From a very early age, she read and wrote extensively about several subjects, principally astronomy. |
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In 2002, Riccardo Giacconi was named co-recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize in physics for his pioneering work in X-ray astronomy. |
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So X-ray astronomy came of age as a branch of science only when suitable detectors were placed in orbit around the Earth. |
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The prize is in honor of Bruno Rossi, an authority on cosmic-ray physics and a pioneer in the field of X-ray astronomy. |
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As a Ph.D. scholar, he designed and developed balloon-borne X-ray astronomy telescope and gamma-ray spectrometer systems. |
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Giacconi said that receiving the award confirms the importance of X-ray astronomy. |
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The field of X-ray astronomy profited by some of the technological developments that went on in these programmes. |
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My career originally started in X-ray astronomy and that's very different from planetary science. |
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Last year's advance material was actually a 2000-word article about the Big Bang, the cosmic microwave background and X-ray astronomy. |
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But once they had translated Ptolemy's Almagest, they developed astronomy so quickly that their mark is found at every step. |
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Menelaus's work formed the basis for Ptolemy's numerical solutions of spherical astronomy problems in the Almagest. |
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Ben has a great passion for creation science, particularly astronomy, and is also becoming quite knowledgeable on computers. |
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At Rome Galileo argued his astronomy against Aristotelian cosmology in various places and before various groups. |
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He does work on cosmology and astronomy, and he wondered how he would explain what the applications of this work were. |
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We have come to realize, through developments in astronomy and cosmology, that we are still quite near the beginning. |
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This comment also applies to cosmology, astronomy, aspects of biology and in fact much scientific and medical experimentation. |
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It focuses on cosmology and astronomy, and on Earth's place in the universe. |
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The fields that have continued to amaze are astronomy and cosmology, which are obviously healthy. |
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He was to hold this appointment for 20 years and contribute not only to mathematics but also to astronomy and cosmography. |
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He entered the University of Leipzig where he studied mathematics, astronomy and cosmography. |
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Numerous thinkers and works contributed to making astronomy and the related sciences of astrology and cosmogony a near-accurate system. |
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For the first time, Galileo came out in print unequivocally in favour of the Copernican astronomy. |
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Its principal responsibilities are to support interplanetary spacecraft missions and radio and radar astronomy observations. |
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Although not trained in astronomy, she quickly showed a unique proficiency in analyzing photographic plates. |
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Arguments for intelligent design are also encountered in physics and astronomy. |
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He obtained the highest level in the civil-service examination having been educated in astronomy and calendar computation. |
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The second of these texts deals with physical geography, while the third is a text on spherical astronomy. |
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For example, sun-centered astronomy replaced earth-centered, oxygen superseded phlogiston, and absolute space gave way to curved space. |
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Among these are astronomy, climatology, ecology, evolutionary biology, geology, and paleontology. |
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The ancient Mayan civilization was very advanced and had a sophisticated knowledge of science, art, and astronomy. |
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And the same objection can be raised against any of the historical sciences including astronomy, evolutionary biology, geology and palaeontology. |
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He lectured on poetry, grammar, history, politics, archaeology, mathematics and astronomy. |
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The sciences are well served in a number of leading fields, including astronomy, chemistry, medicine, and engineering. |
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He contributed to many areas of astronomy and mathematics including celestial mechanics, analytic mechanics, statistics and numerical analysis. |
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She also wrote books on astronomy, compiled tables of positions of celestial bodies and designed several scientific instruments. |
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She contributed to her father's texts on mathematics and astronomy, often compiling tables of the position of celestial bodies. |
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Other courses Whittaker taught at Cambridge included astronomy, geometrical optics, and electricity and magnetism. |
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The exhibits cover topics relating to energy, electricity, mechanics, optics, sound, light, and even nuclear energy and astronomy. |
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In the coming months, astronomy enthusiasts are in for a string of rare celestial events involving the heavenly bodies in the solar system. |
