| 1868 - 346 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....pressure. The spectrum of carbonic oxide burning in oxygen under a pressure of fourteen atmospheres is very brilliant and perfectly continuous. If it be... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1868 - 646 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this fame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....more luminous at a pressure of ten atmospheres than n flame of hydrogen of the same size and burning under the same pressure. The spectrum of carbonic... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1868 - 662 pages
...any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of t/tis flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....carbonic oxide in oxygen becomes much more luminous at n pressure of ten atmospheres than a flame of hydrogen of the same size and burning under the same... | |
| 1868 - 358 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....luminosity, the flame of carbonic oxide in oxygen becames much more luminous at a pressure of ten atmospheres than a flame of hydrogen of the fame size... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 636 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....pressure. The spectrum of carbonic oxide burning in oxygen under * Davy mentions this fact in connection with his view of the source of luminosity in flames,... | |
| James Samuelson, William Crookes - 1869 - 700 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....pressure. The spectrum of carbonic oxide burning in oxygen under a pressure of fourteen atmospheres is very brilliant and perfectly continuous. If it be... | |
| 1869 - 692 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....pressure. The spectrum of carbonic oxide burning in oxygen under a pressure of fourteen atmospheres is very brilliant and perfectly continuous. If it be... | |
| George Farrer Rodwell - 1871 - 620 pages
...spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet. ЛУНЬ a higher initial luminosity, the flame of carbonic...pressure. The spectrum of carbonic oxide burning in oxygen, under a pressure of fourteen atmospheres, is very brilliant and perfectly continuous. If it... | |
| George Farrer Rodwell - 1873 - 752 pages
...12.5 3.6 arained by the spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly contiunous from red to violet. "With a higher initial luminosity,...oxygen becomes much more luminous at a pressure of ten atmosphères. than a flame of hydrogen of the same size and burning under the same pressure. The spectrum... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 652 pages
...without any reflecting surface behind the flame. Examined by tho spectroscope, the spectrum of this flame is bright and perfectly continuous from red to violet....oxygen becomes much more luminous at a pressure of ton atmospheres than a flame of hydrogen of the same size and burning under tho same pressure. The... | |
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