「yerkes」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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Hubble had studied the nebula previously at | Yerkes and Mt. |
Loulis's biological mother remained at | Yerkes and was used for medical research. |
She was a protegee of Charles Tyson | Yerkes, and had $5000 a year from him, enabling her t |
Passing through the Mackay, | Yerkes, and De la Mare art collections, it was eventu |
er, established in 1930 by psychologist Robert | Yerkes and Yale University, was the first laboratory |
ly sound recording star Billy Murray and Harry | Yerkes' band featuring early jazz trombonist Tom Brow |
Yerkes batted and threw right-handed. | |
The suffix "ev" comes from the | Yerkes classification system and stands for "Spectral |
Research is also done utilizing | Yerkes' collection of over 150,000 archival photograp |
Yerkes died in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, at age 82. | |
Biefeld was part of the | Yerkes Eclipse Expedition to Catalina Island in Septe |
Biefeld joined the | Yerkes Eclipse Expedition to Denver, Colorado in 1918 |
ied collection of companies under his control, | Yerkes established the UERL in April 1902 to take con |
Yerkes' final purchase was the Baker Street and Water | |
While at | Yerkes he managed to do some variable star observing |
990 | Yerkes is a minor planet orbiting the Sun. |
In 1942, he began work at the | Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology, then a part o |
After ten months at | Yerkes, Loulis was transferred to Oklahoma with Roger |
(1897-1963), the Russian-born director of the | Yerkes, McDonald and Leuschner observatories in the U |
Affiliated research institutions include | Yerkes National Primate Research Center and the Cente |
University while working with primates at the | Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory Univ |
She was born at the | Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory Univ |
He began his professional career at | Yerkes Observatory under Otto Struve and later went t |
He was the research assistant at the | Yerkes Observatory for the summer of 1919. |
It was observed from the | Yerkes Observatory and the University of California L |
Astronomers at the | Yerkes Observatory waited until just prior to dawn to |
t was discovered by Otto Struve in 1922 at the | Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, USA. |
Yerkes Observatory is most famous for its 102 cm (40 | |
In | Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago he ea |
o years, spending part of that time working at | Yerkes Observatory where he met and married Dorothy W |
where he worked as an assistant astronomer at | Yerkes Observatory and earned a Ph.D. in astronomy fr |
cting telescope in the world, surpassed by the | Yerkes Observatory 40-inch and the Swedish 1-m Solar |
Bosscha Observatory, he took a position at the | Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago and b |
scientific books, a dissertation while at the | Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago, with |
other observatories and telescopes, including | Yerkes Observatory near Chicago, Theodore Jacobsen Ob |
rking for an aging Professor Edwin B. Frost at | Yerkes Observatory partially on the strength of an ar |
In 1905, she started work at | Yerkes Observatory, as assistant and computer for her |
nificant astronomical observatories, including | Yerkes Observatory, Mount Wilson Observatory, Palomar |
It was confirmed by George van Biesbroeck ( | Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin, USA) and Frank Watson |
y where the eclipse was also observed from the | Yerkes Observatory, Lick Observatory and Mount Wilson |
n finished by Edwin B. Frost, then director of | Yerkes Observatory, and Mary R. Calvert. |
George van Biesbroeck and E. E. Barnard ( | Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin, USA) observed that the |
ath in 1923 by Edwin B. Frost, director of the | Yerkes Observatory, and Calvert, and published in 192 |
d-largest) and later the 40-inch (1,000 mm) at | Yerkes Observatory, which remains the largest success |
December 17, 1930 by George Van Biesbroeck at | Yerkes Observatory. |
d on July 30, 1932 by G. Van Biesbroeck at the | Yerkes Observatory. |
His partner of 44 years, Fred | Yerkes, passed on July 8, 2006. |
, when Barnard died, she became curator of the | Yerkes photographic plate collection and a high-level |
In a seven-season career, | Yerkes posted a .268 |
ognize craters on Mars using the great 40-inch | Yerkes refractor. |
Bourne was director of | Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center from 1962 unt |
Orange Park was the home of the | Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center, one of ten r |
ed for two caregivers (Louise and Lisa) at the | Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center in Atlanta, G |
Sarris, Apostolos; Galaty, Michael L.; | Yerkes, Richard W.; Parkinson, William A.; Gyucha, At |
The station is located at | Yerkes Road and Crooked Lane in Upper Merion Township |
Yerkes should be mentioned in Philadelphia related ar | |
uage was called Yerkish, in honor of Robert M. | Yerkes, the founder of the laboratory within which th |
uage was called Yerkish, in honor of Robert M. | Yerkes, the founder of the laboratory within which th |
d paper fell in 1895 into the hands of Charles | Yerkes, the notorious Chicago streetcar boss, who ret |
also known as "Gate Stock", was built for the | Yerkes tube lines, Baker Street and Waterloo Railway |
Her keel was laid down as Charles T. | Yerkes under Maritime Commission contract (Z-ET1-S-C3 |
und railway schemes being developed by Charles | Yerkes' Underground Electric Railways Company of Lond |
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