| Isaac Newton - 1730 - 403 pages
...that it fhould be moved no more. For in that Pofture the Refractions of the Light at the two Sides of the refracting Angle, that is, at the Entrance...their going out of it, were equal to one another*. So alfo in other Experiments, as often as I would have the Re^ fractions on both fides the Prifm to... | |
| 1841 - 488 pages
...prism, and fixed it in that posture. For in that position, the refractions of the light at Ihe two sides of the refracting angle — that is, at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it — were equal to one another. The prism, therefore, being placed... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1869 - 396 pages
...that it should be moved no more. For in that posture the refractions of the light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it, were equal to one another. .So also in other experiments, as often... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1870 - 514 pages
...light at the two sides of the icfrac.ting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it, were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often as I would have the refractions on both sides the prism to be... | |
| Henry E. Roscoe - 1869 - 372 pages
...light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prigm, and at their going out of it, were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often as I would have the refractions on both sides the prism to be... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 542 pages
...that it should be moved no more. For in that posture the refractions of the light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism and at their going out of it, were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often... | |
| Thomas Preston - 1890 - 494 pages
...that it should be moved no more. For in that posture the refractions of the light at the two sides of the refracting angle — that is, at the entrance of the rays into the prism and at their going out of it — were equal to one another. . . . The prism therefore being placed... | |
| Hugh Frank Newall - 1910 - 188 pages
...that it should be moved no more. For in that posture the refractions of the light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often... | |
| Hugh Frank Newall - 1910 - 194 pages
...light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often as I would have the refractions on both sides of the prism to... | |
| Frederic William Westaway - 1912 - 474 pages
...and fixed it in that position. For in that position, the refractions of the light at the two sides of the refracting angle, that is at the entrance of the rays into the prism, and at their going out of it, were equal to one another. So also in other experiments, as often... | |
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