| Chemical Society (Great Britain) - 1898 - 1116 pages
...in suitably arranged vacuum vessels, With hydrogen as a cooling agent, we shall get within 20 or 30 of the zero of absolute temperature and its use will...an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. Even as great a man as James Clerk Maxwell had doubts as to the possibility of ever liquefying hydrogen,... | |
| 1898 - 336 pages
...the specific heat per unit volume must be nearly 0-5, which is about that of liquid air. It is highly probable, therefore, that the remarkable properties...liquid hydrogen predicted by theory will prove to be susceptible of explanation when they are compared with those of liquid air, volume for volume, at corresponding... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1898 - 684 pages
...suitably arranged vacuum vessels. With hydrogen as a cooling agent, we shall get within 20° or 30' of the zero of absolute temperature, and its use will...an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. Even as great a man as James Clerk Maxwell had doubts as to the possibility of ever liquefying hydrogen... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1898 - 570 pages
...suitably arranged vacuum vessels. With hydrogen as a cooling agent, we shall get within 20° or 30° of the zero of absolute temperature, and its use will...an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. Even as great a man as James Clerk Maxwell had doubts as to the possibility of ever liquefying hydrogen.*... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1898 - 610 pages
...suitably arranged vacuum vessels. With hydrogen as a cooling agent, we shall get within 20° or 30° of the zero of absolute temperature, and its use will...an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. Even as great a man as James Clerk Maxwell had doubts as to the possibility of ever liquefying hydrogen.*... | |
| 1898 - 424 pages
...the specific heat per unit volume must be nearly 0-5, which is about that of liquid air. It is highly probable, therefore, that the remarkable properties...liquid hydrogen predicted by theory will prove to be susceptible of explanation when they are compared with those of liquid air, volume for volume, at corresponding... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1899 - 816 pages
...in suitably arranged vacuum vessels. With hydrogen as a cooling agent we shall get within 20 or 30 of the zero of absolute temperature, and its use will...an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. Even as great a man as James Clerk Maxwell had doubts as to the possibility of ever liquefying hydrogen.... | |
| 1899 - 920 pages
...arranged vacuum vessels. With hydrogen as a cooling agent, it will be possible to get within 20 or H0° of the zero of absolute temperature, and its use will...open up an entirely new field of scientific inquiry. The study of fluorine has until recently been embarrassed by its intense chemical activity, which has... | |
| 1900 - 440 pages
...the specific heat per unit volume must be nearly 0-5, which is about that of I quid air. It is highly probable, therefore, that the remarkable properties...compared with those of liquid air, volume for volume, at coi responding temperatures. With hydrogen as a cooling agent we shall get to from 13° to 15° of... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1902 - 874 pages
...specific heat per unit volume must bo nearly ()•.">. which is about that of liquid air. It is highly probable, therefore, that the remarkable properties of liquid hydrogen predicted by theory «rill prove to be less astonishing when they are compared with those of liquid air, volume for volume,... | |
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