The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat then is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same, as the laws of the communication of motion. Treatise on Heat - Page 393by Dionysius Lardner - 1833 - 429 pagesFull view - About this book
| Sir Humphry Davy - 1812 - 352 pages
...must have separated from each other. The immediate cause of the phjenomena of heat then is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller volume by cooling, it is... | |
| 1817 - 534 pages
...heat ? It has certainly been affirmed that the immediate cause of the phenomena of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. No one has ever, as far as I can learn, pointed out any similarity ; nor... | |
| Thomas Thomson - 1817 - 546 pages
...heat ? It has certainly been affirmed that the immediate cause of the phenomena of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. No one has ever, as far as I can learn, pointed out any similarity ; nor... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1821 - 436 pages
...have separated from each other. The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat, then, is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion." Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller volume by cooling, it... | |
| Thomas Curtis - 1829 - 806 pages
...have separated from each other. The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat, then, is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely' the same as the laws of the communication of motion. Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller volume, by cooling, it... | |
| 1829 - 150 pages
...must have separated from each other. The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat then in motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion." Consequently, if you put your hand into a tumbler of water, and the water... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 826 pages
...b motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller Tolume, by coolinj, it is evident that the particles of matter must have space between them ; and since... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1831 - 980 pages
...have separated from each other. The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat, then, is molinn, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion." " Since all matter maybe made to fill a smaller volume by cooling, it... | |
| 1831 - 616 pages
...Davy's opinion in his own words : — "The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat, is motion ; and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller volume by cooling, it is... | |
| Samuel Drew - 1831 - 658 pages
...Davy's opinion in his own words : — "The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat, is motion ; and the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. Since all matter may be made to fill a smaller volume by cooling, it is... | |
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