On the lunar atmospheric tide at St. Helena
The results of the observations made by Captain Lefroy, of the Royal Artillery, Director of the Magnetical and Meteorological Observatory at St. Helena, are here given; from which it appears, on the examination of the barometrical changes during seventeen months, that a maximum of pressure corresponds to the moon’s passage over both the inferior and superior meridians, being slightly greater in the latter case, and that a minimum corresponds nearly to the rising and setting, or to six hours before and after the former periods. The average atmospheric pressures are 28·2714 inches in the first case, and 28·2675 in the last; the difference being 0'0039 inch. The height of the cistern of the barometer above the sea is 1764 feet; and the latitude of the Observatory 15° 57' S. These results were still further confirmed by those of a series of observations during two years. These observations also establish the conclusion that the moon exerts a greater influence on the amount of atmospheric pressure at the periods of her perigee than at those of her apogee.