Brock, Claire. The Comet Sweeper: Caroline Herschel’s astronomical ambition. Thriplow, 2007.
200-2
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Caroline Herschel | Her nephew John, born in 1792, grew up to become Sir John Herschel
, an astronomer perhaps as famous as his father (let alone his aunt). She helped him by recording the first sweeps that... |
Friends, Associates | Emily Shirreff | ES
's circle of friends included Sir William Grove
(inventor of the Grove battery), scientist Mary Somerville
, lawyer and Royal Society president Lord Wrottesley
, astronomer Sir George Biddell Airy
, Sir John Herschel |
Friends, Associates | Anna Atkins | AA
was a close friend of Sir John Herschel
(another photographic pioneer) and his daughters. The idea of a female scientist was not strange to this family, since Sir John was the nephew of the... |
Friends, Associates | Mary Somerville | In London the Somervilles enjoyed participating in a rich scientific community: Mary's time there was much happier than during her first marriage. She attended many lectures at the Royal Institution
, and took lessons in... |
Instructor | Anna Atkins | AA
also continued into her forties her self-education in the new subject of photography. In 1841 she was experimenting with camera work as developed by William Henry Fox Talbot
in the form of photograms produced... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Caroline Herschel | She had begun working on this, at John
's behest, about a year after her return to Hanover. In August 1823 it was still at the planning stage. A year later she was hard at work. Brock, Claire. The Comet Sweeper: Caroline Herschel’s astronomical ambition. Thriplow, 2007. 200-2 |
Literary responses | Caroline Herschel | As early as May 1827 her nephew John
read her autobiographical account of her discovery years, and responded that she underestimated her own part in her joint enterprise with William. Brock, Claire. The Comet Sweeper: Caroline Herschel’s astronomical ambition. Thriplow, 2007. 12 |
Literary responses | Mary Somerville | The Athenæum declared MS
's On the Connexion of the Physical Scienceswith the exception of Sir John Herschel
's treatises, the most valuable and most pleasing work of science that has been published within the century. qtd. in Patterson, Elizabeth Chambers. Mary Somerville and the Cultivation of Science, 1815-1840. Martinus Nijhoff, 1983. 136 |
Occupation | Caroline Herschel | Astronomical observation being impossible in the city, CH
worked at her papers from the past, this time, at her nephew John
's request, compiling her catalogue of nebulae. When her nephew set out for the... |
Publishing | Charlotte Brontë | She started with Henry Colburn
. After Anne and Emily had arranged with Newby for publication of their first novels, she approached a seventh publisher, Smith, Elder, and Co.
. The firm was the publisher... |
Publishing | Mary Somerville | After conducting a set of experiments on the effect of sunlight on vegetable juices, MS
sent a report of her method and results to John Herschel
, who presented her findings to the Royal Society
. Patterson, Elizabeth Chambers. “Mary Fairfax Greig Somerville (1780-1872)”. Women of Mathematics: A Biobiliographic Sourcebook, edited by Louise S. Grinstein and Paul J. Campbell, Greenwood Press, 1987, pp. 208-16. 213, 214 |
Reception | Caroline Herschel | In the beginning CH
's reputation was usually judged more as that of a woman and a sister than as that of a scientist. Frances Burney
's admiration and delight was directed at her as... |
Reception | Mary Somerville | Astronomer Sir John Herschel
reviewed Mechanism of the Heavens, by MS
, in the Quarterly Review. Patterson, Elizabeth Chambers. Mary Somerville and the Cultivation of Science, 1815-1840. Martinus Nijhoff, 1983. 86 |
Reception | Mary Somerville | After conducting a series of trials which involved focussing sunlight on a steel needle, MS
concluded (incorrectly) that the violet rays of the solar spectrum appeared to produce a magnetising effect. The paper was timely... |
Reception | Mary Somerville | MS
was a considerable time employed in writing this book, qtd. in Somerville, Mary. Personal Recollections, from Early Life to Old Age, of Mary Somerville. Editor Somerville, Martha, 1815 - 1879, Roberts Brothers, 1874. 166 |
No bibliographical results available.