| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1895 - 1196 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave-length. The case is thus analogous to that of deep water waves, only that the potential energy here depends upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity.' Two cases are discussed, but the results are very similar. A particle at the surface moves in an elliptic... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting - 1895 - 1164 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave-length. The case is thus analogous to that of deep water waves, only that the potential energy here depends upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity.'1 Two cases are discussed, but the results are very similar. A particle it the surface moves... | |
| John Milne - 1898 - 346 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave length. The case is thus analogous to that of deep water waves, only that the potential energy here depends upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity.' Two cases are discussed, but the results are very similar. A particle at the surface moves in an elliptic... | |
| John William Strutt Baron Rayleigh - 1900 - 624 pages
...an infinite homogeneous isotropic elastic solid, their character being such that the disturbance ia confined to a superficial region, of thickness comparable...upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity*. Denoting the displacements by a, /3, 7, and the dilatation by 0, we have the usual equations in which... | |
| John Milne - 1908 - 366 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave length. The case is thus analogous to that of deep water waves, only that the potential energy here depends upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity.' Two cases are discussed, but the results are very similar. A particle at the surface moves in an elliptic... | |
| 1899 - 614 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave-length. The case is thus analogous to that of deej)-water waves, only that the potential energy here depends...equations of motion of a vibrating elastic solid, Lord Kayleigh obtains a general solution on the assumptions that the displacements are harmonic functions... | |
| Desert Institute on the Mediterranean Littoral - 1957 - 628 pages
...free surface of an infinite homogeneous isotropic elastic solid, their character being such that the disturbance is confined to a superficial region, of...upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity*. Denoting the displacements by a, /3, 7, and the dilatation by 0, we have the usual equations in which... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1895 - 1166 pages
...region of thickness comparable with the wave-length. The case is thus analogous to that of deep water waves, only that the potential energy here depends upon elastic resilience instead of upon gravity.' Two cases are discussed, but the results are very similar. A particle at the surface moves in an elliptic... | |
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