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This synthesis of nuclear physics and stellar astronomy has led us to four significant conclusions. |
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In astronomy Thabit was one of the first reformers of the Ptolemaic system, and in mechanics he was a founder of statics. |
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Britain's foremost radio astronomy observatory at Jodrell Bank celebrates its 45th anniversary this month. |
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The telescopes will be available to the public on the first Friday of every month to give fledgling stargazers an insight into astronomy. |
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Another passion of his was astronomy, which gradually developed into his primary interest. |
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Aristotle's geocentric astronomy, which attaches the heavenly bodies to a series of concentric spheres, was not his own creation. |
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But Copernicus kept the old astronomy by retaining the system of spheres and epicycles. |
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The Inti Raymi festival, which celebrates the June solstice, reflects the Inca's vast knowledge of astronomy. |
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Camera obscura technology has been used in astronomy to study solar eclipses and in spy work to make surreptitious surveillance cameras. |
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Wil Tirion is the world's leading uranographer, and his charts have appeared in astronomy books all over the globe. |
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The increasing importance of astronomy in nautical navigation required further experiments. |
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The first is a scientific encyclopaedia covering logic, natural sciences, psychology, geometry, astronomy, arithmetic and music. |
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At the other end, exactly reproducible images revolutionized the study of subjects like geography, astronomy, botany, anatomy, and mathematics. |
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If you are remotely interested in astronomy, then this book is a must-read. |
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Lectures this year focus on stem cell research, homeopathy, wildlife in Australia, bodies found preserved in bogs and astronomy. |
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Now, though, the planetary astronomy community has an opportunity to make a breakout move. |
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The appearance of a comet attracted Harriot's attention and turned his scientific mind towards astronomy. |
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It was her involvement in astronomy and astrology that purportedly aligned her with black magic and divination. |
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An astronomy satellite that studied black holes and distant galaxies was wiped out by the one star that it did not watch. |
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Many of the Arabic mathematicians produced tables of trigonometric functions as part of their studies of astronomy. |
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Cavalieri also wrote on conic sections, trigonometry, optics, astronomy, and astrology. |
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With an interest in trigonometry, mathematical instruments, astronomy, and geography, Regiomontanus was in a good position to give a lead. |
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The articles are a smattering of bioethics and bioengineering, astronomy, epidemiology, and environmental issues. |
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Because glass does not transmit infrared radiation very efficiently, refracting telescopes are unsuitable for most kinds of infrared astronomy. |
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Before he went there al-Biruni already knew of Indian astronomy and mathematics from Arabic translations of some Sanskrit texts. |
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More than 200 astronomy enthusiasts gathered at a Ribble Valley observatory for a rare sighting of the planet Mercury transiting the sun. |
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The early transits were actually momentous occasions in the world of astronomy. |
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If my own educational journey was to start again I would hope to fit in some astronomy and microbiology. |
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Cosmologist and metrologist Dr. John Hartnett points out that Ross is even wrong about the secular astronomy. |
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He did not restrict himself to studying mathematics, however, for he studied other topics such as astronomy, meteorology and chemistry. |
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His interests went outside mathematics and he sometimes lectured on astronomy, meteorology and biology where he had a special interest in birds. |
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This paper contained equations which Laplace stated were important in mechanics and physical astronomy. |
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The brothers were given the best education in Baghdad, studying geometry, mechanics, music, mathematics and astronomy. |
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Cramer taught geometry and mechanics while Calandrini taught algebra and astronomy. |
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I think my love for mathematics may have come from the Mayas, one of the first civilizations to deeply understand mathematics and astronomy. |
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He had a real understanding of fortification, ballistics and shipping, and could discuss mathematics and astronomy on equal terms with experts. |
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First, the entire science of astronomy had depended on careful measurement from the very beginning. |
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At astronomy, the last class, neither Jordan nor David spoke a word that didn't have to do with plotting stars on a map. |
