CavendishAmerican Philosophical Society, 1996 - 414 páginas Two gifted 18th-century Londoners, Lord Charles Cavendish & his preeminent son, the Honorable Henry Cavendish, were descendants of paired revolutions, one political & the other scientific. Scions of a powerful revolutionary family, they gave a highly original turn to their understanding of public service. Lord Charles began his career as a Member of Parliament & ended it as an officer of the Royal Society, & his son Henry made a complete life within science, in the course of which he demonstrated skills that rank him with the greatest scientists of all time. In the history of British aristocracy, in high tide following the revolutionary settlement, there was no action more remarkable than Henry Cavendish gently laying delicate weights in the pan of his incomparable precision balance. For this to come to pass, it took two kinds of inventiveness, one in social forms & the other in scientific technique. This biography tells how. Illustrations. |
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Outras edições - Ver tudo
Cavendish - The Experimental Life: Max Planck Research Library for the ... Christa Jungnickel,Russell McCormmach Pré-visualização limitada - 2016 |
Cavendish: The Experimental Life Christa Jungnickel,Russell McCormmach Pré-visualização indisponível - 1999 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
Account acid arsenic astronomer Baldwin Banks's BL Add Mss Blagden Diary Blagden Letterbook Blagden Letters Blagden to Sir Blagden wrote bodies British Cambridge Cavendish Mss Cavendish's paper Charles Blagden chemical chemist chemistry Christopher Baldwin Clapham Common Coll committee Correspondence density Devon draft duke of Devonshire earl earth eighteenth century electrical England experimental experiments father Fellows fluid Gould Heberden Henry Cavendish Herschel History Honourable Henry Cavendish instrument-maker instruments interest John Michell Joseph Priestley Kent latent heat later lectures Leyden jar London Lord Charles Cavendish Lord James Cavendish Lowther Macclesfield manuscripts Maskelyne mathematical measure mercury Michell's Minutes of Council Moivre motion natural philosophy Newton Newtonian observations parliament particles persons Philosophical Transactions phlogisticated phlogiston political pounds president Priestley published researches Royal Society scientific Sir Joseph Banks telescope theory of heat thermometer Thomas Birch University Press vis viva Watson whig William
Passagens conhecidas
Página 379 - Crawford : Experiments and Observations on Animal Heat, and the inflammation of combustible bodies.
Página 350 - The effects produced in the world by the agency of Heat are probably just as extensive, and quite as important, as those which are owing to the tendency of the particles of matter towards each other; and there is no doubt but its operations are, in all cases, determined by laws equally immutable.
Página 399 - Correspondence of James Watt on his Discovery of the Theory of the Composition of Water, with a Letter from his Son.
Página 201 - I. It appears from this experiment, that the mountain Schehallien exerts a fenfible attraction ; therefore, from the rules of philpfuphiiiiig, we arc to conclude that every mountain, and indeed every particle of the earth, is endued with the fame property, in proportion to its quantity of matter.
Página 100 - An Account of a Comparison Lately Made by Some Gentlemen of the Royal Society, of the Standard of a Yard, and the Several Weights Lately Made for Their Use; with the Original Standards of Measures and Weights in the Exchequer, and Some Others Kept for Public Use, at Guild-hall, Founders-hall, the Tower, etc.,
Página 249 - That the influence of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished"?
Página 382 - Table of English Silver Coins, from the Norman Conquest to the Present Time.
Página 336 - Many years ago, the late Rev. JOHN MICHELL, of this Society, contrived a method of determining the density of the earth, by rendering sensible the attraction of small quantities of matter; but, as he was engaged in other pursuits, he did not complete the apparatus till a short time before his death, and did not live to make any experiments with it.
Página 176 - ... same power of the distances. Or, to express it more concisely, if you look upon the electric fluid as matter of a contrary kind to other matter, the particles of all matter, both those of the electric fluid and of other matter, repel particles of the same kind, and attract those of a contrary kind, with a force inversely as some less power of the distance than the cube.
Página 395 - Observations made in Savoy, in order to ascertain the height -of mountains by means of the barometer, being an examination of M. De Luc's rules delivered in his Recherches sur les Modifications de P Atmosphere,

