| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1880 - 624 pages
...at 35-5° C., and under a pressure of 108 atmospheres, stands nearly midway between the gas and the liquid, and we have no valid grounds for assigning...the one form of matter any more than to the other." * " Proc. Boy. Soc.," vol. xxix, p. 824. t " Phil. Trans.," 1869, p. 588. This conclusion is based... | |
| 1880 - 334 pages
...atmospheres, stands nearly midway between the gas and the liquid, and we have no valid grounds for assigning n to the one form of matter any more than to the other." This conclusion is based on the relation of volume to pressure for different temperatures, and on the... | |
| Thomas Andrews - 1889 - 632 pages
...acid at 35""5, and under 108 atmospheres of pressure, stands nearly midway between the gas and the liquid ; and we have no valid grounds for assigning...under greater pressures than those just mentioned. In the original experiment of Cagniard de la Tour, that distinguished physicist inferred that the li(iuid... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1880 - 672 pages
...at 35'5° C., .and under a pressure of 108 atmospheres, stands nearly midway between the gas and the liquid, and we have no- valid grounds for .assigning...the one form of matter any more than to the other." 1880.] This conclusion is based on the relation of volume to pressure for different temperatures, and... | |
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