| 1905 - 1004 pages
...hypothesis on the constitution of the gases, which teaches us that "In nil elastic fluids"— gases— "observed under the same conditions the molecules are placed at equal distances," bore their predestined fruit In the hands of his eminent successor, Jean Baptiste Andr6 Dumas and of... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1884 - 616 pages
...be made, which is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that, in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules are placed at equal distances, ie tliat they are present iu them in equal numbers. An immediate consequence of this mode of looking at... | |
| Chemical Society (Great Britain) - 1885 - 956 pages
...to be made, which is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules...which form the basis of our present views in chemical philo* sophy; and it is only to be wondered at that the happy enlistment of Avogadro's ideas into the... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1884 - 556 pages
...to be made, which is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules...only to be wondered at that the happy enlistment of Avogadro's ideas into the service of chemistry, which we owe to Dumas' initiatory sagacity, should... | |
| 1884 - 670 pages
...be made, which is accepted by all physicista. It consists in supposing that, in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules...ie that they are present in them in equal numbers. An immediate consequence of this mode of looking at the question has already been the subject of a... | |
| 1884 - 1100 pages
...be made, whichr is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that, in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules...ie that they are present in them in equal numbers. An immediate consequence of this mode of looking at the question has already been the subject of a... | |
| Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1894 - 406 pages
...to be made, which is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules...ie that they are present in them in equal numbers. An immediate consequence," he goes on to say, " of this mode of looking at the question has already... | |
| 1905 - 858 pages
...hypothesis on the constitution of the gases, which teaches us that "In nil elastic fluids"— gases— "observed under the same conditions the molecules are placed at equal distances," bore their predestined fruit in the hands of his eminent successor, Jean Baptiste Andrfi Dumas and... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1884 - 630 pages
...be made, which is accepted by all physicists. It consists in supposing that, in all elastic fluids observed under the same conditions, the molecules are placed at equal distances, i. e» tliat they are present in them in equal numbers. An immediate consequence of this mode of looking... | |
| |