| Sir Richard Phillips - 1830 - 728 pages
...prevented. — ~~Aiid) in reasoning on this subject, we must not forget to consider that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...experiments, appeared evidently to be inexhaustible. It is hardly necessary to add, that any thing which any insulated body, or system of bodies, can continue... | |
| John Gibson MacVicar - 1830 - 674 pages
...this subject, we must not forget to consider that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of heat, generated by friction, in these experiments, appeared evidently to be inexhaustible. It is hardly necessary to add, that any thing which any insulated body or system of bodies can continue... | |
| John Tyndall - 1863 - 538 pages
...signs of diminution or exhaustion. In reasoning on this subject we must not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...are Rumford's.) It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any insulated body or system of bodies can continue to furnish without limitation cannot... | |
| John Tyndall - 1863 - 500 pages
...signs of diminution or exhaustion. In reasoning on this subject we must not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...are Rumford's.) It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any insulated body or system of bodies can continue to furnish without limitation cannot... | |
| EDWARDL.YOUMANS,M.D. - 1863 - 468 pages
...signs of diminution or exhaustion. In reasoning on this subject we must not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated by friction in these experiments appeared to be inexhaustible. It is hardly necessary to add that any thing which any insulated body or system... | |
| John Tyndall - 1864 - 484 pages
...signs of diminution or exhaustion. In reasoning on this subject we must not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...appeared evidently to be inexhaustible. (The italics are Eumford's.) It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any insulated body or system of bodies... | |
| 1864 - 572 pages
...water. " In reasoning on this subject," he says, " we must not forget to consider that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...experiments, appeared evidently to be inexhaustible." " It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any insulated body, or system of bodies, can continue... | |
| 1865 - 648 pages
...can be called caloric? . . . " In reasoning on this subject we fcust not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...experiments appeared evidently to be inexhaustible. It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any insulatixl body or system of bodies can continue... | |
| John Tyndall - 1865 - 494 pages
...signs of diminution or exhaustion, In reasoning on this subject we must not forget that most remarkable circumstance, that the source of the heat generated...friction in these experiments appeared evidently to be inexfuiustiMe. (The italics are Rumford's.) It is hardly necessary to add, that anything which any... | |
| 1866 - 646 pages
...arsenal at Munich, thus recorded his conclusions, more than two-thirds of a century ago : " The source of heat generated by friction in these experiments, appeared evidently to be inexhaustible. Anything which any insulated body or system of bodies continue to furnish, without limitation, cannot... | |
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