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His astronomy brought back to the fore, he went on to make the earliest telescopic observations in England. |
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Prior to joining Scripps, Smith graduated from Northern Arizona University with a bachelor's degree in physics and astronomy. |
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For comparative historical analysis, this should be a revolution of the same magnitude as the Hubble space telescope was in astronomy. |
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He has published about two dozen papers in various astronomy and astrophysics journals. |
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Modern astronomical research proceeds at a rapid pace due to the application of new technologies in astronomy and astrophysics. |
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Only the professionals could afford the large telescopes and complex support gear required for modern astronomy and astrophysics. |
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Pulsars and quasars may turn out to be commonplace in comparison to the exotic astrophysical events that gravity wave astronomy reveals. |
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He studied physics as his main subject but took mathematics, astronomy and chemistry as minor subjects. |
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It was not only in mathematics and astronomy, however, that Newcomb made major contributions. |
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First, he knew very little about either geography, astronomy, or cartography. |
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Ancient India is also described as the original home of mathematics, astronomy and medicine. |
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This is an area of astronomy in which amateurs are able to make vital contributions to our knowledge base. |
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In addition to his mathematical work, Talbot also published on astronomy and physics. |
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Topics other than mathematics also interested him, especially physics and astronomy. |
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He held university chairs in astronomy, physics and mathematics as well as working as an architect. |
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From his works we know that Kushyar was primarily an astronomer who wrote texts on astronomy and geography. |
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An inquiry into the effect of light pollution on astronomy was published last year. |
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Padua was famous for its medical school and while he was there Copernicus studied both medicine and astronomy. |
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One of the hallmarks of his spell as Astronomer Royal is his popularization of astronomy. |
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Although he studied mathematics and astronomy at Cambridge, he was also interested in biology. |
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Horrocks was educated at Cambridge, where he pursued his passion for astronomy and mathematics. |
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She earned the Chair's Scholar distinction, an award offered to one student in the entire physics and astronomy graduating class. |
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Analysis was driven by the requirements of mathematical physics and astronomy. |
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The Castle of Knowledge was first published in 1556 and gives an elementary introduction to Ptolemy's version of astronomy. |
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Here I look at some studies that examine the astronomy of the pyramid builders. |
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Newton, too, chose to work principally in the more traditional field of planetary astronomy. |
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In astronomy he worked on making observations more precise by improving astronomical instruments. |
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Few astronomers have made so many important contributions to so many different fields in astronomy. |
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He claimed that mathematics was composed of four branches, namely geometry, arithmetic, astronomy and music. |
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Later the revolution of the planet Jupiter was also used in Hindu astronomy. |
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With its emphasis on accurate space flight simulation and orbital mechanics, Orbiter is not all things to all space and astronomy enthusiasts. |
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Subjects taught at the whare wananga included astronomy, genealogy, and natural medicine. |
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He then progressed to the quadrivium, studying geometry, arithmetic, music and astronomy. |
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The field of astronomy is enriched by the accessibility of several high-caliber airborne telescopes. |
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In 1751 he went to the University of Utrecht to lecture on mathematics and astronomy. |
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Is the hypernova theory generally accepted as fact amongst the astronomy community? |
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His terrific presentation on radar astronomy of asteroids included handing out models of the asteroid 216 Kleopatra to the audience. |
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The world was breathing in the Ptolemaic concepts of astronomy for centuries until these were proven wrong by later astronomers and scientists. |
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Her vernacular Dutch writings reflect familiarity with Latin, rhetoric, numerology, Ptolemaic astronomy and music theory. |
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Gemma Frisius applied his mathematical expertise to geography, astronomy and map making. |
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Allen said that the project was an opportunity to search for intelligent life beyond the solar system while doing conventional radio astronomy. |
