The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids under like circumstances of temperature and pressure being once established, it became an object to determine the relative sizes and weights together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume.... Famous Chemists: The Men and Their Work - Page 110by Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1921 - 296 pagesFull view - About this book
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - Chemistry - 1895 - 234 pages
...Gay-Lussac's notion." t — — . ••• Dalton concluded this lecture with the following words : — "The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...established, it became an object to determine * The writer remembers a pupil, to whom he had explained the Atomic Theory by help of wooden blocks, giving... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe, Arthur Harden - Atomic theory - 1896 - 232 pages
...heat. This then is the present view which I have of the constitution of a mixture of elastic fluids. The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...relative sizes and weights, together with the relative '•, number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way "!, to the combinations of gases, and to... | |
| Francis Preston Venable - Atomic theory - 1904 - 322 pages
...mixture of elastic fluids. The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids under like circumstance of temperature and pressure being once established,...relative sizes and weights, together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to the combination of gases and to the number of... | |
| Francis Preston Venable - Atomic theory - 1904 - 310 pages
...it became an object to determine the relative sizes and weights, together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to the combination of gases and to the number of atoms entering into such combinations, the particulars of... | |
| John Price Millington - Chemists - 1906 - 252 pages
..." This then is the present view which I have of the constitution of a mixture of elastic fluids. " The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...relative sizes and weights together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to the combinations of gases, and to the number... | |
| Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - Chemistry - 1906 - 610 pages
...without calling in any other repulsive power than the well^ known one of heat." Dalton then proceeds: "The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...relative sizes and weights, together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to the combinations of gases, and to the number... | |
| Thomas Percy Nunn - Knowledge, Theory of - 1907 - 162 pages
...obstacle removed, he believed that his theory of gaseous interdiffusion held the field, and at once " it became an object to determine the relative sizes and weights, together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. . . . Other bodies besides elastic fluids, namely, liquids and solids,... | |
| Chemistry - 1910 - 470 pages
...the one he at first suggested. He then introduces the subject of the chemical atomic theory : — " The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...established, it became an object to determine the relative sites and weights, together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to... | |
| Edgar Fahs Smith - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1913 - 202 pages
...established, it became an object to determine the sizes and weights together with the relative number of atoms in a given volume. This led the way to the...the number of atoms entering into such combinations. . . . Other bodies besides elastic fluids, namely, liquids and solids, were subject to investigation... | |
| Forris Jewett Moore - Chemistry - 1918 - 356 pages
...is the present view which I have of the constitution of a mixture of elastic fluids." ************ "The different sizes of the particles of elastic fluids...relative sizes and weights, together with the relative number, of atoms in a' given volume. This led the way to the combinations of gases, and to the number... | |
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