Large and Small Telescopes.
P. [19].—With reference to mountainous sites for large instruments, a remark in Sir Isaac Newton’s ‘Opticks’ (1730) may be quoted:—“Telescopes ... cannot be formed so as to take away that confusion of rays which arises from the tremors of the atmosphere. The only remedy is a most serene and quiet air, such as may perhaps be found on the tops of the highest mountains above the grosser clouds.”
P. [27].—Lieut. Winterhalter, of the United States Navy, recently visited a large number of European observatories, and in describing that of Nice says:—“M. Perrotin declares that two hours’ work with a large instrument is as fatiguing as eight with a small one, the labour involved increasing in proportion to the cube of the aperture, the chances of seeing decreasing in the same ratio, while it can hardly be said that the advantages increase in like proportion.” The Nice Observatory, and its splendid instruments (including a 30-inch refractor), are due to the munificence of M. Bischoffsheim, who has expended about five million francs upon them.
P. [36].—The large refractor to be erected on Wilson’s Peak of the Sierra Madre range of mountains, in Southern California, is to be 40 inches in diameter. The rough unground disks of glass are already in the hands of the Clarkes, of Cambridgeport, Mass. It is estimated that the complete object-glass and cell will cost something like $65,000, and the focal length of the instrument will be about 58 feet.
The Sun.
P. [100].—The last minimum of sun-spot frequency appears to have occurred at the middle of 1889. Conspicuous spots were very rare in the first half of 1890, but some fine groups were presented in the last half of the year. On Aug. 31 I saw a group extending over 113,000 miles in length, and on Nov. 27 there was another, which measured 123,700 miles.
P. [111].—Thompson’s cardboard disks have been favourably spoken of as enabling observers to determine the positions of spots at any season of the year.
Mercury.
P. [137].—At the meeting of the British Astronomical Association on Nov. 26, 1890, Mr. G. F. Chambers expressed his firm belief in the existence of an intra-Mercurial planet. The President (Capt. W. Noble) in his inaugural address pointed out the desirability of effecting further observations, both of Mercury and Venus, with a view to redetermine their rotation-periods. He justly remarked that moderately small instruments might be fittingly employed in the work, and that Schiaparelli’s deductions (mentioned on pp. 142 and 149) ought to be accepted with extreme reserve pending their verification.