| Dionysius Lardner - 1833 - 462 pages
...motion, or a motion of the particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. " It seems possible to account for all the phenomena...constant state of vibratory motion, the particles of I S98 A TREATISE ON HEAT. CHAP. XVIII. the hottest body moving with the greatest velocity, and through... | |
| 1836 - 422 pages
...particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. " It seems possible to account for the phenomena of heat, if it be supposed that in solids...velocity, and through the greatest space : that in liquids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest in the last,... | |
| William Mullinger Higgins - 1836 - 514 pages
...particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. " It seems possible to account for the phenomena of heat, if it be supposed that in solids...velocity, and through the greatest space : that in liquids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest in the last,... | |
| Henry Burgess (of Luton) - 1836 - 446 pages
...incompatible with the very hypothesis from which it professes to flow Of Caloric Sir H. Davy writes, "It seems possible to account for all the phenomena...of vibratory motion, the particles of the hottest body moving with the greatest velocity, and through the greatest space; that in liquids and elastic... | |
| Hugo Reid - 1837 - 402 pages
...motion, or a motion of the, particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. " It seems possible to account for all the phenomena...of vibratory motion, the particles of the hottest body moving with the greatest velocity, and through the greatest space ; that, in liquids and elastic... | |
| Thomas Webster - 1837 - 512 pages
...motion, or -a motion of particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other.' Again, ' it seems possible to account for all the phenomena...be supposed that in solids the particles are in a state of vibratory motion, the particles of the hottest moving with the greatest velocity, and through... | |
| William Mullinger Higgins - 1838 - 426 pages
...particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. " It seems possible to account for the phenomena of heat, if it be supposed that in solids...with the greatest velocity, and through the greatest apace : that in liquids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest... | |
| John Towers (C.M.H.S.) - 1839 - 746 pages
...Humphry Davy does not appear to admit the materiality of heat, or to consider it as a specific fluid. " It seems possible to account for all the phenomena of heat, if it be conceived that in solids the particles are in a constant state of vibratory motion; the particles of... | |
| 1841 - 444 pages
...undulatory motion, or a motion of the particles round their axes, or a motion of particles round each other. It seems possible to account for all the phenomena...greatest velocity, and through the greatest space ; that la liquids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest in the... | |
| Encyclopaedia - 1845 - 876 pages
...motion of particles round each other " 327 Нмь " It seems possible to account for all the phenomena heat, if it be supposed that in solids the particles...velocity, and through the greatest space ; that in liquids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest in the last,... | |
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