I think, therefore, it would be more philosophical, and more directly expressive of the facts, to speak of such a body in relation to the current passing through it, rather than to the poles, as they are usually called, in contact with it; and say that... The Fundamental Laws of Electrolytic Conduction: Memoirs by Faraday, Hittorf ... - Page 51by Michael Faraday, Johann Wilhelm Hittorf, Friedrich Wilhelm Georg Kohlrausch - 1899 - 95 pagesFull view - About this book
| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 634 pages
...and that in larger or smaller quantities, according as the current is more or less powerful (377.). I think, therefore, it would be more philosophical,...under decomposition, oxygen, chlorine, iodine, acids, &c., are rendered at its negative extremity, and combustibles, metals, alkalies, bases, &c., at its... | |
| Arthur Turnbull - 1919 - 360 pages
...direction than in another, and consequently making them travel by a series of successive decompositions and recompositions in opposite directions, and finally...alkalies, bases, etc., at its positive extremity. I do not believe that a substance can be transferred in the electric current beyond the point where... | |
| Sydney Ross - 1991 - 254 pages
...decomposition — and not external, as they might be considered, if directly dependent upon the poles. ... I think, therefore, it would be more philosophical,...alkalies, bases, etc., at its positive extremity. One experiment in particular seemed to Faraday of prime importance in proving his thesis: his published... | |
| 1833 - 456 pages
...and that in larger or smaller quantities, according as the current is more or less powerful (3770- I think, therefore, it would be more philosophical,...more directly expressive of the facts, to speak of a decomposing body, in relation to the current passing through it, rather than to the poles, as they... | |
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