Philosophical Transactions, Giving Some Account of the Present Undertakings, Studies, and Labours of the Ingenious, in Many Considerable Parts of the World, Part 1Royal Society of London, 1833 |
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Page 143
... island which was thrown up in the summer of last year , I am enabled to give a few more particulars respect- ing it , which I beg leave to communicate to the Royal Society , not so much on account of the importance of the particulars ...
... island which was thrown up in the summer of last year , I am enabled to give a few more particulars respect- ing it , which I beg leave to communicate to the Royal Society , not so much on account of the importance of the particulars ...
Page 152
... island interposed in the space over which it is to pass . In fig . 3. the I and II o'clock lines are not at all affected , or very slightly , by the island ; the III o'clock line is held back so that it meets the shores of the island ...
... island interposed in the space over which it is to pass . In fig . 3. the I and II o'clock lines are not at all affected , or very slightly , by the island ; the III o'clock line is held back so that it meets the shores of the island ...
Page 153
... island ; the other line running across the ocean like the uninterrupted lines , but with an indentation towards the island . After this time these two lines give rise to two separate waves , 6 and VI ; the former moving in a retrograde ...
... island ; the other line running across the ocean like the uninterrupted lines , but with an indentation towards the island . After this time these two lines give rise to two separate waves , 6 and VI ; the former moving in a retrograde ...
Page 154
... Islands , as will be seen hereafter . 5. Effects of the interference of undulations . — In such a case as the one just mentioned , the tides going round the island by different paths will at last meet , and the water will be affected by ...
... Islands , as will be seen hereafter . 5. Effects of the interference of undulations . — In such a case as the one just mentioned , the tides going round the island by different paths will at last meet , and the water will be affected by ...
Page 166
... island in September 1826 by Lieut . JOHN- SON have been communicated to me ; they are very irregular , probably in con- sequence partly of uncertainty arising from the smallness of the tide , the greatest rise not being much more than ...
... island in September 1826 by Lieut . JOHN- SON have been communicated to me ; they are very irregular , probably in con- sequence partly of uncertainty arising from the smallness of the tide , the greatest rise not being much more than ...
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appears arsenic acid atoms axis barytes battery brain and spinal Cape Cape Frio carbonic acid centre cluster coarse coast coils colour cotidal lines crystals deflection Description and Remarks determined diam diameter direction dist Ditto double star effect equator excited experiments fibres fluid galvanometer globular cluster grains heat helix high water HUMPHRY DAVY inches influence intensity interval irreg fig Island length lens LUBBOCK magnetic MDCCCXXXIII means merid metals moon motion muscles nearly nebula needle nerves NORIE Nova nucleus object observations obtained parallel phosphate phosphoric acid poles preceding psbM pyrophosphoric acid quantity rich right ascension salt silver soft iron spinal marrow subarseniate subphosphate surface Sweep Synonym tide tide-wave vglb wire wool
Popular passages
Page 28 - By current, I mean anything progressive, whether it be a fluid of electricity, or two fluids moving in opposite directions, or merely vibrations, or, speaking still more generally, progressive forces. By arrangement, I understand a local adjustment of particles, or fluids, or forces, not progressive. Many other reasons might be urged in support of the view of a current rather than an arrangement, but I am anxious to avoid stating unnecessarily what will occur to others at the moment. II. Ordinary...
Page 296 - What signifies philosophy that does not apply to some use ? May we not learn from hence that black clothes are not so fit to wear in a hot, sunny climate or season as white ones, because in such clothes the body is more heated by the sun when we walk abroad, and are at the same time heated by the exercise, which double heat is apt to bring on putrid, dangerous fevers ? That soldiers and seamen, who must march and...
Page 36 - On combining a piece of litmus with a piece of turmeric paper, wetting both with solution of sulphate of soda, and putting the paper on the glass, so that p was on the litmus and n on the turmeric, a very few turns of the machine sufficed to show the evolution of acid at the former and alkali at the latter, exactly in the manner effected by a volta-electric current.
Page 48 - These circumstances indicate that the torpedo has power (in the way probably that Cavendish describes,) to continue the evolution for a sensible time, so that its successive discharges rather resemble those of a voltaic arrangement, intermitting in its action, than those of a Leyden apparatus, charged and discharged many times in succession. In reality, however, there is no philosophical difference between these two cases.
Page 24 - Common electricity is excited upon non-conductors, and is readily carried off by conductors and imperfect conductors. Voltaic electricity is excited upon combinations of perfect and imperfect conductors, and is only transmitted by perfect conductors, or imperfect conductors of the best kind. " Magnetism, if it be a form of electricity, belongs only to perfect conductors ; and, in its modifications, to a peculiar class of them.
Page 51 - ... of an inch in acid, consisting of one drop of oil of vitriol and four ounces of distilled water at a temperature of about 60°...
Page 53 - I at first laid down, namely, that the chemical power of a current of electricity is in direct proportion to the absolute quantity of electricity which passes (377.
Page 39 - I do not intend to deny that with such an apparatus common electricity can decompose water in a manner analogous to that of the voltaic pile; I believe at present that it can. But when what I consider the true effect only was obtained, the quantity of gas given off was so small that I could not ascertain whether it was, as it ought to be, oxygen at one wire and hydrogen at the other. Of the two streams one seemed more copious than the other, and on turning the apparatus round, still the same side...
Page 27 - ... air as to enable it to conduct the electricity through a space of six or seven inches. 275. The instantaneous charge of a Leyden battery by the poles of a voltaic apparatus is another proof of the tension, and also the quantity, of electricity evolved by the latter. Sir H. Davy...
Page 36 - ... or towards n; and I have seen no reason to believe that in cases of true electro-chemical decomposition by the machine, the electricity passed in sparks from the conductor, or at any part of the current, is able to do more, because of its tension, than that which is made to pass merely as a regular...