The Annual of Scientific Discovery, Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and Art, Količina 15Gould, Kendall, and Lincoln, 1865 |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 100
Stran 17
... give more than an outline of this great plan , which may best be briefly described as consisting of three gigan- tic main tunnels or sewers on each side of the river . These completely divide underground London , from west to east , and ...
... give more than an outline of this great plan , which may best be briefly described as consisting of three gigan- tic main tunnels or sewers on each side of the river . These completely divide underground London , from west to east , and ...
Stran 28
... give the amount of oxygen required for illuminating purposes ; i . e . to obtain one part of oxygen four feet of air would be needed , as three feet would be nitrogen . Now , the great difficulty in using air as a substitute for pure ...
... give the amount of oxygen required for illuminating purposes ; i . e . to obtain one part of oxygen four feet of air would be needed , as three feet would be nitrogen . Now , the great difficulty in using air as a substitute for pure ...
Stran 30
... gives the slope in terms of the distance apart of the feet ( metres or yards ) . If you want to establish a given slope , set the foot to the indicated point of the scale , and adjust your plane to the instrument . The lower bar of the ...
... gives the slope in terms of the distance apart of the feet ( metres or yards ) . If you want to establish a given slope , set the foot to the indicated point of the scale , and adjust your plane to the instrument . The lower bar of the ...
Stran 36
... give support and prevent the composition from falling when the alum melts . The proportion of alum is about one quarter of the whole . This would give of water from the compo- sition , at 212 ° , only five per cent . , and at 250 ...
... give support and prevent the composition from falling when the alum melts . The proportion of alum is about one quarter of the whole . This would give of water from the compo- sition , at 212 ° , only five per cent . , and at 250 ...
Stran 38
... give up vapor at a temperature above 212 ° only , was tested in the use of a mixture of sulphate of ammonia and common salt , diluted with powdered coke , which , on the application of heat , yielded sal ammoniac . Experiments were also ...
... give up vapor at a temperature above 212 ° only , was tested in the use of a mixture of sulphate of ammonia and common salt , diluted with powdered coke , which , on the application of heat , yielded sal ammoniac . Experiments were also ...
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action ammonia animals appear aqueous vapor astronomers atmosphere atoms Aye-Aye body British Association carbonic acid Carboniferous cause cent chemical color containing depth Devonian diameter discovery distance earth effect electric equal existence experiments exposed fact feet fire French gases give glass graphite gun-cotton gunpowder gypsum heat hundred hydrochloric acid hydrogen inches insects iron islands length less light lime liquid London magnesium manufacture mass matter metal miles minute moon mountains nature nearly nitrogen observed obtained organic oxygen paper passed phenomena photographic plants plate portion pounds present pressure produced Prof proportion putrefaction quantity rays recent remarkable result rifled rock rubidium safe salt shot side silica soda solar solar parallax solid species spectrum stars steam substance sulphur sulphuric acid sun's surface temperature thallium thickness tion transmutation of species tube velocity vessel weight whole
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 79 - ... melt in air, — the flux of power is eternally the same. It rolls in music through the ages, and all terrestrial energy, — the manifestations of life, as well as the display of phenomena, are but the modulations of its rhythm.
Stran 172 - It is conceivable that the various kinds of matter, now recognized as different elementary substances, may possess one and the same ultimate or atomic molecule existing in different conditions of movement. The essential unity of matter is an hypothesis in harmony with the equal action of gravity upon all bodies. We know the anxiety with which this point was investigated by Newton, and the care he took to ascertain that every kind of substance, ' metals, stones, woods, grain, salts, animal substances,'...
Stran 323 - Star be observed to the East and the other to the West of the Meridian, the Time will be determined with rather more certainty.
Stran 81 - In 1845 he published his Memoir on " Organic Motion," and applied the mechanical theory of heat in the most fearless and precise manner to vital processes. He also embraced the other natural agents in his chain of conservation. In 1853 Mr. Waterston proposed, independently, the meteoric theory of the sun's heat, and in 1854 Professor William Thomson applied his admirable mathematical powers to the development of the theory; but six years previously...
Stran 229 - Assuming 4,000 feet as the greatest depth at which it will ever be possible to carry on mining operations, and rejecting all seams of less than two feet in thickness, the entire quantity of available coal existing in these islands has been calculated to amount to about...
Stran 140 - The rain quits the ocean as vapour; it returns to it as water. How are the vast stores of heat, set free by the change from the vaporous to the liquid condition, disposed of ? Doubtless in great part they are wasted by radiation into space. Similar remarks apply to the cumuli of our latitudes. The warmed air, charged with...