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... Philosophical Magazine - Page 841895Full view - About this book
 | Chemistry - 1894 - 448 pages
...were excited in the molecule by rotation instead of translation, or by stress. Now there are about io3 molecules of the sensitive medium in the length of...velocity, which increases and diminishes periodically. It does not seem clear, however, that alternating stress might not be as potent a factor in disintegration... | |
 | English periodicals - 1895 - 614 pages
...Lippmann, that certain effects in colour photography produced by Fox Talbot and Becqucrel were really due to this kind of localization of the photographic effect,...or elasticity between its parts and the surrounding jether, very nearly a swaying to and fro of it as a whole : if it were exactly this, it could not be... | |
 | Joseph Larmor - Electricity - 1929 - 700 pages
...absorption of the radiation. Let us consider the actual circumstances of the case. There are about 1o3 molecules of the sensitive medium in the length of...or elasticity between its parts and the surrounding aether, very nearly a swaying to and fro of it as a whole : if it were exactly this, it could not be... | |
 | Institute of Physics and the Physical Society - Physics - 1895 - 768 pages
...absorption of the radiation. Let us consider the actual circumstances of the caso. There are about 102 molecules of the sensitive medium in the length of...or elasticity between its parts and the surrounding aether, very nearly a swaying to and fro of it as a whole : if it were exactly this, it could not be... | |
 | English periodicals - 1895 - 668 pages
...out by Lord Rayleigh some time previous to Wiener's experiments, and afterwards verified by Lippmann, that certain effects in colour photography produced...or elasticity between its parts and the surrounding fether, very nearly a swaying to and fro of it as a whole : if it were exactly this, it could not be... | |
 | William Thomson, Lord Kelvin - Mathematics - 2011 - 700 pages
...absorption of the radiation. Let us consider the actual circumstances of the case. There are about 1os molecules of the sensitive medium in the length of...or elasticity between its parts and the surrounding aether, very nearly a swaying to and fro of it as a whole : if it were exactly this, it could not be... | |
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