Philosophical MagazineTaylor & Francis., 1875 - Matter |
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Page 2
... temperature as the brine , as far as my own experiments are con- cerned . §4 . Cold produced on mixing saturated Brine with Water . - To examine this point , a series of covered beaker - glasses containing known weights of water , and a ...
... temperature as the brine , as far as my own experiments are con- cerned . §4 . Cold produced on mixing saturated Brine with Water . - To examine this point , a series of covered beaker - glasses containing known weights of water , and a ...
Page 3
... temperature accordingly in the range of ratio between 84 and 90 of water and 16 and 10 of salt , and the greatest depression of temperature to be got by mixing saturated brine with water , is under no circumstance quite 1o C. § 5. If ...
... temperature accordingly in the range of ratio between 84 and 90 of water and 16 and 10 of salt , and the greatest depression of temperature to be got by mixing saturated brine with water , is under no circumstance quite 1o C. § 5. If ...
Page 6
... temperature gradually sinks ; but , as has been shown , the solid part consists of ice , which may be completely freed from salt by mere pressure . This forma- tion of ice continues , and the temperature sinks until the in- ferior limit ...
... temperature gradually sinks ; but , as has been shown , the solid part consists of ice , which may be completely freed from salt by mere pressure . This forma- tion of ice continues , and the temperature sinks until the in- ferior limit ...
Page 7
... temperature is observed at which the ice begins to increase in quantity when the brine is again subjected to cold . TABLE VI . Temperatures at which Brines of various strengths give up Ice . ( 1 ) ( 2 ) ( 3 ) ( 4 ) Water , in grams ...
... temperature is observed at which the ice begins to increase in quantity when the brine is again subjected to cold . TABLE VI . Temperatures at which Brines of various strengths give up Ice . ( 1 ) ( 2 ) ( 3 ) ( 4 ) Water , in grams ...
Page 8
... temperature . Saturated brine at 0o contained • Mother - liquor after keeping at - 10 ° دو دو دو دو دو دو per cent . 26-2724 of NaCl . 24-6528 -10 ° 24-6187 -16 ° 24-1182 -21 ° to 22 ° 23-8874 دو دو دد دو دو دو It is clear , therefore ...
... temperature . Saturated brine at 0o contained • Mother - liquor after keeping at - 10 ° دو دو دو دو دو دو per cent . 26-2724 of NaCl . 24-6528 -10 ° 24-6187 -16 ° 24-1182 -21 ° to 22 ° 23-8874 دو دو دد دو دو دو It is clear , therefore ...
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Popular passages
Page 29 - “I have uttered that I understood not; things too wonderful for me, which I knew not.” “Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in
Page 321 - respectively. Then, at the points where 1 and 1', 2 and 2', 3 and 3', 4 and 4' respectively intersect each other, the potentials will be the sums of the potentials of the intersecting lines; and therefore the potential at all these points is the same, namely
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Page 121 - 0 will be B, A, B', A; but since B and B' are complementary, their suppression will not affect the resulting tint except as to intensity, and the overlap will be effectively deprived of A alone; in other words, it will be of the same tint as the image 0 would be if the combination Q,
Page 155 - In his ‘Essay on the Application of Mathematical Analysis to the Theories of Electricity and Magnetism' (Nottingham, 1828),
Page 243 - that, from the point (about 600°) at which the specific heat of carbon ceases to vary with increase of temperature and becomes comparable with that of other elements, any real difference in the specific heats of the two modifications disappears, and carbon obeys the law of Dulong and Petit.
Page 201 - and Energy,” printed in Phil. Trans. 1873), as conclusively proving that such slags are not denser in the molten than in the solid state, and that the floating referred to is due to other causes. The author returns thanks to several persons for facilities liberally afforded him in making these experiments.
Page 121 - having lost the same tints as B 0, will have lost also the tint A, and will have received besides the addition of two measures of the tint A'. Effect of Combinations of two Colours.—A similar train of reasoning might be applied to the triple overlaps. But the main interest of these parts of the' figure consists in
Page 289 - openings. Thus the resonator's mouth was exposed to the vibrations during an interval which equalled that during which it was screened from them. A rubber tube led from the nipple of the resonator to one ear, while the other ear was tightly closed with a lump of beeswax.
Page 204 - end. (This absorption may ¿ break up into channelled spaces.) Fifth stage ... Unique continuous absorption. 9. I shall content myself in the present note by giving one or two instances of the passage of spectra from one stage to another, beginning at the fifth stage. From 5 to 4.