| James Hodgson - Astronomy - 1723 - 724 pages
...min. 57 fee- and the Right Afcenfion 55 deg. 17 rain. 03 fec,¿¿ The Obliquity of the Ecliptic, or the Inclination of the Axis of the Earth to the Plane of the Ecliptic, is the Principal Poftulatum upon which all the Calculations and Conclusions relating... | |
| John Keill - Astronomy - 1739 - 504 pages
...thofe Circles. Let it meet with the Ecliptick in A ; the Arch PA will meafure the Angle PCH, which is the Inclination of the Axis of the Earth to the Plane of the Ecliptick; that is, it will be 66 J. Degrees ; and therefore the'-Arch EP, which is its Complement... | |
| Benjamin Martin - Science - 1747 - 574 pages
...Points E and P Fig. i. draw the great Circle EPA, meeting the Ecliptic AL in A ; the Arch PA mcafures the Inclination of 'the Axis of the Earth to the Plane of the Ecliptic, tax. the Angle PCH, which is found by Obfervation to be about 66° 30', and therefore... | |
| William Nicholson - Electricity - 1797 - 690 pages
...and autumn, and all the variety of the fenfons, are produced by the fimple and admirable contrivance of the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of the ecliptic ; yet this mechanical difpofition would not have been alone fuffkient to produce that... | |
| Philip Doddridge - 1803 - 624 pages
...subject to diseases and death; besides those arising from the asperities of the surface of our globe, and the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of the ecliptic; they are most of them so evidently weak, and capable of being retorted as beauties rather... | |
| George Gregory - Science - 1808 - 322 pages
...on the other side of the equator from which he is retiring. It is easy, therefore, to see that it is the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of the ecliptic, and its constant parallelism, which occasion the change of the seasons. The sun being... | |
| Thomas Keith - Astronomy - 1811 - 388 pages
...and nights at the equator are always equal. Thus, the different seasons are clearly accounted for, by the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of its orbit,* combined with the parallel motion of that axis. CHAPTER V. Of the Origin of Springs and Rivers, and... | |
| 1814 - 378 pages
...conclude, that the vicissitudes of the seasons, and the inequalities of day and night, are caused by the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of hs orbit. We, who have the happiness of being plated in a pleasant region of the temperate zone, can... | |
| Thomas Keith - Astronomy - 1819 - 380 pages
...and nights at the equator are always equal. Thus the different seasons are clearly accounted for, by the inclination of the axis of the earth to the plane of its orbit,* •combined with the parallel motion of that axis. CHAP. V. Of the Origin of Springs and Pivers, and... | |
| Thomas Keith - 1821 - 408 pages
...as in Ferguson's Astronomy, chap. x. But, as this last method does not so clearly shew the obliquity of the axis of the earth to the plane of its orbit : take a board of any convenient dimensions, suppose two feet across, on which describe a circle, or... | |
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