Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Gerald Orin Dobek, FRAS
- Preface from the original Atlas
- ADDENDUM
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- Catalogue of 349 dark objects in the sky
- Catalogue of 352 dark objects in the sky in J2000.0 co-ordinates
- Photographs, charts, tables and descriptions
- Photographs, charts, tables and descriptions
- Biography of Edward Emerson Barnard by Gerald Orin Dobek
BOOK I
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Gerald Orin Dobek, FRAS
- Preface from the original Atlas
- ADDENDUM
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- Catalogue of 349 dark objects in the sky
- Catalogue of 352 dark objects in the sky in J2000.0 co-ordinates
- Photographs, charts, tables and descriptions
- Photographs, charts, tables and descriptions
- Biography of Edward Emerson Barnard by Gerald Orin Dobek
Summary
My principal aim in presenting these photographs has been to give pictures of some of the most interesting portions of the Milky Way in such form that they may be studied for a better understanding of its general structure. They are not intended as star charts. Such photographic charts have already been made by Wolf and Palisa and by Franklin-Adams. They are probably more useful for the identification of individual stars. But these do not give us a true picture of the parts of the sky shown, for there are structures and forms that cannot well be depicted in ordinary charts, and it has seemed to me that some of these are of the utmost importance in the study of the universe at large. These photographs may, therefore, be considered as supplementary to the regular charts in that they show the details of the clouds, nebulosities, etc. In this form, however, it is always difficult to identify the individual small stars. To overcome this difficulty charts have been prepared corresponding to each photograph and giving on the same scale a set of co-ordinates, and all the principal stars and objects of especial interest. The most useful reference stars are numbered, as are the dark objects. These charts and the tables, which give fuller data about the reference stars, will be found in Part II. It is recommended that in studying any photograph the reader should open Part II to the corresponding chart, and then he will have before him the photograph or plate, the author's text descriptive of it, the chart, with its co-ordinates, including most of the stars of the Bonner Durchmusterung, and the table supplementary to the chart.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011