If a pound of water at 32D be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate between them, or 102°. But if a pound of water at 172° be added to a pound of ice at 32°, the ice will quickly dissolve, and on... Elements of Chemistry: For the Use of Schools - Page 39by John Johnston - 1850 - 383 pagesFull view - About this book
| Edward Turner - 1829 - 508 pages
...thermometer during the process. If a pound of water at 32" be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate...in the mixture, it will be found to stand, not at 102a, but at 32°. In this experiment, the pound of hot water, which was originally at 172J, actually... | |
| Edward Turner - 1835 - 714 pages
...thermometer, during the proeess. If a pound of water at 32° be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate...if a pound of water at 172° be added to a pound of iee at 32°, the iee will quiekly dissolve, and on plaeing a thermometer in the mixture, it will be... | |
| Edward Turner - 1840 - 696 pages
...thermometer, during the process. If a pound of water at 32° be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate between them, or 102°. Bat if a pound of water at 172° be bodies are far less striking when the corrected atomic weights... | |
| John Johnston - 1843 - 586 pages
...thermometer, during the process. If a pound of water at 32D be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate...experiment, the pound of hot water, which was originally at 172D, actually loses 140° of heat, all of which enters into the ice, and causes its liquefaction,... | |
| J. Davy - 1851 - 326 pages
...mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate between them, 102°; but if a pound of water at 172° be added to...will be found to stand, not at 102°, but at 32°. In what two states does Dr. Black suppose heat to exist? Dr. Black supposes caloric to exist in two states,... | |
| J. Davy - 1855 - 378 pages
...at 172°, the temperature will be intermediate between them, 102°; but if a pound of water at 172o be added to a pound of ice at 32°, the ice will quickly...will be found to stand, not at 102° but at 32°. In what two states does Dr. Black suppose heat to exist? In a latent or combined, and free or uncombined.... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1856 - 598 pages
...to his conclusions ? A. He noticed that if a pound of water at 32° be mixed with a pound at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate...stand not at 102°, but at 32°. In this experiment he noticed, therefore, that the pound of hot water, which was originally at 172*, actually lost 140°... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1870 - 408 pages
...to his conclusions ? — He noticed that if a pound of water at 32° be mixed with a pound at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate...will be found to stand not at 102°, but at 32°. What did he notice in this experiment ? — In this experiment he noticed that the pound of hot water,... | |
| Thomas Ruggles Pynchon - 1873 - 644 pages
...shown by a second experiment. If a pound of water at 32° be mixed with a pound of water at 172°, the temperature of the mixture will be intermediate Between them, or 102°, — the mean temperature. But if a pound of water at 172° be added to a pound of ice at 32°, the... | |
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