| 1774 - 628 pages
...molecules of which the movement is sensibly affected by heat, with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding, inferior atoms following as a unit — laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| 1863 - 982 pages
...molecules of which the movement is sensibly affected by heat with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, fallowing as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| 1864 - 382 pages
...molecules of which the movement is sensibly affected by heat, with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, following, as a unit, laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| 1865 - 388 pages
...projectile velocity. Matter is thus made to differ only in being lighter or denser matter. The specific motion of an atom being inalienable, light matter...alternative hypothesis of emission and undulation, so m molecular mobility the motion may be assumed to reside either in separate atoms and molecules or... | |
| 1867 - 378 pages
...molecules of which the movement is sensibly affected by heat, with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, following, as a unit, laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow - 1887 - 516 pages
...the movement is sensibly affected by heat, with gaseous expansion as the result. According to Graham the gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the inferior atoms, following as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent atoms. He... | |
| Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1894 - 406 pages
...whose movement is sensibly affected by heat, with gaseous expansion as the result. According to Graham the gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the inferior atoms, following as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent atoms. He... | |
| 1864 - 1214 pages
...the movement of which is sensibly affected by heat with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaáeous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, following as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| 1863 - 706 pages
...molecules of which the movement is sensibly affected by heat with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, fullowing as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
| 1864 - 1632 pages
...molecules the movement of which is sensibly affected by heat with gaseous expansion as the result. The gaseous molecule must itself be viewed as composed of a group or system of the preceding inferior atoms, following as a unit laws similar to those which regulate its constituent... | |
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