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These millimeter wave frequencies have been used for radio astronomy, space-based cloud imaging, and various military applications. |
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But at critical junctures in the history of astronomy, there is generally an overabundance of ideas on how to move ahead. |
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But don't fancy that all that frantic astronomy would make the smallest difference to the reason and justice of conduct. |
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The consensus was that there had to be something in this astrology lark, and what did I know, I'm only an astronomy graduate. |
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Various factors counted against Halley when he was an applicant in 1691 for the Savilian astronomy professorship at Oxford University. |
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It was due to him that reflecting telescopes of sufficient accuracy and power to be useful in astronomy were developed. |
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If astronomy can be recognised in this way, he argues passionately, then gastronomy should be. |
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His other contributions to astronomy, botany, crystallography, electrochemistry, optics and physiology are also substantial. |
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The almanacs played an important part in educating ordinary people about the advance of astronomy and the understanding of the universe. |
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These will range from fiber optics to remote sensing to astronomy, and I hope you will find the opportunity to attend at least some of these very interesting events. |
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In astronomy and geography Arabic influence was even more pronounced. |
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The authors took care to eliminate the possibility of other sources of polarization, which is always a concern in astronomy. |
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Muslims made many discoveries in mathematics, chemistry, physics, medicine, astronomy and psychology. |
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One of the big challenges in astronomy involves determining when the first galaxies formed, and what they looked like. |
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Cosmic ray observations are more challenging than many other forms of astronomy. |
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By 1952, despite the pioneering work in radio astronomy in France, it became clear that others were using more powerful instruments and the French could not compete. |
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As a next step the astrophysicists want to use the upcoming LOFAR array in the Netherlands and Germany for radio astronomy and cosmic ray research. |
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Today some 10 neutron-star-neutron-star binaries have been discovered, and radio astronomy has accumulated a spectacular database of more than 1500 pulsars. |
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It was a tabletop monument to Greek and Alexandrian astronomy. |
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He wrote several books on arithmetic, algebra, geometry and astronomy. |
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In fact, of course, the Arabs' contributions to the world have been crucial, from algebra to the lateen sail, from Sufi spirituality to key discoveries in astronomy. |
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The themes of heraldry, religion, astronomy, astrology and the natural world are expressed in murals, mosaics, stained glass, intricate woodwork and stone and marble carvings. |
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Two of the most famous asterisms in astronomy, the Big and Little Dippers hover above the pine trees at Carranza Field in the New Jersey Wharton State Forest. |
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Our understanding of astronomy has shown us that cometary and asteroidal impacts are relatively commonplace over timescales of hundreds of millions of years. |
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As a result of the breadth of such profound scientific questions, astrobiologists draw heavily on expertise in biology, chemistry, astronomy, and planetary science. |
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Astrochemistry is a broad and interdisciplinary emerging field at the intersection of the traditional disciplines of chemistry, physics, and astronomy. |
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Supernovae are among the most spectacular phenomena known to astronomy. |
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He made a number of contributions to mathematics, physics and astronomy. |
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Leslie was a polymath and lucubrator with a good knowledge of literature, astronomy, geology, genealogy, ornithology, and, particularly, local history. |
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When most people think of astronomy, they envision gazing at the stars through an optical telescope, a system of mirrors and lenses that collects light. |
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In recent years he has focused on astronomy, using lasers to help combine images from distant telescopes, effectively creating a huge virtual lens. |
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Knowing that Chinese rulers especially respected the mathematical sciences, he studied them diligently and became proficient at map-making and astronomy. |
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As we have noted Jeans worked on thermodynamics, heat and other aspects of radiation, publishing major works on these topics and on applications to astronomy. |
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The larger theories of geology, astronomy, oceanology, meteorology, ecology, biology, and even physics do not lend themselves to repeatable experiments. |
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Jodrell Bank, the radio astronomy observatory in the UK, uses a BBC micro from the early 1980s to steer one of their smaller dishes which tracks a pulsar in the Crab nebula. |
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After To Die For, Affleck moved to New York and attended Columbia University for two years, majoring in physics and astronomy. |
