| Henry Woodward - 1888 - 632 pages
...anhydride may be dissolved in water. Applying Henry's law of the absorption of gases, he considers that on the pressure being relieved from that required for saturation, vesicles of gas may separate from the solvent and may coalesce and rise through the magma expanding as they reach regions... | |
| Osmond Fisher - 1889 - 490 pages
...to be about unity. In the case of sulphuretted hydrogen and water, m was about 0'86l. If the liquid is saturated with gas at all depths, the mass of the...it, these must be subject to the liquid pressure. Let the liquid be exactly saturated at every depth f under the pressure or at that depth. It will contain... | |
| Osmond Fisher - 1889 - 482 pages
...to be about unity. In the case of sulphuretted hydrogen and water, m was about 0'86'. If the liquid is saturated with gas at all depths, the mass of the...it, these must be subject to the liquid pressure. Let the liquid be exactly saturated at every depth f under the pressure or at that depth. It will contain... | |
| Cambridge Philosophical Society - 1886 - 930 pages
...relations between a substance, as rock, which is not liquid at a lower temperature than (say) 3000° Fah., and a substance, as water, which is not a gas under...exactly saturated at every depth £" under the pressure •ar at that depth. It will consist of fused rocky matter and dissolved gas, without any vesicles... | |
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