Agnes Mary Clerke
#59,477
Most Influential Person Across History
British astronomer
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Physics
Why Is Agnes Mary Clerke Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Agnes Mary Clerke was an Irish astronomer and writer, mainly in the field of astronomy. She was born in Skibbereen, County Cork, Ireland, and died in London. Family Agnes Clerke was the daughter of John William Clerke who was, at the time, a bank manager in Skibbereen, and his wife Catherine Mary Deasy whose father was a judge's registrar. She had two siblings; her older sister, Ellen Mary and her younger brother, Aubrey St. John . Her elder sister Ellen also wrote about astronomy. All of the Clerke children were entirely home schooled.
Agnes Mary Clerke's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- An Historical and Descriptive List of some Double Stars Suspected to Vary in Light (1888) (194)
- A popular history of astronomy during the nineteenth century .. (102)
- Solar Physics (1886) (44)
- A Prolonged Sunspot Minimum (1894) (35)
- A New Cosmogony (1887) (19)
- Globular Star Clusters (1888) (12)
- The Herschels And Modern Astronomy (7)
- Sunspot Observations in Hungary (3)
- The Distribution of the Stars (1893) (2)
- New Double Stars (1889) (1)
- The distance of the Pleiades (1893) (1)
- Homeric Astronomy (1887) (1)
- THE SYSTEM OF ALGOL. (1892) (1)
- The System of the Stars (2nd edition) (1)
- Photographic Star-Gauging (1889) (1)
- Stellar Spectra and Stellar Velocities (1893) (0)
- Star Distances (1889) (0)
- A New Cosmogony1 (0)
- Helium in long-period variables (1899) (0)
- The Sun's Motion in Space (1891) (0)
- Stars with Banded Spectra (1886) (0)
- Bright-line stars of the Wolf-Rayet type (0)
- Kepler's Correspondence with Herwart von Hohenburg (1886) (0)
- Homeric Astronomy (0)
- Correspondence of Christian Huygens (1889) (0)
- Langley's New Astronomy (1888) (0)
- Physical Hypotheses (0)
- The Early Correspondence of Christian Huygens (1888) (0)
- The Observation of Red Stars (1891) (0)
- Irregular Star Clusters (1888) (0)
- THE SYSTEM OF ZETA CANCRI. (1890) (0)
- Recent Photographs of the Annular Nebula in Lyra (1891) (0)
- The spectra of the Orion nebula and of the aurora (1889) (0)
- The Yale College Measurement of the Pleiades (1887) (0)
- The Sun's Dusky Veil (0)
- Professor Newcomb's Determination of the Velocity of Light (1886) (0)
- Recent determinations of the Sun's movement in space (1902) (0)
- Professor Newcomb's Determination of the Velocity of Light (0)
- Progress of astronomical photography (1894) (0)
- Note on the period of ζ Geminorum (1901) (0)
- Stellar spectroscopy at the Lick Observatory (0)
- The spectrum of Mira Ceti (1899) (0)
- The Sun as a Bright-Line Star (1893) (0)
- Huygens and his Correspondents (1891) (0)
- Where did the nebulae get their helium (1906) (0)
- The Correspondence of Christian Huygens (1892) (0)
- Five short-period variables (1896) (0)
- The Pleiades (0)
- Rigel and the great nebula (1890) (0)
- The new star in Auriga (1892) (0)
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