Bulletin de I Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres, et des Beauxr Arts de Belgique, 1873, No. 11. Among the papers in this report of the work of the Belgian Academy, is one by M. Terby, giving the results of observations on Mars and Jupiter in 1871 and 1872-3.
It is illustrated by
fourteen figures of Jupiter and twelve of Mars. The Jupiter drawings exhibit
some remarkable changes in the two polar “ calottes ” or dark parts. In 1872,
the north polar region was usually darker than the southern, while in 1873 the
contrary was often the case, though the southern one was always of smaller
dimension. The drawings also exhibit curious variations in the shape of the
belts, as seen at successive dates when the rotation of the planet caused it to
present the same portion of its surface to the observer. The Mars sketches may
be advantageously compared with Browning's stereographs, and with drawings he
published in the Intellectual Observer, vol. xii. ; but M. Terby’s telescope,
only 9 centimétres of useful aperture,”
or little more than 3 inches, could only give a distinct view of the more
delicate markings in exceptionally fine weather.
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