| American Philosophical Society - Learned institutions and societies - 1847 - 408 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion (53 grains to the square inch), exhibited in the... | |
| American Philosophical Society - Electronic journals - 1847 - 422 pages
...to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the eflect of this agent is merely to neutralize the polarity...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion (53 grains to the square inch), exhibited in the... | |
| Alfred Marshall Mayer - Matter - 1868 - 140 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion (52 grains to the square inch), exhibited in the... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - Discoveries in science - 1879 - 590 pages
...when broken, exhibiting, at the point of rupture, a cup-shaped surface, showing that the exterior oí the metal sustained its connection longer than the...to detach from the surface of each the same plate of wood, suspended from the beam of a balance, under the same condition of temperature and pressure.... | |
| 1880 - 552 pages
...end when broken exhibiting at the point of rupture a cup-shaped surface, showing that the exterior of the metal sustained its connection longer than the...this subject the comparative tenacity of pure water in which soap had been dissolved, was measured by the usual method of ascertaining the weight required... | |
| Smithsonian Institution - Electromagnetism - 1880 - 560 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion, (52 grains to the square inch,) exhibited in the... | |
| Smithsonian Institution - Chemistry - 1881 - 850 pages
...end when broken exhibiting at the point of rupture a cup-shaped surface, showing that the exterior of the metal sustained its connection longer than the...this subject the comparative tenacity of pure water in which soap had been dissolved, was measured by the usual method of ascertaining the weight required... | |
| 1881 - 898 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion (52 grains to the square inch), exhibited in the... | |
| 1881 - 856 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the h.eat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion, (52 grains to the square inch,) exhibited in the... | |
| Smithsonian Institution - Chemistry - 1881 - 834 pages
...of cohesion to suppose, instead of the attraction of the liquid being neutralized by the heat, that the effect of this agent is merely to neutralize the...so as to give them perfect freedom of motion around every imaginable axis. The small amount of cohesion, (52 grains to the square inch,) exhibited in the... | |
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