| George Walker - 1809 - 378 pàgines
...of each are constantly in proportion to the times elapsed, and that the cubes of the .1.. distances distances of the planets from the sun are as the squares of their periodical revolutions in their orbits, harmonise the motions of them all, and assign to each... | |
| William Shepherd, Jeremiah Joyce, Lant Carpenter - 1815 - 598 pàgines
...times, and of course proportional to the times of describing them. He also discovered by trials, that the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun, are in the same proportion as the squares of the periodical times in which they revolve about the sun.... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford, Henry Vethake - 1832 - 624 pàgines
...possess the measure of our whole planetary system, as, according to the second • law of Kepler (qv), the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun are as the squares of the periods of their revolutions (which have long been known). Therefore the determining of this distance... | |
| Mary Somerville - 1831 - 710 pàgines
...; they are so connected by Kepler's law of the squares of the periodic times being proportional to the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun, that one cannot vary without affecting the other. With the exception of these two elements, it appears,... | |
| Encyclopaedia Americana - 1832 - 620 pàgines
...possess the measure cf our whole planetary system, as, according to the second law of Kepler (qv), the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun are as the squares of the periods of their revolutions (which have long been known). Therefore the determining of this distance... | |
| Leigh Hunt - 1834 - 972 pàgines
...which Kepler might have apprized you that, the squares of the times of the planetary revolutions are as the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun. But this was not all. It was not the tone for any mere physical truth. The enunciation was that of... | |
| Mary Somerville - 1834 - 390 pàgines
...changes; they are so connected by Kepler's law of the squares of the periodic times being proportional to the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun, that one cannot vary without affecting the other. With the exception of these two elements, it appears... | |
| Mary Somerville - 1834 - 484 pàgines
...; they are so connected by Kepler's law of the squares of the periodic times being proportional to the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun, that one cannot vary without affecting die other. With the exception of these two elements, it appeals... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1835 - 620 pàgines
...possess the measure of our whole planetary system, as, according to the second law of Kepler (qv), the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the sun are as the squares of the periods of their revolutions (which have long been known). Therefore the determining of this distance... | |
| Joseph Denison - 1842 - 56 pàgines
...EXPOSITION, THE analogy discovered by Kepler in the beginning of the seventeenth century, viz., that the cubes of the mean distances of the planets from the Sun are as the squares of their periodic times, is found to be invariably consistent with observation, and is therefore so firmly... | |
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