Philosophical MagazineTaylor & Francis., 1895 - Physics |
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Results 1-5 of 81
Page 6
... the one terminal H left has a value 1.1 in ( M2 ) and 4.5 in Mß , we can calculate at once from the schemes in Table IV . the values of the halogen atoms in ( M2 ) * , and also the limiting volumes 6 Mr. William Sutherland on the.
... the one terminal H left has a value 1.1 in ( M2 ) and 4.5 in Mß , we can calculate at once from the schemes in Table IV . the values of the halogen atoms in ( M2 ) * , and also the limiting volumes 6 Mr. William Sutherland on the.
Page 11
... is really immaterial in comparison with other unavoidable roughnesses in these cal- culations . The formula by which Quincke calculated a from The his experimental data is not exact ( see Worthington , Laws of Molecular Force . 11.
... is really immaterial in comparison with other unavoidable roughnesses in these cal- culations . The formula by which Quincke calculated a from The his experimental data is not exact ( see Worthington , Laws of Molecular Force . 11.
Page 13
... calculation and experiment . Proceeding to take the differ- ences for the compounds of the dibasic acids , we get for K - Na , 1.9 in the carbonates , 1-8 in the sulphates , 1 · 4 in the chromates , 1.9 in the bichromates , and 1.6 in ...
... calculation and experiment . Proceeding to take the differ- ences for the compounds of the dibasic acids , we get for K - Na , 1.9 in the carbonates , 1-8 in the sulphates , 1 · 4 in the chromates , 1.9 in the bichromates , and 1.6 in ...
Page 16
... calculation , for the inorganic compounds the values of F come out about 11 times their values as found in organic compounds ( see also the values for Br and I above ) . This is a satisfactory result so far as it goes , but on the ...
... calculation , for the inorganic compounds the values of F come out about 11 times their values as found in organic compounds ( see also the values for Br and I above ) . This is a satisfactory result so far as it goes , but on the ...
Page 18
... calculated as the collisional pressure per unit surface , that is the force transmitted across that surface by the collisions of molecules , or rather atoms , of diameter E , average distance e from next neighbour , and kinetic enegy D ...
... calculated as the collisional pressure per unit surface , that is the force transmitted across that surface by the collisions of molecules , or rather atoms , of diameter E , average distance e from next neighbour , and kinetic enegy D ...
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Popular passages
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Page 147 - As a unit of resistance, the international ohm, which is based upon the ohm equal to 10" units of resistance of the CGS system of electromagnetic units, and is represented by the resistance offered to an unvarying electric current by a column of mercury at the temperature of melting ice, 14.4521 grams in mass, of a constant cross-sectional area and of the length of 106.3 centimetres.
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Page 136 - That gravity should be innate, inherent and essential to matter, so that one body may act upon another at a distance through a vacuum, without the mediation of any thing else, by and through which their action and force may be conveyed from one to another, is to me so great an absurdity, that I believe no man who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty of thinking, can ever fall into it.
Page 88 - Helmholtzt, on the basis of the formal equations of Heaviside and Hertz, in which the free aether is still supposed to be an elastic medium of excessively small density in which the dense atoms are imbedded. If such a view should turn out to be the basis of a consistent body of theory, the considerations given above with respect to the intensities of molecular tractions would have a bearing on it also. Let us now consider more particularly the explanation that would be offered by the electric theory...
Page 84 - There are about 1U3 molecules of the sensitive medium in the length of a single wave of light : thus in the stationary wavetrain all the parts of a single molecule would at any instant be moving with a sensibly uniform velocity, which...
Page 144 - I. The Object to be Attained. SOME time ago the authors considered the possibility of constructing an apparatus for the determination of the mechanical equivalent of heat which could be placed in the hands of junior students, and which would enable a sufficiently accurate result to be obtained without the introduction of troublesome corrections. For such a purpose the electrical method was naturally adopted ; for now that the commercial values of the electrical units are known with considerable accuracy...
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Page 87 - I~ 77) i an<l the phenomena of crystalline media could be included by assuming a vector-coefficient instead of the scalar a. The conclusion, then, is that in this limited range an elasticsolid theory of a very rare aether is not so much at fault as would at first sight appear. A theory based on difference of rigidity without difference of inertia, after...
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