| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1798 - 772 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of of all elastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and vapours may be in a chemical sense, their... | |
| Repertory of arts, manufactures and agriculture - 1802 - 556 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids ; and we .ought not to .despair of effecting it in low temperatures and by strong. pressure'exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and-vapours... | |
| 1894 - 576 pages
...entertained respecting the ' reducibility of all elastic fluids, of whatever kind, into ' liquids ; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low ' temperatures,...pressure exerted upon the ' unmixed gases.' * The experimental verification of this forecast, now all but complete, was begun by Faraday. In 1823 he... | |
| John Redman Coxe, Thomas Cooper - 1813 - 532 pages
...entertained respecting the rcducibility II. H of all clastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids ; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases. However unessential the distinction between the gases and vapours may be in a chemical sense, their... | |
| William Charles Henry - 1854 - 308 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids, of whatever kind, into liquids; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." He had previously, in his Meteorological Essays (p. 127, 2nd ed.), published a table of the temperatures... | |
| William Somerville Orr - 1855 - 556 pages
...entertained respecting the redueibility of all elastic fluida, of whatever kind, into liquids; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." It fortunately occurred to Mr. Faraday that the most probable means of exhibiting gases (or rather... | |
| Henry Lonsdale - 1867 - 336 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids, of whatever kind, into liquids ; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." His experiments made on the vapours of sulphuric ether, spirits of wine, water of ammonia, solution... | |
| Henry Lonsdale - 1874 - 352 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids, of whatever kind, into liquids ; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." His experiments made on the vapours of sulphuric ether, spirits of wine, water of ammonia, solution... | |
| Victoria and Albert museum - 1876 - 550 pages
...Dalton, " respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids, of whatever kind, into liquids ; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...by strong pressure exerted upon the unmixed gases." Although this conclusion has not been universally carried out, yet the expression of the possibility... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1879 - 696 pages
...entertained respecting the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever kind into liquids; and we ought not to despair of effecting it in low temperatures,...unmixed gases." * The same ideas are reiterated in Dulton's 'New System of Ohemical Philosophy,' which appeared in 1808, yet no definite proof of the... | |
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