^6 Mr. Herschel's and Mr. South's observations of the apparent 
No. XXII. R. A. i h 47 m ; Decl. 7 6° 25' N. 
47 Cassiopeia ; Struve 49 ; (*) 
Double; extremely unequal ; large white, small blue ; mag- 
nitudes 4 and 10; very difficult. 
Position. 
O t 
78. o 
76.36 
79-3 1 
77-55 
1 
j 
76. 5 ) 
78. o j 
H 
S 
Mean = 77.41 
Dec. 21, 1821. 
Five-feet Equatorial. 
sp 
Position = 77°.4 i' sp 
Distance = i'.33."594 
Distance. 
Parts. 
299. o ) 
297. o S 
296. 5 ) 
295. o j 
H 
S 
Mean ~ — 296.87 
Z ™ — 0.52 
296.35 
No. XXIII. 
R. A. i h 48“ ; Decl. 22 0 43' N. 
44- 33 
42.55 
43-33 
44.50 
44.28^ 
43- 5" 
44.58 
44.50 
45- 3° 
44 - 32 . 
Mean =44.19 
x Arietis ; Struve 50 ; V. 12 ; 
Large white ; small blue, pretty unequal. 
Nov. 29, 1821. 
Five-feet Equatorial. 
nf 
Position. 
VH 
>-s 
Position = 44°.i9 / nf 
Distance = 37 // .889 
Mean = 120.25 
Z= — ■ 0.28 
119.97 
According to Sir W. Herschel (Catalogue of 1782), the 
measures of this star are 
Position 42 0 o' nf ; Distance 36''. 61 ; 1781.83. 
Mr. Struve has also measured this star (Dorpat Obs. ii. page 
167. Obs. 145), and states the position at 43 0 42' nf, (mean 
of 3 observations). A subsequent measure (Dorpat Obs. iii. 
p. 134) makes it 45 0 1' nf ; mean 44 0 21 ' nf\ Epoch 1820.39. 
* Entered in Struve’s and South’s Catalogues as V. 84. In the Catalogue of 
1785, V. 84, is called FI. 47 : ; Cassiopeise, but is evidently a different star. 
