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" ... through which they pass, and if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn, may be the same as that received at the earth, if the constituents of their atmospheres be the same as that of the earth, and greater if the... "
The Chemical News and Journal of Physical Science - Page 286
1865
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The Intellectual repository for the New Church. (July/Sept. 1817 ..., Volume 23

New Church gen. confer - 616 pages
...atmosphere or the amount of water present through which they pass ; and if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn may...received at the Earth, if the constituents of their atmosphere be the same as that of the Earth, and greater if the density be greater ; so that the effective...
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Proceedings of the British Meteorological Society, Volume 2

Royal Meteorological Society (Great Britain) - 1865 - 572 pages
...water present through which they pass ; and if so, the proportion of the neat received at Mercury and Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, may be the same as that...and greater if the density be greater ; so that the affective solar heat at the superior planets, Jupiter and Saturn, may be greater than at the inferior...
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Proceedings of the British Meteorological Society, Volume 2

1865 - 606 pages
...water present through which they pass ; and if so, the proportion of the heat received at Mercury and Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, may be the same as that...and greater if the density be greater ; so that the affective solar heat at the superior planets, Jupiter and Saturn, may be greater than at the inferior...
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Proceedings of the British Meteorological Society, Volume 2

1865 - 564 pages
...atmosphere or the amount of water present throng which they pass ; and, if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn may be the same as that receited at the Earth, if the constituents of their atmospheres be the same ns that of the Earth, and...
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Belgravia, a London magazine, conducted by M.E. Braddon, Volume 12

Belgravia - 1870 - 558 pages
...they pass, and if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn, maybe the same as that received at the earth, if the constituents...at Jupiter and Saturn may be greater than at either of the inferior planets Mercury or Venus, notwithstanding their far greater distances from the sun.'...
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Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 3; Volume 66

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1866 - 828 pages
...water present, through which they pass ; and if so, the proportion of the heat received at Mercury and Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, may be the same as that...density be greater ; so that the effective solar heat at the superior planets, Jupiter and Saturn, may be greater than at the inferior planets, Venus and Mercury,...
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Quarterly Journal of Science: 1866, Volume 3

1866 - 736 pages
...or the amount of water present in that through which they pass. If it be so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn may be the same as that received at the Earth, notwithstanding their different distances from the sun. Many subjects of much interest in this division...
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The Quarterly Journal of Science, Volume 3

1866 - 658 pages
...or the amount of water present in that through which they pass. If it be so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn may be the same as that received at the Earth, notwithstanding their different distances from the sun. Many subjects of much interest in this division...
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Notices of the Proceedings, Volume 4

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1866 - 730 pages
...and if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn, may be the same at that received at the Earth, if the constituents of their atmospheres be the game as that of the Earth, and greater if the density be greater, so that the effective solar heat...
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The Heavens: An Illustrated Handbook of Popular Astronomy

Amédée Guillemin - 1867 - 588 pages
...through which they pass, or the amount of water present in them ; and if so, the proportion of heat received at Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn, may...that the effective solar heat at Jupiter and Saturn, notwithstanding their far greater distance from the Sun, may be greater than at either the inferior...
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