| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1890 - 1018 pages
...of the inertia of palpable masses, or assemblages of very large numbers of atoms. § 16. It is also wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography and elasticity of solids, and the theruio-elastic properties of solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1890 - 950 pages
...of the inertia of palpable masses, or assemblages of very large numbers of atoms. § 16. It is also wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography...solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition from attraction to repulsion. Suppose, for instance, the mutual force between... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1904 - 724 pages
...— or groups of atoms as explained above (§ 1) — constitutes the Boscovich equilibrium- theory of elastic solids. It is wonderful how much towards...crystallography and elasticity of solids, and the therrno-elastic properties of solids, liquids, and gases, \ve find ; without assuming, in the Boscovichian... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin - 1890 - 578 pages
...of the inertia of palpable masses, or assemblages of very large numbers of atoms. § 16. It is also wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography...solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition from attraction to repulsion. Suppose, for instance, the mutual force between... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin - 1890 - 546 pages
...of the inertia of palpable masses, or assemblages of very large numbers of atoms. § 16. It is also wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography...solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition from attraction to repulsion. Suppose, for instance, the mutual force between... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1890 - 928 pages
...vol. MX, pp. 494-4%. Also, Arnture, October 3, 1889, vol. \L, pp. 545-547.) It is also wonderful bow much towards explaining the crystallography and elasticity...solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition from attraction to repulsion. Suppose for instance the mutual force between... | |
| William Peddie - 1896 - 608 pages
...developments of Boscovich's theory pure and simple — amply justify this statement.' ' It is also wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography...solids, liquids, and gases, we find without assuming more than one transition from attraction to repulsion.' Poisson's theory of the elasticity of solids... | |
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1904 - 776 pages
...for any given homogeneous assemblage of single atoms — or groups of atoms as explained above (ij 1)— constitutes the Boscovich equilibrium-theory...zero for all distances exceeding a certain distance I, which we shall call the diameter of the sphere of influence; is repulsive when the distance between... | |
| Howard Jason Rogers - 1906 - 788 pages
...finally becoming a repulsion when the atoms are very near. He remarks, "It is wonderful how much toward explaining the crystallography and elasticity of solids,...liquids, and gases, we find without assuming in the Boscovitchian law of force more than one transition from attraction to repulsion." The fundamental... | |
| 1902 - 890 pages
...explained above (§ 1) — constitutes the Boseovich equilibrium-theory of elastic solids. Fig. 3. It is wonderful how much towards explaining the crystallography and elasticity of solids, and the thermo-ehistic properties of solids, liquids, and gases, we find ; without assuming, in the Boscovichian... | |
| |