EEPORTS OF ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORIES. 7 Of) 



recently added a .spectrosco])0 witli Iceland spar])risin hihI (piartz lenses 

 for photograijby of spectra of stars. 



Underneath the Observatory are two rooms, oiio devoted to chemistry 

 and photography, the other to ])hysieal experiiiients in coimectitm with 

 spectrum analysis. 



Work in 1S80: 



Contiunation and comi)letion of a series of ])hotographs of spectra of 

 various stars. liesearches in connet^tion with these spectra. 



(See Philosophical Trai:saetions of Eoyal Society of London, 1880, 

 Part I, p. GG9.) 



LtJBECK, Germany. 

 Sternicarte. 



Longitude from Greenwich, 42'" 45^55 E. 



Latitude, 



Director : 



Latitude, 53--^ 51' 31".2 N 



Lund, Sweden. 

 Lund Observatory. 



Longitude fi'om Greenwich, 52'" 45^02 E. 



Latitude, 55° 41' 52".05 IS. 



Authority for latitude and longitude: ITudersokning af Meridian 

 cirkeln pii Lunds Observatorium jemte bestamming af dentammas 

 folhojd af And. Lindstedt. Bestimmung der Laugen-Difiereuz 

 zwischen Berlin nnd Lund, auf telegraphischem Wege ausgetiihrt iin 

 Jahre 18G8. Uerausgegebeu von C. Bruhns. 



Directors : 



A. Lidtgreen, 1786; 



-,1815; 



J. M. xlGARDT, 1847 ; 



Axel Moller, jjro/mor of astronomy. 

 Assistants: N. C. Duner, observer; 



F. Enghtrom, eand. pliil. 

 Founded as a dependency of the University about 1 7(](). Keorganized 



in 180(5. 



Instruments: • tt i ^ 



(a) Meridian circle: oue; makers, A. & G. Bepsold, m Hamburg; 

 diameter of circles, 31) inches (1 meter); divided to 2'; read by 4 micro- 

 scopes to 0.1"; aperture of objective, U inches (l.i3".".); magndnng 

 Dower ordinarilv employed, 173 diameters. 



"^ (0) E,uatori.;linsL^ents: makers, G. & S. Mi..z, m Muiuc. a.n^. 

 JuNaER,in Copenhagen; aperture of objective, Di n.ches (24o' ), mag- 



S. Mis. 31 45 



