Blackburn Standard Wednesday 4th March 1840
THE COMET
To the Editor of the Blackburn Standard.
Sir, —Will you have
the goodness to insert in the Standard the following account of a comet which
is now seen: it is written by Mr. Moses Holden, whose lectures many of your
readers will remember, and appeared in the Preston papers of last Saturday:-
" A second Comet
has appeared this year, although the month of February is not yet out. This
second is very small, and can only be seen with a good telescope. I saw it on
the 23rd, it was little above the girdle of Andromeda, and did not look half
large as the Nebula in that girdle, nor half as large as Encke's Comet. Its
movement for the week along the girdle of Andromeda, as it passes the stars, is
as follows,
Feb 1840 29 28
27 26 25
24 23
o o o
o o o
o Comet.
Nu*
Beta * Mu* 0 Nebula
An equatorial telescope turned to right ascension, in time 1
hour and 15 minutes, and declination 35 deg,
5 min., will be near the place, and with a Comet eye-piece would soon
find it this evening.

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