The London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of ScienceTaylor & Francis, 1871 |
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الصفحة 139
... slope ; but in respect to an imaginary one , having a constant direction and a uniform channel and slope , it is possible . I have computed it numerically in respect to a glacier of a uniform rectangular section , slope , direction ...
... slope ; but in respect to an imaginary one , having a constant direction and a uniform channel and slope , it is possible . I have computed it numerically in respect to a glacier of a uniform rectangular section , slope , direction ...
الصفحة 246
... slope of 10 feet from the equator to lat . 56 ° is about the same in steep- ness as a slope of 18 feet from the equator to the pole . It there- fore follows that Herschel , in taking 39 ° as the temperature of maximum density , did not ...
... slope of 10 feet from the equator to lat . 56 ° is about the same in steep- ness as a slope of 18 feet from the equator to the pole . It there- fore follows that Herschel , in taking 39 ° as the temperature of maximum density , did not ...
الصفحة 247
... slope ; for he regards it as the primum mobile of the whole affair , whereas the tendency of the water to run down the slope is regarded as a secondary matter . It is perfectly true that I have not in my paper on the sub- ject taken ...
... slope ; for he regards it as the primum mobile of the whole affair , whereas the tendency of the water to run down the slope is regarded as a secondary matter . It is perfectly true that I have not in my paper on the sub- ject taken ...
الصفحة 249
... slope from the equator to the pole and in sinking to a depth of 10,000 feet or so through the polar water assumed to be warmer than the sur- face - water , comprehends the total amount of work that gravita- tion can possibly perform ...
... slope from the equator to the pole and in sinking to a depth of 10,000 feet or so through the polar water assumed to be warmer than the sur- face - water , comprehends the total amount of work that gravita- tion can possibly perform ...
الصفحة 250
... slope ) comprehends all the work that gravitation can perform on a pound of water in making a complete circuit from the equator to the pole and from the pole back to the equator . This , I trust , will be evident from the following ...
... slope ) comprehends all the work that gravitation can perform on a pound of water in making a complete circuit from the equator to the pole and from the pole back to the equator . This , I trust , will be evident from the following ...
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طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
1+p² acid action æther amount atoms axis body calculated Calculus of Variations carbonic acid centimetres centims chlorine chromosphere circuit consequently constant curve deduced denoted density descend determined diameter differential direction discharge distance earth Edward Sabine effect electric electrodes energy equal equation equatorial column equilibrium Erfx ergal experiments expression feet fluid foot-pounds force formula galvanometer gases given glacier Gulf-stream heat Hence hydrogen inches integral length lines liquid magnetism mass mean metallic metres millimetre millims molecules motion observed obtained particles Phil photosphere pipe plane polar column poles position pound of water pressure produced quantity relay represented repulsion resistance result rotation shearing sin² slope solar solid solution specific gravity spectrum sun's supposed surface temperature terminal stations theory tion tube vapour variation velocity vis viva wave-length waves weight
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 128 - A mind just entering on the subject may consider it difficult to think of the powers of matter independent of a separate something to be called the matter, but it is certainly far more difficult, and indeed impossible, to think of or imagine that matter independent of the powers. Now the powers we know and recognize in every phenomenon of the creation, the abstract matter in none ; why then assume the existence of that of which we are ignorant, which we cannot conceive, and for which there is no...
الصفحة 378 - ... inches, with a focal length of 12 feet. In the Table the first column contains simply the reference number. An asterisk denotes that the line affected by it has no well-marked corresponding dark line in the ordinary solar spectrum.
الصفحة 128 - ... all the facts of what is usually called the atomic theory in chemistry, were dismissed because they were not expressive enough, and did not say all that was in the mind of him who used the word atom in their stead...
الصفحة 124 - You do not surely expect that chemistry should be able to present you with a handful of phlogiston, separated from an inflammable body ; you may just as reasonably demand a handful of magnetism, gravity, or electricity to be extracted from a magnetic, weighty, or electric body. There are powers in nature which cannot otherwise become the objects of sense, than by the effects they produce ; and of this kind is phlogiston.
الصفحة 377 - ... of propagation. Hence the component velocity of the fishing-line perpendicular to the fronts of these waves was the true minimum velocity. To measure it, therefore, all that was necessary was to measure the angle between the two sets of parallel lines of ridges and hollows, sloping away on the two sides of the wake, and at the same time to measure the velocity with which the fishing-line was dragged through the water. The angle was measured by holding a jointed...
الصفحة 378 - The telescope and collimator have each a focal length of nearly 10 inches, and an aperture of \ of an inch. The prism-train consists of five prisms (with refracting angles of 55°) and two half-prisms. The light is sent twice through the whole series by means of a prism of total reflection at the end of the train, so that the dispersive power is that of twelve prisms. The instrument distinctly divides the strong iron line at 1961 of Kirchhoff's scale, and separates B (not li) into its three components....
الصفحة 246 - Summary of recent observations on ocean temperature made in HMS Challenger, and USS Tuscarora; with their bearing on the doctrine of a general oceanic circulation sustained by difference of temperature,
الصفحة 374 - ... of the wave increases ; by and by conterminal waves unite ; the "ridges increase, and if the wind increase the waves become "cusped, and are regular waves of the second order. They con" tinue enlarging their dimensions ; and the depth to which they " produce the agitation increasing simultaneously with their " magnitude, the surface becomes extensively covered with waves
الصفحة 377 - The angle to which the ruler had to be opened in this adjustment was the angle sought. By laying it down on paper, drawing two straight lines by its two edges, and completing a simple geometrical construction with a length properly introduced to represent the measured velocity of the moving solid, the required minimum wave-velocity was readily obtained. Six observations of this kind were made, of which two were rejected as not satisfactory. The following are the results of the other four : — Velocity...
الصفحة 366 - ... and that the components of angular velocity round the three fixed rectangular axes are constant. An isotropic helicoid may be made by attaching projecting vanes to the surface of a globe, in proper positions; for instance, cutting at 45' each at the middles of the twelve quadrants of any three great circles, dividing the globe into eight quadrantal triangles. By making the globe and the vanes of light paper, a body is obtained rigid enough and light enough to illustrate by its motions through...