Award of the Boyle Medal and Rep. of Sci. Com. R.D.S. 105 
‘‘On the Appreciation of Ultra-Visible Quantities.””—Proc. Royal Dublin 
Society, 1887. 
‘‘Curious Consequences of a well-known Dynamical Theorem.’?—Proc. 
Royal Dublin Society, 1887. 
“On Texture in Media.’’—Proc. Royal Dublin Society, 1890. 
‘¢On the Limits of Vision and on the Vision of Insects.” —Proc. Royal Dublin 
Society, 1894. 
‘Explanation of Spurious Double Lines in Spectra.’’—British Association 
Report, 1894. 
‘‘On the Kinetic Theory of Gases regarded as Illustrating Nature.’’—Proc. 
Royal Dublin Society, 1895. 
“On Motions competent to produce Groups of Lines which have been observed 
in Spectra.’’—British Association Report, 1895. 
“‘ Kvidence that Réntgen Rays are Ordinary Light.””—Phil. Mag., 1898. 
Many contributions to Astronomy, as:— 
‘¢ Collimator for Adjusting Newtonian Telescopes.’’—British Association Report, 
1856. 
‘On the Connection between Comets and Meteors.’’—Phil. Mag., 1867. 
‘< On the Solar Kclipse of 1868.’’—Phil. Mag., 1867. 
“On the Mounting of Specula.’’—Monthly Notices of Royal Astronomical 
Society. 
‘‘On a Movement designed to give Astronomical Accuracy to the Motions of 
Siderostats.’’—Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 
“Lectures on Meteoric Astronomy before the Royal Dublin Society ’’ (18701) 
and the Royal Institution (1879 and 1897). 
“On the Perturbations of the Leonids’’ (in conjunction with Dr. Downing).— 
Proc. Royal Society, 1899. 
Other Papers on Meteoric Astronomy in the Monthly Notices of the Royal 
Astronomical Society. 
And, what is, perhaps, Dr. Stoney’s most valuable contribution to 
Physical Astronomy :— 
“On the Physical Constitution of the Sun and Stars.’”’—Proc. Royal Society, 
1867. 
This Report would be incomplete without mention of Dr. 
1 See “¢ Journal”’ of the Royal Dublin Society, vol. y., 1870. 
SCIEN. PROC. R.D.S., VOL. IX., PART I. I 
