Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
Sign in
Books Books
" The species of colour, and degree of refrangibility proper to any particular sort of rays, is not mutable by refraction, nor by reflection from natural bodies, nor by any other cause, that I could yet observe. When any one sort of rays has been well parted... "
Encyclopædia metropolitana; or, Universal dictionary of knowledge, ed. by E ... - Page 375
by Encyclopaedia - 1845
Full view - About this book

Miscellanea Curiosa: Being a Collection of Some of the Principal Phaenomena ...

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1705 - 398 pages
...difagreeing in both. 3. The Species of Colour, and degree of Refrangibility proper to any particular fort of Rays, is not mutable by Refraction, nor by Reflection from natural Bodies, nor by any other caufe, that I could yet obferve. When any pne fort of Rays hath been well parted from thofe of other...
Full view - About this book

Miscellanea Curiosa: Containing a Collection of Some of the ..., Volume 1

Edmond Halley, Richard Mead - 1708 - 430 pages
...dlfagreeing in both. 3. The Species of Colour, and Degree of Refrangibility proper to any particular fort of Rays, Is not mutable by Refraction, nor by Reflection from Natural Bodies, nor by- any other Caufe, that I could yet obferve. When any one fort of Rays hath been well parted from thofe of other...
Full view - About this book

Philosophical Transactions and Collections, to the End of the Year ..., Volume 1

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1722 - 722 pages
...both, or proportionally difagreeing in both. 3. The Species of Colour, and Degree of Refrangibility proper to any particular Sort of Rays, is not mutable...by Reflection from natural Bodies, nor by any other Caufe that I could yet obferve. When any one Sort of Rays hath been well parted from thofe of other...
Full view - About this book

The Philosophical Transactions and Collections to the End of the ..., Volume 1

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1749 - 674 pages
...3. The Speciesjpf,- Colour, and Degree of Refrangibility proper to any particular Sort of Кгф$\ is not mutable by Refraction, nor by Reflection from natural Bodies, nor by any other Caufe that I could yet obierve. When any one Sort of Rays hath been well parted from thofe of other...
Full view - About this book

Memoirs of the Life, Writings, and Discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton, Volume 1

David Brewster - 1855 - 504 pages
...power over the retina sooner than the red. The Newtonian doctrine, " that the degree of refrangibility proper to any particular sort of rays is not mutable by refraction, nor reflection, nor by any other cause,"2 has been recently questioned by Professor Stokes, one of the...
Full view - About this book

Popular Science Monthly, Volume 61

1902 - 614 pages
...both, or proportionally disagreeing in both. 3. The species of colour, and degree of refrangibility proper to any particular sort of rays, is not mutable...notwithstanding my utmost endeavours to change it. I have refracted it with prisms, and reflected it with bodies, which in day-light were of other colours;...
Full view - About this book

The Library of Original Sources: Advance in knowledge, 1650-1800

Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 484 pages
...both, or proportionally disagreeing in both. 3. The species of colour and degree of refrangibility proper to any particular sort of rays, is not mutable...notwithstanding my utmost endeavours to change it. I have refracted it with prisms, and reflected it with bodies, which in daylight were of other colours...
Full view - About this book

A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity from the Age of ...

Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1910 - 502 pages
...ever belongs the same degree of Refraugibility." " The species of colour, and degree of Refrangibility proper to any particular sort of Rays, is not mutable...that I could yet observe. When any one sort of Rays hath been well parted from those of other kinds, it hath afterwards obstinately retained its colour,...
Full view - About this book

A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity from the Age of ...

Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1910 - 502 pages
...could yet observe. When any one sort of Rays hath been well parted from those of other kinds, it hath afterwards obstinately retained its colour, notwithstanding my utmost endeavours to change it." Tho publication of the new theory gave rise to an acute controversy. As might have been expected, Hooke...
Full view - About this book

The Monist, Volume 25

Paul Carus - 1915 - 672 pages
...ever belongs the same degree of refrangibility ... The species of color and degree of refrangibility proper to any particular sort of rays is not mutable...that I could yet observe. When any one sort of rays hath been well parted from those of other kinds, it hath afterwards obstinately retained its color,...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF