comparative Brightness of the Stars. 4,81 
<£ among the red, or ruddy stars ; which formerly I did not 
<e use to do.” 
Catalogue and Atlas. 
si, 29, 72, and 73 should be out. 
Atlas. 
17 requires — 15' in PD. 
Notes to Leo. 
‘‘Order of magnitude May 12, 1783. * i'" m y 2' m 
(2 2 ' m 2 s ^ 9 y [a o ^ v <r.” 
25 There is no observation of this star by Flamsteed ; but 
if — 14' 30" in RA and -f- 2* 2,5' 25" in PD be applied, ac- 
cording to the edition of 1712, the place will then agree with 
10 Sextantis. There are two very small stars near the place 
where 25 is put in Atlas ; one of them is the star V. 63, which 
in my catalogue of double stars is called 25 Leonis. 
2 6 There is an observation of this star by Flamsteed on 
page 299 ; but it is defective. 
28 There is an observation without time on page 299, 
marked “ Leonis taken after the transit of Mars, which has 
probably occasioned the insertion of 28 into the British cata- 
logue ; but the observed star must have been 11 Sextantis. 
38 In the observation, March 10, 1691 ; the number 821,66 
is cast up 6 degrees too little, which produced this star ; when 
the error is corrected, we find that the star observed was 3 7. 
41 This is the double star in my second catalogue I. 28, 
and by a series of observations, it appears now that the dis- 
tance between the two stars is considerably increased, since 
sQ. 2 
