... from one extremity to the other the brightness of the rays would increase successively in intensity. This luminous current would appear several times in quick succession, and it would pass much more frequently from west to east than in the opposite... A Complete Course of Meteorology - Página 584por Ludwig Friedrich Kämtz, Charles Martins, Léon Lalanne - 1845 - 598 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Dionysius Lardner - 1846 - 644 páginas
...enormous dome of light, as represented in fig. 3. Fig. 3. The bow then would continue to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undulatory motion...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light would run successively over all the rays of the aurora... | |
| Dionysius Lardner - 1854 - 870 páginas
...to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undulatory motion in its light — that is to say, from one extremity to the other the brightness of...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light had run successively over all the rays of the aurora... | |
| A. R. Phippen - 1854 - 472 páginas
...brightness of the rays would increase successively in intensity. Thk luminous current would<appear several times in quick succession, and it would pass...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light would run successively over all the rays of the aurora... | |
| Dionysius Lardner - 1853 - 960 páginas
...intersected, and formed the summit of an enormous dome of light. The bow then would continue to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undulatory motion...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light had run successively over all the rays of the aurora... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1855 - 566 páginas
...continue to ascend towards the zenith ; it would experience an undulatory motion in its light ; that is, from one extremity to the other the brightness of...to east than in the opposite direction. Sometimes, though rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterwards; and as soon as this wave... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1855 - 570 páginas
...continue to ascend towards the zenith; it would experience an undulatory motion in its light ; that is, from one extremity to the other the brightness of...succession, and it would pass much more frequently from wett to east than in the opposite direction. Sometimes, though rarely, a retrograde motion would take... | |
| Dionysius Lardner - 1856 - 518 páginas
...intersected, and formed the summit of an enormous dome of light. The bow then would continue to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undulatory motion...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light had run successively over all the rays of the aurora... | |
| Dionysius Lardner - 1856 - 726 páginas
...3. Fig. 3. The bow then would continue to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undnlatory motion in its light — that is to say, that from...rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterward ; and as soon as this wave of light would run successively over all thf rays of the aurora... | |
| Dionysius Lardner - 1858 - 912 páginas
...to ascend toward the zenith : it would suffer an undulatory motion in its light — that is to say, from one extremity to the other the brightness of...successively in intensity. This luminous current would ippear several times in quick succession, and it would pass much more frequently from west to east... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1867 - 562 páginas
...continue to wcend towards the zenith. Its light would experience an unilulatory movement ; that is, from one extremity to the other the brightness of...to east than in the opposite direction. Sometimes, though rarely, a retrograde motion would take place immediately afterwards ; and as soon as this wave... | |
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