Turner, Herbert Hall, 1861-1930
Turner, H.H.
Turner, H. H. (Herbert Hall), 1861-1930
Herbert Hall Turner British astronomer and seismologist
Turner, H. H. 1861-1930
Turner, Herbert Hall
VIAF ID: 27848634 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/27848634
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Herbert Hall Turner ‡c British astronomer and seismologist
- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, H. H.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, H. H. ‡d 1861-1930
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, H. H. ‡q (Herbert Hall), ‡d 1861-1930
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, Herbert Hall ‡d 1861-1930
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, Herbert Hall, ‡d 1861-1930
- 100 1 _ ‡a Turner, Herbert Hall, ‡d 1861-1930
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (29)
5xx's: Related Names (3)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Royal Astronomical Society
- 510 2 _ ‡a University of Oxford
- 510 2 _ ‡a University of Oxford ‡e Affiliation
Works
Title | Sources |
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Address delivered...in the section of astrophysics at the congress, of arts and sciences at St. Louis... | |
Astrographic catalogue 19000̇ : Oxford Section Dec. | |
Astronomical discovery | |
Charles Pritchard, 1897 | |
Charles Pritchard, D.D.; F.R.S.; F.R.A.S.; F.R.G.S., late Savilian professor of astronomy in the University of Oxford; memoirs of his life | |
A collection of examples on heat and electricity / H. H. Turner. - London, 1885. | |
The day numbers of the nautical almanac for the years 1900, 1901, 1902, modified for use with the tables of star constants | |
The great star map : being a brief general account of the international project known as the astrographic chart | |
Halley's comet; an evening discourse to the British association, at their meeting at Dublin, on Friday, September 4, 1908 | |
History of the Royal Astronomical Society | |
Modern astronomy; being some account of the revolution of the last quarter of a century | |
Note on the nebulosity round Nova Persei | |
Note on the period of S Serpentis | |
Note on the position of the sun's axis of rotation, as deduced from Greenwich sun-spot measures 1886-1901 | |
Note on the use of long-focus mirrors for eclipse work | |
Obituary notice of Sir George B. Airy | |
On a long period (about 240 years) in chinese earthquake records | |
On a method of solving spherical triangles, and performing other astronomical computations, by use of a simple table of squares | |
On an annual variation in the R-D discordance | |
On differential refraction to terms of higher orders than the first | |
On graphical methods of determining the local or Greenwich time of sunset at different places within a given region | |
On mechanically compensating the rotation of the field of a siderostat | |
On new forms of levels | |
On stationary radiants of meteors : reply to the criticisms of M. Th. Brédikhine | |
On the accuracy of the positions of the star images in the "Harvard sky" | |
On the alleged rotation of the Spiral Nebula Messier 51 Canum Venaticorum | |
On the brightness of the corona of April 16, 1893 : preliminary note | |
On the classification of long-period variable stars, and a possible physical interpretation | |
On the determination of places of (1) reference stars, (2) fundamental stars, by photographic methods | |
On the diminution of light in its passage through interstellar space | |
On the errors of star photographs due to optical distorsion of the object-glass with which the photograph is taken : first and second papers | |
On the expression of sun-spot periodicity as a Fourier sequence in similar problems : (papers of the I.U.S.R. computing bureau, No. X) | |
On the formula connecting diameters of photographic images with stellar magnitude | |
On the harmonic analysis of Wolf's sun-spot numbers, with special reference to Mr. Kimura's paper : (papers of the I.U.S.R. computing bureau, No. IX) | |
On the inclinations of binary star orbits to the galaxy | |
On the measurement and reduction of the plates for the astrographic chart | |
On the persistence of the 21 - minute period during the nine years 1918-1926, as shown by the Philippine records of Earthquakes | |
On the photographic magnitudes determined with the Vatican astrographic equatorial : corrections depending on distance from the plate centre | |
On the possible identity of Nova Geminorum with a small star photographed before the outburst | |
On the R-D discordance : some measures of photographs on the pleiades at the Oxford University Observatory | |
On the relative number of star images photographed in different parts of a plate, and on the performance of various object-glasses in this respect | |
On the so-called "annual" periodicity in the occurence of earthquakes | |
On the straightness of spider lines | |
On the suggestion made by Sir David Gill that the brighter fixed stars are as a whole rotating with respect to fainter stars as a whole | |
On the systematic errors of measures on photographic plates | |
On the systematic proper motions of bright stars relatively to faint stars in the Oxford zones (+25° [plus twenty-five degrees] to 31° [thirty-one degrees]) | |
Otto Struve : 1819-1905 | |
The Oxford photographic determinations of stellar parallax : further reply to Sir David Gill. | |
Pogson's observations of U Geminorum | |
Preliminary note on a method of photographing the moon with surrounding stars | |
Presidential address to Mathematical Association, Jan. 11 , 1911 | |
Presidential address to Public School Science Masters : January 1917 | |
A proposal for the comparison of the stellar magnitude scales of the different observatories taking part in the astrographic catalogue : second note : the Bordeaux magnitudes | |
Reply to Professor Sampson's objections to the hypothesis of a sun-spot swarm | |
Report of the Observations of the Total Solar Eclipse of august 29, 1886, made at Grenville in the island of Grenada | |
Results obtained with the personal equation machine at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich | |
The Rousdon variable star observations | |
Some notes on aberration | |
Some notes on the use and adjustment of the coelostat | |
The stellar magnitude scales of the astrographic catalogue : twelfth note : the Hyderabad magnitudes (- 17° and - 18°) [minus seventeen degrees and minus eighteen degrees], the Perth magnitudes (- 32° and - 34°) [minus thirty-two degrees and minus thirty-four degrees], the Edinburgh magnitudes (- 38°) [minus thirty-eight degrees], and the Cape magnitudes (- 41° and - 42°) [minus fourty-one degrees and fourty-two degrees] | |
Tables for facilitating the use of harmonic analysis | |
"Tom Tower : Christ Church, Oxford | |
Total solar eclipses : (the wilde lecture) | |
Uchū no tabi | |
Variable stars : abstract of a lecture delivered at the meeting of the Association held on February 26, 1908 | |
A voyage in space : a course of six lectures ... | |
What can we learn from rainfall records ? | |
宇宙の旅 |