The Quarterly Journal of Science, Volume 6John Churchill and Sons, 1869 |
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Page 5
... experiments of the late Professor Faraday , connected with " the relations of gold and other metals to light . " These were fully recorded in his Bakerian Lecture , 1857 , and printed in the Philosophical Transactions ' for that year ...
... experiments of the late Professor Faraday , connected with " the relations of gold and other metals to light . " These were fully recorded in his Bakerian Lecture , 1857 , and printed in the Philosophical Transactions ' for that year ...
Page 6
... experiments in stating that fine gold particles so loosely deposited that they wipe off by a light touch of the finger , and possessing one conjoint structure , can in one state transmit light of a blue - grey colour , or can by heat be ...
... experiments in stating that fine gold particles so loosely deposited that they wipe off by a light touch of the finger , and possessing one conjoint structure , can in one state transmit light of a blue - grey colour , or can by heat be ...
Page 7
* After reading the account of Faraday's beautiful and exhaustive experiments , of which I have only referred to one series , I should have despaired of being able to add any information that would elucidate our inquiry had not nature ...
* After reading the account of Faraday's beautiful and exhaustive experiments , of which I have only referred to one series , I should have despaired of being able to add any information that would elucidate our inquiry had not nature ...
Page 21
... EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCHES ON THE MECHA- NICAL PROPERTIES OF STEEL . By WM . FAIRBAIRN , LL.D. , F.R.S. , & c . THE present may be justly considered the age of iron , as in every branch of industry where force , form , and motion are ...
... EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCHES ON THE MECHA- NICAL PROPERTIES OF STEEL . By WM . FAIRBAIRN , LL.D. , F.R.S. , & c . THE present may be justly considered the age of iron , as in every branch of industry where force , form , and motion are ...
Page 23
... experiments , to determine the comparative values of the different kinds of steel , as regards their powers of resistance to transverse , tensile , and compressive strain . These experiments have been instituted not only for those ...
... experiments , to determine the comparative values of the different kinds of steel , as regards their powers of resistance to transverse , tensile , and compressive strain . These experiments have been instituted not only for those ...
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Popular passages
Page 614 - SOUND : a Course of Eight Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. By JOHN TYNDALL, LL.DFRS New Edition, crown 8vo.
Page 115 - Stand with your back to the wind, and the barometer will be lower on your left hand than on your right.
Page 316 - The POLAR WORLD; a Popular Description of Man and Nature in the Arctic and Antarctic Regions of the Globe. By Dr.
Page 575 - ... highly probable, though not completely demonstrated, the applicability to living beings of the laws which have been ascertained with reference to dead matter, I feel constrained at the same time to admit the existence of a mysterious something lying beyond, a something sui generis, which I regard, not as balancing and suspending the ordinary physical laws, but as working with them and through them to the attainment of a designed end. What this something which we call life may be is a profound...
Page 161 - When the durion strikes a man in its fall, it produces a dreadful wound, the strong spines tearing open the flesh, while the blow itself is very heavy ; but from this very circumstance death rarely ensues, the copious effusion of blood preventing the inflammation which might otherwise take place. A Dyak chief informed me that he had been struck down by a durion falling on his head, which he thought would certainly have caused his death, yet he recovered in a very short time.
Page 28 - Science, the objects of which shall be to give a stronger impulse and more systematic direction to scientific inquiry...
Page 578 - Others find its justification, its "raison d'etre," in its being either the torch-bearer leading the way, or the handmaiden holding up the train of Physical Science; and a very clever writer in a recent magazine article, expresses his doubts whether it is, in itself, a more serious pursuit, or more worthy of interesting an intellectual human being, than the study of chess problems or Chinese puzzles.
Page 432 - ... embraces, in one stupendous analogy, the growth of a solar system from molecular chaos, the shaping of the earth from the nebulous cubhood of its youth, through innumerable changes and immeasurable ages, to its present form ; and the development of a living being from the shapeless mass of protoplasm we term a germ.
Page 259 - IT has often been maintained on chemical grounds that hydrogen gas is the vapour of a highly volatile metal. The idea forces itself upon the mind that palladium with its occluded hydrogen is simply an alloy of this volatile metal, in which the volatility of the one element is restrained by its union with the other, and which owes its metallic aspect equally to both constituents.
Page 132 - In about two minutes,' writes the Professor in his preliminary report, dated the I4th of October, 'a reaction commenced. At first a moderate quantity of brown nitrous fumes escaped; these were followed by copious blackish, then grey, then whitish fumes, produced by the escape of steam, carrying with it in suspension a portion of the flux. After the lapse of five or six minutes...