Online Collections at UoB - Objects
ID number: BIRRC-P0830 Institution: Research and Cultural Collections Named collection: Historic Physics Collection Artist / Maker: J & W Cary Title / Object name: Celestial globe Object type: Astronomical instrument
Place made: Strand, London Date made: March, 1816 Materials: Globe is made of printed paper mounted on plaster. It is mounted in a brass ring supported on a polished wooden stand. Measurements: Globe diameter 40 cm, Overall height 1.4 m
|

|
A celestial globe shows the positions of the stars in the sky marked with symbols representing their brightness (magnitude). It is mounted to rotate about an axis parallel to the axis of the Earth showing how the stars move overhead at night. The axis can be tilted to the latitude of the observer. On this globe the constellations are shown by coloured paintings. In the 1950s and 60s the globe was used in the undergraduate teaching laboratories to train students in basic astronomy, and a manual for this teaching is on file.A celestial globe shows the positions of the stars in the sky marked with symbols representing their brightness (magnitude). It is mounted to rotate about an axis parallel to the axis of the Earth showing how the stars move overhead at night. The axis can be tilted to the latitude of the observer. On this globe the constellations are shown by coloured paintings.
In the 1940s to 60s the globe was used in the undergraduate teaching laboratories to train students in basic astronomy. A manual for this teaching is on file and an earlier version is in the Cadbury Research Library.
Inscriptions / Translations: CARY’S NEW CELESTIAL GLOBE on which are laid down THE WHOLE of the STARS NEBULAE &c contained in the Astronomical Works of the REVD. F. WOLLASTON FRS De la Caille, Herschel, Hevelius, Mayer, Flamsteed, Bradley &c
London: Made and sold by J & W Cary, Strand March 1816
Explanation Greek letters or figures prefixed to the stars signify from the British catalogue a stroke drawn under the figures thus 450 De la Caille H. Hevelius, M. Mayer, CH. C Herschel and B. Bradley
|
20 Related Media Items
<< Viewing Record 193 of 1323 >> |