There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids; and -we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry - Page 128by Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1922Full view - About this book
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1798 - 772 pages
...commonly denominated gases. There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting the reducibility of of all elastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids;...of effecting it in low temperatures and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and... | |
| Repertory of arts, manufactures and agriculture - 1802 - 556 pages
...reduced, into a liquid state ,by the united agency of those two powers, are commonly denomi.nated gases. -There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting...of effecting it in low temperatures and by strong. pressure'exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and-vapours... | |
| 1894 - 576 pages
...by extreme cold, be reduced to liquids, and these again to solids. And Dalton wrote, in 1801 : — ' There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting...effecting it in low ' temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the ' unmixed gases.' * The experimental verification of this forecast, now all... | |
| John Redman Coxe, Thomas Cooper - 1813 - 532 pages
...gases. There can •scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting the rcducibility II. H of all clastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids ; and we ought...of effecting it in low temperatures and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and... | |
| William Charles Henry - 1854 - 308 pages
...volume of air. It opens with the following anticipation of a subsequent discovery by Mr. Faraday :—" There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting...of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." He had previously, in his Meteorological Essays (p. 127,... | |
| William Somerville Orr - 1855 - 546 pages
...suggested by Mr. Daltonf that all gases are convertible into liquids. "There can scarcely," he observes, " be a doubt entertained respecting the reducibility...of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." It fortunately occurred to Mr. Faraday that the most probable... | |
| William Somerville Orr - 1855 - 556 pages
...scarcely," ic observes, " be a doubt entertained respecting the redueibility of all elastic fluida, of whatever kind, into liquids; and we ought not to...of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." It fortunately occurred to Mr. Faraday that the most probable... | |
| Henry Lonsdale - 1867 - 336 pages
...the anticipation of a discovery subsequently made by Dr Michael Faraday. Dalton's words are : — " There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting...of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." His experiments made on the vapours of sulphuric ether, spirits... | |
| Henry Lonsdale - 1874 - 352 pages
...the anticipation of a discovery subsequently made by Dr Michael Faraday. Dalton's words are : — " There can scarcely be a doubt entertained respecting...of effecting it in low temperatures, and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." His experiments made on the vapours of sulphuric ether, spirits... | |
| Victoria and Albert museum - 1876 - 550 pages
...Faraday, of the condensation of gases. "There can scarcely be a doubt entertained," says Dalton, " respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids,...of effecting it in low temperatures, .and by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." Although this conclusion has not been universally carried... | |
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