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There he gave courses on astronomy, celestial mechanics, the differential and integral calculus, the theory of probability, geometry and trigonometry. |
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A common culture, calendar, and mythology held the civilisation together and astronomy played an important part in the religion which underlay the whole life of the people. |
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This was a clash between two perfectly naturalistic theories of astronomy. |
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Specific problems which Lexell studied in astronomy were his calculation of the solar parallax and his calculation of the orbits of several comets. |
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Radio astronomy is a young field relative to optical astronomy. |
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It will be used by astronomy club members and novice stargazers who will benefit from the forest's dark skies, unhindered by polluting street lights. |
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As well as symphonies he wrote books on astronomy and campanology. |
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He now had more time than before to devote to his study of astronomy, having an observatory in the rooms in which he lived in one of the towers in the town's fortifications. |
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Because we are familiar with major astronomical observatories being sited atop remote mountain peaks, it seems peculiar that Nantucket has so many connections with astronomy. |
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While others might have had their nose in The Hardy Boys, LeCun was picking up books on evolution, astronomy, and rocket science. |
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It is, rather, a handbook for philosophy students, written to illustrate how arithmetic, geometry, stereometry, music, and astronomy are interrelated. |
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It is a remarkable scientific document which contains his work on mathematics, music, astronomy, calendars, cartography, geology, optics and medicine. |
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As a Dominican he continued to study philosophy and theology but he became increasingly interested in the study of mathematics, astronomy, and cartography. |
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Cosmographia provided a layman's introduction to such subjects as astronomy, geography, cartography, surveying, navigation and mathematical instruments. |
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The conference will cover many areas of mathematical sciences like astronomy, statistics, operations research, computer science and many other mathematically related subjects. |
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Modern scholarship has not seriously affected his stature in the fields of mathematics, dynamics, celestial mechanics, astronomy, optics, natural philosophy, or cosmology. |
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This work is an encyclopaedia of mathematics, astronomy, optics and music. |
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Just as the Western church refused at first to accept the heliocentric model of Copernicus, so modern astronomy so far chooses to dismiss this second discovery. |
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The zodiac was involved in chronometry, astronomy, and divination. |
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The syllabus included mechanics, hydrostatics, optics, and astronomy. |
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The manuscripts provide a written testimony to the skill of African scientists, in astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, medicine and climatology in the Middle Ages. |
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Between the star parties, parks, and planetariums, Hawaii offers more publicly accessible world-class astronomy per square mile than anywhere else on Earth. |
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It was at this stage that he became interested in astronomy and saved his pocket money to buy himself materials such as lens from which he could construct a telescope. |
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Compared to physics and astronomy, cosmology is a young science. |
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Several experiments in physics, astronomy and the earth sciences will generate petabytes of data in the next few years, and so will some businesses. |
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However, self-employed individuals in the earth sciences, physics and astronomy, and political science were the highest-paid doctorates in their field. |
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About fifty years after Liu's remarkable contributions, a major advance was made in astronomy when Yu Xi discovered the precession of the equinoxes. |
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While Laplace and Gauss contributed to the physical sciences such as astronomy and geodesy, Fisher used his mathematical gifts to till the fertile ground of biology. |
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These were the scientists who were to devote their labours to the study of natural history, geology, astronomy and even the nascent discipline of anthropology. |
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It is plausible to think that Copernicus' introduction of the heliocentric hypothesis had this effect on the previously unchallenged Ptolemaic earth-centered astronomy. |
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When the school term ended in May 1914, Hubble decided to pursue his first passion and so returned to university as a graduate student to study more astronomy. |
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Euclid also wrote Phaenomena which is an elementary introduction to mathematical astronomy and gives results on the times stars in certain positions will rise and set. |
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Geminus wrote a number of astronomy texts, including the elementary text Isagoge or Introduction to Astronomy based on the work of Hipparchus which we referred to above. |
