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Sir John Herschel   /sər dʒɑn hˈərʃəl/   Listen
Sir John Herschel

noun
1.
English astronomer (son of William Herschel) who extended the catalogue of stars to the southern hemisphere and did pioneering work in photography (1792-1871).  Synonyms: Herschel, John Herschel, Sir John Frederick William Herschel.






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"Sir john herschel" Quotes from Famous Books



... member of a committee, to which Sir John Herschel and Mr. Dollond also belonged, appointed by the Royal Society to examine, and if possible improve, the manufacture of glass for optical purposes. Their experiments continued till 1829, when the account of them constituted the subject of a 'Bakerian Lecture.' This lectureship, founded ...
— Faraday As A Discoverer • John Tyndall

... and Forbes when I reach London, and I have a letter of introduction to Sir John Herschel (who has, I hear, a great penchant for the towing-net). Supposing I could do so, would it be of any use to procure recommendations from them that my ...
— The Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley Volume 1 • Leonard Huxley

... noticed by almost every one, that, during the warm and moist nights of summer, the moon, as she rises above the horizon, appears much larger than when at the zenith. So the setting sun is seen of apparently increased size. Sir John Herschel asserts that the appearance is an illusion, and so do some others. Professor Carey says, that, if we look through a paper tube at the moon when on the horizon, the paper being folded so as to make the aperture of its exact size, and then look again at it ...
— Atlantic Monthly Vol. 6, No. 33, July, 1860 • Various

... by Sir John Herschel[119] at the head of his Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy: a book containing notions of discovery far beyond any of which Bacon ever dreamed; and this because it was written {81} after discovery, instead of before. Sir John Herschel, in his version, has ...
— A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I (of II) • Augustus De Morgan

... its sublimest aspects. His splendid astronomical instruments, for the most part made entirely by his own hands, have enabled him to detect the "willow leaf-shaped" objects which form the structural element of the Sun's luminous surface. The discovery was shortly after verified by Sir John Herschel and other astronomers, and is now a received ...
— James Nasmyth's Autobiography • James Nasmyth


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