| Isaac Newton - 1730 - 403 pages
...never changed in the leaft. If any Part of the red Light was refracted, it remained totally of the fame red Colour as before. No orange, no yellow, no green...produced by that Refraction. Neither did the Colour any ways change by repeated Refractions, but continued always the • fame fame red entirely as at firft.... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1869 - 396 pages
...another very little part, as is described in the twelfth experiment of the first book (see Fig. 15). For by this refraction the colour of the light was...produced by that refraction. Neither did the colour any ways change by repeated refractions, but continued always the same red entirely as at first. The like... | |
| Henry E. Roscoe - 1869 - 372 pages
...another very little part, as is described in the twelfth experiment of the first book (see Fig. 15). For by this refraction the colour of the light was...produced by that refraction. Neither did the colour any ways change by repeated refractions, but continued always the same red entirely as at first. The like... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1870 - 452 pages
...as many degrees of colours as there were sorts of rays differing in refrangibility. Exper. i3. — Now, that these colours could not be changed by refraction,...illuminated with any part of this homogeneal light, as in the fourteenth experiment of the first book is described, I could not perceive any new colour... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 552 pages
...appeared as many degrees of colours as there were sorts of rays differing in refrangibility. Exper. 5. — Now, that these colours could not be changed...illuminated with any part of this homogeneal light, as in the fourteenth experiment of the first book is described, I could not perceive any new colour... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 542 pages
...as many degrees of colours as there were sorts of rays differing in refrangibility. Exper. 5.—Now, that these colours could not be changed by refraction,...Neither did the colour any way change by repeated refraction 0 , but continued always the same red entirely as at first. The like constancy and immutability... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 550 pages
...the least. If any part of the red light was refracted, it remained totally of the same red coloiir as before. No orange, no yellow, no green or blue,...illuminated with any part of this homogeneal light, as in the fourteenth experiment of the first book is described, I could not perceive any new colour... | |
| Richard Cockburn Maclaurin - 1909 - 324 pages
...experiment that " if any part of red light was refracted, it remained totally of the same red color as before. No orange, no yellow, no green or blue, no other new color, was produced by refraction." And as these colors were not changeable by refraction, so neither... | |
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