Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . owever, Dr. Arctowski came to believe in both propo-sitions, and said: I have become more enthusiastic about them eventhan Dr. Abbot himself. a. Referring to Dr. Arctowskis paper, reference No. 14 above, Ireproduce his figures 1, 3, 4, and 5 as figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 herein. b. Referring to L. B. Aldrichs administrative report on the Astro-physical Observatory for 1952 (Rep. Secretary Smithsonian Inst.,1952, p. 131), I reproduce here as figure 5 his figure showing thecorrelation of solar-constant measures with sunspot numbers. c. Referring to my paper We


Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . owever, Dr. Arctowski came to believe in both propo-sitions, and said: I have become more enthusiastic about them eventhan Dr. Abbot himself. a. Referring to Dr. Arctowskis paper, reference No. 14 above, Ireproduce his figures 1, 3, 4, and 5 as figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 herein. b. Referring to L. B. Aldrichs administrative report on the Astro-physical Observatory for 1952 (Rep. Secretary Smithsonian Inst.,1952, p. 131), I reproduce here as figure 5 his figure showing thecorrelation of solar-constant measures with sunspot numbers. c. Referring to my paper Weather Predetermined by Solar Vari-ation, reference No. 18 above, I reproduce figure 6 of that paper asfigure 6 here. I call attention to the similarity of the full and dottedcurves of the figure. This similarity indirectly proves the correlationclaimed as c, above. Each month the curves represent means of effectson numerous occasions. SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 122 4000 3OO0 3000 IOOO /<? 16 19 26 3. Fig. i.—Variations of the solar constant and of areas of solar faculae. Dailysolar-constant values for February and March, 1926, and areas of faculae. *0 3000 IOOO


Size: 1831px × 1365px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidsmiths, booksubjectscience