| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 614 pages
...considered as depending upon the decomposition, or not (413. 703.), still the relation of the two functions is equally intimate and inseparable. 855. Considering...extraordinary quantity or degree of electric power uhich naturally belongs to the particles of matter ; but it is not inconsistent in the slightest degree... | |
| John Towers (C.M.H.S.) - 1839 - 746 pages
...separation of that grain of water into its elements again.'11 New Researches, Sixth Series, pp. 116, 117. This view of the subject gives an almost overwhelming...facts which can be brought to bear on this point. I view the experiments of Dr. Faraday with astonishment, and hesitate to propose a doubt concerning... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 634 pages
...considered as depending upon the decomposition, or not (413. 703.), still the relation of the two functions is equally intimate and inseparable. 855. Considering...illustrate this I must say a few words on the voltaic pile *. 857. Intending hereafter to apply the results given in this and the preceding series of Researches... | |
| Henry Allon - 1851 - 604 pages
...exactly equal the current required for the separation of that grain of water into its elements again. This view of the subject gives an almost overwhelming...illustrate this I must say a few words on the voltaic pile.' ' What an enormous quantity of electricity, therefore, is required for the decomposition of... | |
| John Phin - 1872 - 110 pages
...exactly equal the current required for the separation of that grain of water into its elements again. "This view of the subject gives an almost overwhelming...facts which can be brought to bear on this point. "What an enormous quantity of electricity, therefore, is required for the decomposition of a single... | |
| Edward Cornelius Towne - 1887 - 52 pages
...grain of water will require an electric current equal to a very powerful flash of lightning. . . . This gives an almost overwhelming idea of the extraordinary...which naturally belongs to the particles of matter — the enormous electric power of each particle or atom of matter." " Magnetic action may be considered... | |
| 1895 - 710 pages
...exactly equal the current required for the separation of that grain of water into its elements again. " This view of the subject gives an almost overwhelming...which naturally belongs to the particles of matter, . . the enormous electric power of each particle or atom of matter. " What an enormous quantity of... | |
| 1834 - 1276 pages
...considered as depending upon the decomposition, or not (413. 703.). still the relation of the two functions is equally intimate and inseparable. 855. Considering...inconsistent in the slightest degree with the facts which or eight inches were retained at one constant temperature of dull redness, equal quantities of water... | |
| Edward Cornelius Toune, Graeme Mercer Adam - 1896 - 124 pages
...exactly equal the current required for the separation ofthat grain of water into its elements again. " This view of the subject gives an almost overwhelming...which naturally belongs to the particles of matter, . . the enormous electric power of each particle or atom of matter. " What an enormous quantity of... | |
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