 | Robert Lindsay - 1979 - 428 pages
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 | 1812 - 552 pages
...present themselves in bodies that are heated. Rejecting the generally-received hypothesis, he observes, " It seems possible to account for all the phenomena...besides the vibratory motion, which must be .conceived greater in the last, the particles have a motion round their own axis with different velocities, the... | |
 | 1822 - 506 pages
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 | 1812
...the following manner. Rejecting received hypotheses, ho observes, " It seems possible to account fur all the phenomena of heat, if it be supposed, that, in solids, die /.- i< ha are in a constant state of vibratory motion, ibe particles of the bittest bodies moving... | |
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