| Cambridge Philosophical Society - 1842 - عدد الصفحات: 458
...is, that we are necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are...consideration of non-crystallized media; for which it is proved, that the function due to the molecular actions, in its most general form, contains only... | |
| James David Forbes - 1856 - عدد الصفحات: 218
...with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are requisite and tvflcient for the complete solution of any problem to which it may be applied." Л consideration of the candid admissions of the preceding paragraphs (especially the last sentence)... | |
| Isaac Todhunter - 1886 - عدد الصفحات: 968
...is that we are necessarily led by the mere; process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are requisite and sufficient for the complete solutions of any problem to which it may be applied. The mechanical principle which Green uses, we... | |
| Augustus Edward Hough Love - 1892 - عدد الصفحات: 396
...is that we are necessarily led by the mere " process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all " the equations and conditions which...solution of any problem to which it may be applied." The function here spoken of, with its sign changed, is the potential energy of the strained elastic solid... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1894 - عدد الصفحات: 1272
...is, that we are necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are...solution of any problem to which it may be applied.' On the practical application of this procedure some fresh 1 Lord Kelvin (Sir W. Thomson), Phil. Mag.,... | |
| Arthur Schuster - 1904 - عدد الصفحات: 466
...is, that we are necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are...solution of any problem to which it may be applied." The function introduced above by Green we now call " Potential Energy," and a particular interest attaches... | |
| Augustus Edward Hough Love - 1906 - عدد الصفحات: 580
...that we are " necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care "on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are...solution of any problem to which it may be "applied." 39 'Memoire sur 1'equilibre interieur des corps Bolides homogenes,' Pan'*, Mem. par divert savants,... | |
| T. M. Charlton - 2002 - عدد الصفحات: 208
...is that we are necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations and conditions which are...solution of any problem to which it may be applied. It relates in fact to the potential energy, of a strained elastic body, expressed in terms of strains;... | |
| Olivier Darrigol - 2003 - عدد الصفحات: 566
...that we are necessarily led by the mere process of the calculation, and with little care on our pan, to all the equations and conditions which are requisite...solution of any problem to which it may be applied': Thomson to Stokes, 20 October 1 847. in Wilson 1990: 32 1for least action applied to impulsively staned... | |
| عدد الصفحات: 688
...is that we are necessarily led by the mere "process of the calculation, and with little care on our part, to all the equations "and conditions which are...solution of "any problem to which it may be applied." The function here spoken of, with its sign changed, is the potential energy of the strained elastic body... | |
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