Jointly they establish, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or seemingly opaque solid, the mean distance between the centres of contiguous molecules is less... A Manual of inorganic chemistry v. 1 - Page 14de Sir Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1873Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow - 1887 - 516 pages
...Institution, given about four years ago, he extended the lines of his argument and arrived at the conclusion that in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the one five-millionth and greater than the one thousand-millionth of a centimeter ; and in order to give... | |
| William John Ibbetson - 1887 - 548 pages
...transparent solid, or seemingly opaque * Lecture on the Size of Atoms, Royal Institution, February 3, 1883. solid, the mean distance between the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the five-millionth and greater than the thousandmillionth of a centimetre. " To form some conception of... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin - 1889 - 486 pages
...they establish, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the i/5,000,000th, and greater than the i/1,000,000,000th of a centimetre. To form some conception of the... | |
| Cotteswold Naturalists' Field Club - 1890 - 500 pages
...they establish, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the five-millionth, and greater than the thousandth millionth of a centimetre. To form some conception... | |
| George Frederick Barker - 1892 - 932 pages
...says Thomson, " with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probabilit}-, the conclusion that in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid or...seemingly opaque solid, the mean distance between the centers of contiguous molecules is less than the hundred-millionth and greater than the two-thousand-millionth... | |
| Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1894 - 406 pages
...Institution, given about four years ago, he extends the lines of his argument and arrives at the conclusion that in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the one five-millionth and greater than the one thousandmillionth of a centimeter ; and in order to give... | |
| T. J. J. See - 1907 - 340 pages
...they established, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the 1/5,000,000 and greater than the 1/1,000,000,000 of a centimeter. "To form some conception of the degree... | |
| Thomas Jefferson Jackson See - 1908 - 150 pages
...they established, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the 1/5,000,000 and greater than the 1/1,000,000,000 of a centimeter. f To form some conception of the... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1908 - 760 pages
...they established, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the 1/5,000,000 and greater than the 1/1,000,000,000 of a centimeter. " To form some conception of the... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1908 - 762 pages
...they established, with what we cannot but regard as a very high degree of probability, the conclusion that, in any ordinary liquid, transparent solid, or...the centres of contiguous molecules is less than the 1/5,000,000 and greater than the 1/1,000,000,000 of a centimeter. "To form some conception of the degree... | |
| |