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Tonight, we introduce you to a high school senior who broke new ground in the field of astronomy, surpassing even seasoned professionals in astronomy. |
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His first major publication in astronomy was a catalogue of double stars which he published in the Transactions of the Royal Society in 1824 and for which he received honours. |
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The way was opened to later scientific advances, particularly in astronomy and dynamics. |
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During the oral relay, team members each answered five questions on astronomy topics such as black holes, spiral nebulae and red giants. |
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He later was for a time teacher of astronomy at the universities of Zaragoza and then Cartagena. |
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Measurements of time were made using extrapolation from readings based on astronomy. |
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Hooke's activities in astronomy extended beyond the study of stellar distance. |
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In 1655, according to his autobiographical notes, Hooke began to acquaint himself with astronomy, through the good offices of John Ward. |
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In 2005, EADS Astrium Space Transportation started a campaign in favour of a project called LIFE, for astronomy from the Moon surface. |
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For if astronomy is the study of the movements of the heavens, then astrology is the study of the effects of those movements. |
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For the first oceanic exploration Western Europeans used the compass, as well as progressive new advances in cartography and astronomy. |
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Hipparchus had some knowledge of Mesopotamian astronomy, and he felt that Greek models should match those of the Babylonians in accuracy. |
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The Almagest is the critical source of information on ancient Greek astronomy. |
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It encompasses the fields of botany, zoology, astronomy, geology and mineralogy as well as the exploitation of those resources. |
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Among his contributions to astronomy was his explanation of Saturn's planetary rings. |
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There were national Olympiads of astronomy and astronautic exhibitions and regional meetings on astronomy teaching. |
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Higher operational frequencies can be required for particular cases such as radiometry and radio astronomy. |
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The Local Group, an astronomy club from Santa Clarita will have telescopes set up for public viewing. |
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Sir Bernard was a great pioneer in radio astronomy and especially in the way he could drive projects to completion. |
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This small change in configuration was informed by Wren's knowledge of astronomy. |
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Without telescopes, the Zapotec culture used astronomy to measure the year. |
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His work on black holes and binary stars was critical in advancing the field of X-ray astronomy. |
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A maximum of three people can receive the prize,and the third was Riccardo Giacconi,for his contributions to X-ray astronomy. |
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Paleontology is one of the historical sciences, along with archaeology, geology, astronomy, cosmology, philology and history itself. |
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The new scientific method led to great contributions in the fields of astronomy, physics, biology, and anatomy. |
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Getting above the Earth's atmosphere, however, was not the only challenge of X-ray astronomy. |
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Nearly everything we know about dark matter so far comes from astronomy. |
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Societies in the region laid the foundations for astronomy, mathematics and astrology. |
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Beatrix Potter was interested in every branch of natural science save astronomy. |
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In Italy, the Lunar Society Italia was formed to communicate science and astronomy. |
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During the decline of the Mughal Empire, the Hindu king Jai Singh II of Amber continued the work of Mughal astronomy. |
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Near the end of his life Maudslay developed an interest in astronomy and began to construct a telescope. |
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Science, engineering, art, literature, astronomy, and philosophy flourished under the patronage of these kings. |
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And I trust anon by the help of an infallible guide, to perfect such Prutenic tables, as shall mend the astronomy of our wide expositors. |
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Galileo and other scientists pioneered the study of optics, ballistics, astronomy, anatomy, and so on. |
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The Maya interpretation of deities was intrinsically tied to the calendar, astronomy, and their cosmovision. |
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This information was used for divination, so Maya astronomy was essentially for astrological purposes. |
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It contain thirty three major pieces from the site and includes displays about Olmec customs, government, astronomy and writing. |
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The year 1543 is, in fact, this author's terminus ad quem, and it is certainly important both for physics and astronomy. |
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The discipline which is the ancestor of modern specializations like astronomy, biology, physics and chemistry was then called natural philosophy. |
