 | Sir William Anderson - 1887 - 274 ページ
...temperature of 35°; and he announced the important proposition, that " the immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication...same as the laws of the communication of motion." Our more extended knowledge enables us to confirm the views expressed by Davy. now accepted as 772... | |
 | Marcellus John Thompson - 1887 - 232 ページ
...motion." Davy defines heat as "a peculiar motion," and in his " Chemical Philosophy" tells us that " the laws of its communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion." Locke, later on,* insists that " what in our sensation is heat, in the object is nothing but motion."... | |
 | John Gray McKendrick - 1888 - 560 ページ
...melted, although the temperature of the receiver was kept below the freezing point, and he inferred that "the immediate cause of the phenomena of heat...same as the laws of the communication of motion." (Davy's Elements of Chemical Philosophy, p. 94.) In 1834, Faraday discovered important relations existing... | |
 | Robert Henry Thurston - 1888 - 710 ページ
...and precisely the real nature of heat, saying: "The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat, then, is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely...same as the laws of the communication of motion." The basis of this opinion was the same that had previously been noted by Rumford. So much having been determined,... | |
 | Sir George Charles Vincent Holmes - 1888 - 564 ページ
...Again, in 1812, Davy thus states his theory : — ' The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat, then, is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely...same as the laws of the communication of motion.' Another way of stating the above is that heat is a form of energy. To make this point clear before... | |
 | 1889 - 852 ページ
...but it was not until 1812 that he came to the conclusion that ' the immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication...same as the laws of the communication of motion.' From data given by Rumford, it may be calculated that 940 footpounds of work are necessary to produce... | |
 | William Robinson (M.E.) - 1890 - 658 ページ
...in 1812 he made the following most important statement : — " The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication...same as the laws of the communication of motion." Moreover, the statement that " heat is kinetic energy " is supported by the following considerations... | |
 | Robert Henry Thurston - 1890 - 704 ページ
...and precisely the real nature of heat, saying: " The immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat, then, is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely...same as the laws of the communication of motion." The basis of this opinion was the same that had previously been noted by Rum ford. So much having been... | |
 | 1890 - 870 ページ
...the conclusion that ' the immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat is motion, and the laws of ite communication are precisely the same as the laws of the communication of motion. ' From data given by Rumford, it may be calculated that 940 footpounds of work are necessary to produce... | |
 | ROBERT CHAMBERS - 1892 - 902 ページ
...biit it was not until 1812 that he came to the conclusion that ' the immediate cause of the phenomenon of heat is motion, and the laws of its communication...same as the laws of the communication of motion.' From data given by Ktimford, it may be calculated that 940 footpounds of work are necessary to produce... | |
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