Nature, 22 tomasSir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1880 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 60
iv psl.
... Atoms , Vortex , S. Tolver Preston , 121 Atti della R. Accademia dei Lincei , 234 Audiphone , a New , Thos . Fletcher , 145 Audition , Binaural , Prof. Graham Bell's Experiments in , 586 August Perseids of 1880 , W. F. Denning , 470 ...
... Atoms , Vortex , S. Tolver Preston , 121 Atti della R. Accademia dei Lincei , 234 Audiphone , a New , Thos . Fletcher , 145 Audition , Binaural , Prof. Graham Bell's Experiments in , 586 August Perseids of 1880 , W. F. Denning , 470 ...
v psl.
... Atomic Volumes of Certain Elements and the Heat of Formation of some of their Compounds , Walter Weldon , 448 ; on the Specific Rotary Power of Cane and Invert - Sugar , Alfred H. Allen , 448 ; on the Identification of the Coal - Tar ...
... Atomic Volumes of Certain Elements and the Heat of Formation of some of their Compounds , Walter Weldon , 448 ; on the Specific Rotary Power of Cane and Invert - Sugar , Alfred H. Allen , 448 ; on the Identification of the Coal - Tar ...
vii psl.
... Atoms , 95 Darwin's Theory of the Origin of Coral Reefs and Islands , 351 Darwinian Essays , Two , Alfred R. Wallace , 141 Darwinism , Degeneration , a Chapter in , Prof. E. Ray Lan- kester , F.R.S. , 141 Daubrée ( M. ) , on Descartes ...
... Atoms , 95 Darwin's Theory of the Origin of Coral Reefs and Islands , 351 Darwinian Essays , Two , Alfred R. Wallace , 141 Darwinism , Degeneration , a Chapter in , Prof. E. Ray Lan- kester , F.R.S. , 141 Daubrée ( M. ) , on Descartes ...
xii psl.
... Atomic Weight and Valence of Aluminium , " 21 ; Artificial Diamonds , 192 ; Geology of the Henry Mountains , 266 Mallory Screw , a New Vessel Propelled by , 252 Malvern Hills , Camps on the , 211 Mammoth Skull , Discovery of , at Posen ...
... Atomic Weight and Valence of Aluminium , " 21 ; Artificial Diamonds , 192 ; Geology of the Henry Mountains , 266 Mallory Screw , a New Vessel Propelled by , 252 Malvern Hills , Camps on the , 211 Mammoth Skull , Discovery of , at Posen ...
xiv psl.
... Atom Theory , 145 ; S. Tolver Preston , 56 Physical Science in Russia , 207 Physics without Apparatus , 320 , 343 , 366 , 438 , 462 , 488 , 537 , 588 66 Physiological Chemistry , " by Prof. A. Gamgee , F.R.S. , 398 ; Dr. M. Foster ...
... Atom Theory , 145 ; S. Tolver Preston , 56 Physical Science in Russia , 207 Physics without Apparatus , 320 , 343 , 366 , 438 , 462 , 488 , 537 , 588 66 Physiological Chemistry , " by Prof. A. Gamgee , F.R.S. , 398 ; Dr. M. Foster ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
acid Albanian American Ångström apparatus appear atomic weight atoms aurora body carbon carbonic acid cells centimetres chemical colour comet connection containing corresponding crannog described diameter direction discharge effect electric electromotive force Eocene exhibited existence experiments fact feet galvanometer geological give glass heat Herr hydrogen inches increase interesting iron Islands Journal Lake larvæ less light lines liquid Livadia magnetic matter means Medusa ment metal Miocene molecular molecules motion Museum nature nitrogen North observations Observatory obtained original oxygen paper perihelion phenomena phosphorescent physical plates pole portion position present pressure probably produced Prof published RAY LANKESTER recent regard region remarkable researches rocks rotation Royal Society scientific seen Silurian solution South species specimens spectra spectrum stone sulphuric acid surface temperature theory tion tube vapour various volume weight wire
Populiarios ištraukos
183 psl. - FELKIN, HM— Technical Education in a Saxon Town. Published for the City and Guilds of London Institute for the Advancement of Technical Education.
xxi psl. - History warns us, however, that it is the customary fate of new truths to begin as heresies and to end as superstitions...
135 psl. - ... example, sulphate of copper. Two wires, one connected with the positive, and the other with the negative pole of a...
1 psl. - Primary and direct evidence in favour of evolution can be furnished only by palaeontology. The geological record, so soon as it approaches completeness, must, when properly questioned, yield either an affirmative or a negative answer : if evolution has taken place, there will its mark be left ; if it has not taken place, there will lie its refutation.
ix psl. - GARNETT (W.) A Treatise on Elementary Dynamics for the use of Colleges and Schools. By William Garnett, BA (late Whitworth Scholar), Fellow of St. John's College, and Demonstrator of Physics in the University of Cambridge. Crown 8vo.
82 psl. - And he said, BLESSED be the Lord God of Shem ; And Canaan shall be his servant. God shall enlarge Japheth, And he shall dwell in the tents of Shem ; And Canaan shall be his servant.
154 psl. - But by great rarefaction the free path is made so long that the hits in a given time may be disregarded in comparison to the misses, in which case the average molecule is allowed to obey its own motions or laws without interference; and if the mean free path is comparable to the dimensions of the vessel, the properties which constitute gaseity are reduced to a minimum, and the matter becomes exalted to an ultra-gaseous state, in which the very decided but hitherto masked properties now under investigation...
219 psl. - You write two or three words on a paper ; he takes it with him into a room, and turns a machine enclosed in a cylindrical case, at the top of which is an electrometer, a small fine pith ball : a wire connects with a similar cylinder and electrometer in a distant apartment, and his wife by remarking the corresponding motions of the ball, writes down the words they indicate, from which it appears that he has formed an alphabet of motions. As the length of the wire makes no difference in the effect,...
1 psl. - To those who are familiar with the process of development all d priori objections to the doctrine of biological evolution appear childish. Any one who has watched the gradual formation of a complicated animal from the protoplasmic mass which constitutes the essential element of a frog's or a hen's egg has had under his eyes sufficient evidence that a similar evolution of the animal world from the like foundation is, at any rate, possible.
2 psl. - 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.