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He was also versed in the sciences of medicine, astronomy, geography, mathematics, physics and celestial mechanics. |
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Iranians were among the first to use mathematics, geometry and astronomy in architecture. |
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His accomplishments in strategic warfare, exploration, mathematics and astronomy were of an exceptional level. |
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The court at Tahert was noted for its support of scholarship in mathematics, astronomy, astrology, theology, and law. |
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He especially credits people who have designed, built, and used spectrographs in astronomy. |
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E as a compilation and reorganization of basic material in spherical geometry and spherical astronomy. |
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Both of these fields represent an overlap of the disciplines of astronomy and chemistry. |
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Neutrino astronomy is a closely related area that may benefit from the newly measured effect. |
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Theorists in astronomy endeavor to create theoretical models and from the results predict observational consequences of those models. |
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Ptolemy's Almagest is the only surviving comprehensive ancient treatise on astronomy. |
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One of the oldest fields in astronomy, and in all of science, is the measurement of the positions of celestial objects. |
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Gamma ray astronomy observes astronomical objects at the shortest wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. |
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It played a major role in the history of astronomy and navigation, and is best known as the location of the prime meridian. |
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Historically, optical astronomy, also called visible light astronomy, is the oldest form of astronomy. |
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The next Spartan, to fly next January, will study Comet Halley, while later ones will focus on solar physics and ultraviolet astronomy. |
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Classical Sanskrit literature flowered as well, and Indian science, astronomy, medicine, and mathematics made significant advances. |
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Radio astronomy uses radiation outside the visible range with wavelengths greater than approximately one millimeter. |
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Observational astronomy may be divided according to the observed region of the electromagnetic spectrum. |
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Significant advances in astronomy came about with the introduction of new technology, including the spectroscope and photography. |
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During the Middle Ages, astronomy was mostly stagnant in medieval Europe, at least until the 13th century. |
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In physical science, Aristotle studied anatomy, astronomy, embryology, geography, geology, meteorology, physics and zoology. |
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Greek astronomy is characterized from the start by seeking a rational, physical explanation for celestial phenomena. |
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Throughout his career, George worked in the areas of astronomy and astrophysics, and taught his students about nova-like variable stars. |
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Following the Babylonians, significant advances in astronomy were made in ancient Greece and the Hellenistic world. |
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Most of early astronomy actually consisted of mapping the positions of the stars and planets, a science now referred to as astrometry. |
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In early times, astronomy only comprised the observation and predictions of the motions of objects visible to the naked eye. |
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Having been interested in astronomy since childhood, he had an observatory built in his garden. |
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Few fields, such as astrometry, are purely astronomy rather than also astrophysics. |
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However, since most modern astronomical research deals with subjects related to physics, modern astronomy could actually be called astrophysics. |
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Theoretical astronomy is oriented toward the development of computer or analytical models to describe astronomical objects and phenomena. |
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Hardy published Two on a Tower in 1882, a romance story set in the world of astronomy. |
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During the 20th century, the field of professional astronomy split into observational and theoretical branches. |
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Photoconductive detectors have a wide range of applications, particularly for astronomy and scientific instrumentation. |
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Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Struve appointed extraordinary professor of astronomy at Dorpat University, and assistant at Dorpat Observatory. |
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More generally, all astronomical phenomena that originate outside Earth's atmosphere are within the purview of astronomy. |
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He had also read a great deal of history in English and had been taught arithmetic, physics and astronomy. |
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The Muslims of the Yuan dynasty introduced Middle Eastern cartography, astronomy, medicine, clothing, and diet in East Asia. |
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The first two leaves contain texts in Catalan language covering cosmography, astronomy, and astrology. |
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The Greeks developed astronomy, which they treated as a branch of mathematics, to a highly sophisticated level. |
