| John Michels (Journalist) - 1903 - 858 pages
...a large number of smaller bodies,' which he calls 'corpuscles,' and these are equal to one another. "In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn by Thomson from the study of one class of... | |
| 1908 - 354 pages
...Professor Thomson,137 " as containing a larger number of smaller bodies which I will call corpuscles. ... In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." The term electron * has largely supplanted that of corpuscle. The mass of an electron is always the... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - 1903 - 858 pages
...a large number of smaller bodies,' which he calls 'corpuscles,' and these are equal to one another. "In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn by Thomson from the study of one class of... | |
| 1904 - 1106 pages
...a large number of smaller bodies," which he calls "corpuscles," and these are equal to one another. "In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn 1>\" Thomson from the study of one class... | |
| Hugh Chisholm - 1911 - 1018 pages
...corpuscles; the mass of a corpuscle is the same as the mass of the negative ion in a gas at low pressure. In the" normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrical and neutral. Though the individual corpuscles behave like negative ions, yet when they are... | |
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1903 - 40 pages
...large number of smaller bodies," which he calls "corpuscles," and these are equal to one another. " In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn by Thomson from the study of one class of... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1904 - 1104 pages
...a large number of smaller bodies," which he calls "corpuscles," and these are equal to one another. "In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral." It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn by Thomson from the study of one class of... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1904 - 1108 pages
...a large number of smaller bodies," which he calls "corpuscles," and these are equal to one another. "In the normal atom this assemblage of corpuscles forms a system which is electrically neutral.v It must be borne in mind that these conclusions are drawn by Thomson from the study of one... | |
| E. A. Davis, Isabel Falconer - 2002 - 218 pages
...the mass of a corpuscle is the mass of the negative ion in a gas at low pressure, ie about 3 x l0~-'6 of a gramme. In the normal atom, this assemblage of...corpuscles behave like negative ions, yet when they arc assembled in a neutral atom the negative effect is balanced by something which causes the space... | |
| E. A. Davis, Isabel Falconer - 1997 - 280 pages
...mass of a corpuscle is the mass of the negative ion in a gas at low pressure, ie about 'A x lO"1'* of a gramme. In the normal atom, this assemblage of...individual corpuscles behave like negative ions, yet when *hey are assembled in a neutral atom the negative effect is balanced by something which causes the... | |
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