Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Volume 7Taylor & Francis, 1964 |
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Page 308
... medium , the mass becomes more diamagnetic , be- cause a certain quantity of the magnetic medium is thus replaced by the less magnetic matter . Dr. Tyndall seems to have assumed , that on the compression of an aggregate of particles of ...
... medium , the mass becomes more diamagnetic , be- cause a certain quantity of the magnetic medium is thus replaced by the less magnetic matter . Dr. Tyndall seems to have assumed , that on the compression of an aggregate of particles of ...
Page 451
... medium assumed in these cases , the resultant attraction of the cubical mass will always be greatest , or repulsion least , when the force acts in the line of compression , no matter how diamagnetic the cube may have become by ...
... medium assumed in these cases , the resultant attraction of the cubical mass will always be greatest , or repulsion least , when the force acts in the line of compression , no matter how diamagnetic the cube may have become by ...
Page 453
... medium from its interstices is more than supplied by the magnetic matter which takes its place ; " for , according to what has already been advanced , the excess of the attraction of the material particles above that of the medium they ...
... medium from its interstices is more than supplied by the magnetic matter which takes its place ; " for , according to what has already been advanced , the excess of the attraction of the material particles above that of the medium they ...
Contents
On a Class of Differential Equations including those which occur | 4 |
Note on the Decomposition of Sulphuric Acid by Pentachloride | 11 |
On some new Compounds of Phenyl By Alexander Williamson | 18 |
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action alcohol angular aperture animal aperture appear attraction axis baryta bismuth body Brachiopoda carbonate cause cavity cells chloride coefficients Col du GĂ©ant colour communication compound considerable containing copper corresponding crystals datiscine determined diamagnetic direction disc distilled ducts effect electricity equations examination experiments F.R.S. Received fact fibres fluid force function galvanometer glacier glottis gutta percha heat hydrochloric acid hydrogen inches intestine investigation iron latter light liver magnetic mass mean membrane memoir metal minute muscle muscular nitric acid nitrous object-glass oblique observations obtained odd number osmose ovum oxide paper phenomena phenyl phosphoric acid plane polar portion potash present pressure produced Professor quantity refracted remarkable researches Rhynchonella rotation Royal Society salt Samuel Charles Whitbread solution specimens starch stearopten structure substance sulphate sulphuric acid surface temperature theory tion tube urine variation Waldheimia whilst wire