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" From all which it is manifest, that if the sun's light consisted of but one sort of rays, there would be but one colour in the whole world, nor would it be possible to produce any new colour by reflections and refractions, and by consequence that the... "
Memoirs of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - Page 42
by Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1862
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Spectrum Analysis: Six Lectures, Delivered in 1868, Before the Society of ...

Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 542 pages
...homogeneal light could sensibly change its colour. From all which it is manifest, that if the sun's light consisted of but one sort of rays, there would...would it be possible to produce any new colour by reflexions and refractions, and by consequence that the variety of colours depends upon the composition...
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Spectrum Analysis: Six Lectures, Delivered in 1868, Before the Society of ...

Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 552 pages
...homogeneal light could sensibly change its colour. From all which it is manifest, that if the sun's light consisted of but one sort of rays, there would...would it be possible to produce any new colour by reflexions and refractions, and by consequence that the variety of colours depends upon the composition...
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Spectrum analysis, 6 lects

sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 550 pages
...faintly. I never yet found any body which by reflecting homogeneal light could sensibly change its colour. whole world, nor would it be possible to produce any new colour by reflexions and refractions, and by consequence that the variety of colours depends upon the composition...
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Discoveries and Inventions of the Nineteenth Century

Robert Routledge - 1893 - 732 pages
...number of other experiments described in his "Opticks," (AD 1675), Newton concludes, "that if the sun's light consisted of but one sort of rays, there would...reflections and refractions, and, by consequence, the variety of colours depends upon the composition of light." " And if, at any time, I speak of light...
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Light

Richard Cockburn Maclaurin - 1909 - 324 pages
...totally green, and so of other colors. "From all which," he concludes, "it is manifest that if the sun's light consisted of but one sort of rays, there would be but one color in the whole world, nor would it be possible to produce any new color by reflections and refractions,...
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the second course of light

Arthur Edward Ellard McKenzie - 1965 - 386 pages
...189. (a) Yellow ink on white paper, (b) Blue ink on white paper. (c) Green-blue ink on yellow ink. sort of Rays, there would be but one colour in the whole world', and also 'Colours in the Object are nothing but a Disposition to reflect this or that sort of Rays...
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