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This is frequently possible in certain areas, such as in the biological sciences, and more difficult in other areas, such as in astronomy. |
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The sphericity of the Earth is also accounted for in the work of Ptolemy, on which medieval astronomy was largely based. |
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Publications by K Snedegar and B Warner on ethnoastronomy, and B Warner and P Smits on the history of astronomy, were consulted. |
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American civilizations also displayed impressive accomplishments in astronomy and mathematics. |
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The event was unorthodox and comprised space elevators, lunar infrastructure, as well astronomy. |
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While there, he lectured on Latin grammar, Aristotelian logic, arithmetic, geometry, and the mathematical aspects of astronomy and music. |
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He referred mainly to his tidology when he applied for the Lowndean professorship of astronomy, which had become vacant that fall. |
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The fields of geology, astronomy and psychology also made strides and gained new insights. |
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Also listed is Pupin Hall, another National Historic Landmark, which houses the physics and astronomy departments. |
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Ptolemy's comprehensive treatise of mathematical astronomy superseded most older texts of Greek astronomy. |
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He may have studied and taught astronomy at the University of Salamanca. |
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In astronomy, chaoslike phenomena include the orbits of asteroids, comets, and satellites, where small disturbances can have dramatic and complex effects. |
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Dark matter and dark energy are the current leading topics in astronomy, as their discovery and controversy originated during the study of the galaxies. |
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Appealing chapters comment on distances through space, the shape of the Milky Way, asteroids and sunspots, quasars, neutrino astronomy, and the expanding universe. |
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The field of sidereal astronomy, therefore, was virtually untrodden when, shortly after the beginning of his telescopic work, Herschel began his first review of the heavens. |
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With Griffith Observatory closed until May 2006 for a renovation, Valley College and other local planetariums are helping to meet the pubic's demand for astronomy programs. |
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South Africa has cultivated a burgeoning astronomy community. |
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Technologically important powers that are measured in picowatts are typically used in reference to radio and radar receivers, acoustics and in the science of radio astronomy. |
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Asteroid Pawelmaksym, discovered in 2007 at Charleston Observatory, South Carolina, was recently named in honour of Pawel and his role as an astronomy populariser in Poland. |
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Peter Grego is well known to many as a great populariser of astronomy and an entertainingly informative steersman to those seeking to find out more about the heavens. |
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In library and information science, for example, a h-index of 16 is a high value, but in, say astronomy and retrovirology, it is considered to be a relatively low value. |
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He was also renowned for his scientific instruments, particularly his astrolabes and astronomical rings used to study the geometry of astronomy and astrology. |
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The height of 365 feet is explained by Wren's interest in astronomy. |
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Juan Casanovas, in his overview of the state of continental astronomy after the death of Kepler, is less sure of the answer to the question of Riccioli's Copernicanism. |
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Infrared astronomy is founded on the detection and analysis of infrared radiation, wavelengths longer than red light and outside the range of our vision. |
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Radio astronomy is different from most other forms of observational astronomy in that the observed radio waves can be treated as waves rather than as discrete photons. |
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In his youth he studied astronomy, geography and cartography. |
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Maya astronomy did not serve to study the universe for scientific reasons, nor was it used to measure the seasons in order to calculate crop planting. |
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Electricity and astronomy were at one time among his favourite amusements. |
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Some elements were first deciphered in the late 19th and early 20th century, mostly the parts having to do with numbers, the Maya calendar, and astronomy. |
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Hipparchus also created a comprehensive catalog of 1020 stars, and most of the constellations of the northern hemisphere derive from Greek astronomy. |
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Norman Lockyer, who in 1906 published the first systematic study of megalithic astronomy, had argued that Bryn Celli Ddu marked the summer solstice. |
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In the 14th century, Indian mathematician Madhava of Sangamagrama and the Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics stated components of calculus. |
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As with other empires during the Classical Period, Han China advanced significantly in the areas of government, education, mathematics, astronomy, technology, and many others. |
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