This cannot be averred without hesitation, but the hypothesis at least is sufficiently plausible to make it worth while to discuss its consequences. Here we are then taken back again to the observation of the particles of an emulsion and to the study... A System of Physical Chemistry ... - Page 25by William Cudmore McCullagh Lewis - 1916 - 1075 pagesFull view - About this book
| Jean Perrin - 1910 - 110 pages
...a new law ? Will it not comport itself simply as a very large molecule, in the sense that its mean energy has still the same value as that of an isolated...average equal to that of any one of these molecules. The propositions, of which I have just shown the probability, could be looked upon as special cases... | |
| Jean Perrin - 1910 - 110 pages
...the same value as that of an isolated molecule ? This cannot be averred without hesitation, but tha hypothesis at least is sufficiently plausible to make...average equal to that of any one of these molecules. The propositions, of which I have just shown the probability, could be looked upon as special cases... | |
| Mary J. Nye - 1983 - 700 pages
...of this wonderful movement which most directly suggests time molecular hypothesis. But at the s.'mme time we are led to render the theory precise by saying, not only that each particle owes its mnovenment to the impacts of time molecules of the liquid, but further that the eI¿ergy maintained... | |
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