Search Results for "astronomy"
Kindly Urania
history of scienceWho is the earliest female author on the shelves of the Royal Society Library? Rupert Baker investigates...
The Lady Computers of the Royal Observatory
history of scienceGuest blogger Louise Devoy reflects on the first generation of paid female astronomers at Greenwich, who helped to prove that women could actively contribute to professional science.
Spectral presence
history of scienceKatherine Marshall looks at the life of Lady Margaret Huggins, and her significant work in spectroscopic astrophotography in the late nineteenth century.
The nearly man
history of scienceAinsley Vinall tells the story of the astronomer Alexander Aubert FRS, the subject of an oil painting recently purchased by the Royal Society.
Observing general relativity
history of scienceHow did a solar eclipse in May 1919 help to prove Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity? Vida Milovanovic tells the story.
Herschel, old and new
history of science91TV’s Herschel collection is growing! Keith Moore describes how a new acquisition provides insights into the wider Herschel family and their scientific endeavours.
Digitising the Herschel letters
history of scienceSir John Herschel’s careful management of his correspondence, and his central position in nineteenth-century science, make the Royal Society’s Herschel letters an invaluable archival resource, as Eloise Barber discovers during a major new digitisation project.
Magnetic Halley
history of scienceJon Bushell looks at the Royal Society's portraits of Edmond Halley, and a diagram of Halley's curious model for the internal structure of the Earth.
The power of sound
history of scienceAlice Oates explains how the technique known as sonification can enhance astronomers’ ability to analyse large, complex datasets, and can also facilitate access to space sciences for blind and partially sighted people.
The first lady’s comet
history of scienceDr Patricia Fara tells the story of Caroline Herschel, concert soprano turned astronomer, unkindly caricatured in Georgian times as ‘The Female Philosopher, smelling out the Comet’.
Comet tales
history of scienceKeith Moore looks to the skies for comets past and present.
Paper machines
history of scienceLouisiane Ferlier marvels at the paper tools - including quadrants, dials and volvelles - hidden within some of the oldest astronomy books in the Royal Society Library.