary
It has long been known that among the fixed stars are several which experience a periodical increase and diminution of brightness. The star Omicron, in the constellation Oetus, sometimes appears as a star of the second magnitude, but continues of this brightness only about a fortnight, when it decreases for about three months, till it becomes completely invisible to the naked eye, in which state it remains about five months, and then increases again to the second magnitude, the interval between its periods of greatest brightness being about eleven months. The star Algol varies from the second to the fourth magnitude, going through its changes in less than three days. More than forty such cases have been noticed, although in many of them the change of brightness is not very remarkable.
In the case of a few stars, remarkable changes of brightness have been observed, which have not been reduced to any law of periodicity. The star η (eta) Argûs is of this kind. This is a star of the southern hemisphere in right ascension 10h. 39m.; south declination 58° 54′. In Halley's catalogue, constructed in 1677, it is marked as of the fourth magnitude; yet in Lacaille's in 1751, and in subsequent catalogues, it is recorded as of the second magnitude. In the interval from 1811 to 1815, it was again of the fourth; and again from 1822 to 1826 of the second magnitude. In 1827, it increased to the first magnitude; it thence receded to the second, and so continued until the end of 1837.
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- The Recent Progress of AstronomyEspecially in the United States, pp. 170 - 174Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010