We may infer from the facts above mentioned that the colouring matter of blood, like indigo, is capable of existing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference of colour and a fundamental difference i/i the action on the spectrum. The Intellectual Observer - Page 881868Full view - About this book
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1864 - 636 pages
...reagents might be mentioned, but these will suffice. 8. We may infer from the facts above mentioned that the colouring matter of blood, like indigo, is capable...difference of colour and a fundamental difference i/i the action on the spectrum. It may be made to pass from the more to the less oxidized slate by... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1864 - 636 pages
...the facts above mentioned that the colouring matter of blood, like indigo, is capable of r. rial ing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference...difference in the action on the spectrum. It may be made to pats from the more to the less oxidized state by the action of suitable reducing agents, and recovers... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1867 - 1006 pages
...Blood," has published some very curious results. By spectrum analysis he has been led to infer that the colouring matter of blood, like indigo, is capable...spectrum. It may be made to pass from the more to the less oxidised state, by the action of suitable reducing agents, and recovers its oxygen by absorption from... | |
| 1868 - 802 pages
...substance to which he has given the name of r.rvorin. Unlike ha-matin, it is soluble in water, and " is capable of existing in two states of oxidation. distinguishable by a difference of color and a fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum." Oxidized, or " trarltt'' cruorni,... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1869 - 396 pages
...of the Royal Society in 1864. From this we learn that " the colouring matter of blood, like that of indigo, is capable of existing in two states of oxidation,...fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum." These two forms may be made to pass one into the other by suitable oxidizing and reducing agents, and... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1870 - 514 pages
...of the Royal Society for 1864. From this we learn that " the colouring matter of blood, like that of indigo, is capable of existing in two states of oxidation,...fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum." These two forms may be made to pass one into the other by suitable oxidizing and reducing agents, and... | |
| 1870 - 442 pages
...effected. He details a series of observations from which he iniers that "the colouring matter of the blood is capable of existing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference of colour, and by a fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum. It may be made to pass from the more to... | |
| Charles Knight - 1870 - 446 pages
...effected. He details a series of observations from which he infers that " the colouring matter of the blood is capable of existing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference of colour, and by a fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum. It may be made to pass from the more to... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 542 pages
...of the Royal Society for 1864. From this we learn that " the colouring matter of blood, like that of indigo, is capable of existing in two states of oxidation,...fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum." These two forms may be made to pass one into the other by suitable oxidizing and reducing agents, and... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1876 - 1134 pages
...Virc'how's Archiv, Bd. xxiii, 1802. p. 446. 5 Proceed. Koy. Soc., vol. xiii, ШЗ-И4, p. 355. ble of existing in two states of oxidation, distinguishable by a difference of color and a fundamental difference in the action on the spectrum. To this coloring matter he has applied... | |
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