Nature, Volume 104Sir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1919 |
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Página 113
... temperature of the fluid in its bulb , and that to draw any useful inference from that temperature it is necessary to know how the heat which produced it was supplied . Heat may enter a thermometer from the air by conduction , aided by ...
... temperature of the fluid in its bulb , and that to draw any useful inference from that temperature it is necessary to know how the heat which produced it was supplied . Heat may enter a thermometer from the air by conduction , aided by ...
Página 678
... temperature of the container and specimen . When granite was heated to 550 ° C. , a temperature corresponding to eleven miles below the surface , it stood a pressure equivalent to fifteen miles , and might have stood more but that the ...
... temperature of the container and specimen . When granite was heated to 550 ° C. , a temperature corresponding to eleven miles below the surface , it stood a pressure equivalent to fifteen miles , and might have stood more but that the ...
Página 711
... temperature of between 15,250 ° and 17,700 ° C. was reached , the exact temperature depending upon the amount of dissocia- FIG . 8 . tion or combination existing between the elements at the time . Calculation of the Temperature Reached ...
... temperature of between 15,250 ° and 17,700 ° C. was reached , the exact temperature depending upon the amount of dissocia- FIG . 8 . tion or combination existing between the elements at the time . Calculation of the Temperature Reached ...
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