10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «DIATHERMACY»
Discover the use of
diathermacy in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
diathermacy and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Elements of Chemistry: Theoretical and Practical: Chemical ...
Diathermacy of different Solids. Each plate was 0102 inch thick. Rock Salt (limpid
) Sicilian Sulphur (yellow). Fluor Spar (limpid) Rock Salt (cloudy) Heryl (greenish
yellow). . Iceland Spar (limpid) Plate Glass Quartz (limpid) Quartz (smoky) White ...
William Allen Miller, 1877
2
Elements of Chemistry: Chemical physics
VARIATIONS OP DIATHERMACY. 207 Diathermacy of different Solids. Each
plate was 0*102 inch thick. Naked Flame. Ignited Platinum. Copper 75o° F.
Copper 211" V. Bock Salt (limpid) . . Sicilian Sulphur (yellow) Fluor Spar (limpid) .
William Allen Miller, 1855
3
Elements of chemistry: theoretical and practical
296 VARIATIONS OF DIATHERMACY. It must not be forgotten that hitherto
Tyndall's experiments npon the various gases and vapours have been confined
for the most part to radiant heat of low refrangibility. No doubt other and very
different ...
William Allen Miller, 1867
VARIATIONS OF DIATHERMACY. 225 the hot ball and the other bulb, it will be
found that although both plates are almost equally transparent to light, yet the
bulb nert the rock salt will rise in temperature much more rapidly than the one
next ...
William Allen Miller, 1860
5
Elements of chemistry pt. 1 1855
Diathermacy of different Solids. 207 Each plate was o" i ol inch thick. Bock Salt (
limpid) . . . . Sicilian Sulphur (yellow) . . Fluor Spar (limpid) . . . . Bock Salt (cloudy)
. . . . Beryl (greenish yellow) . . Iceland Spar (limpid) . . . Plate Glass I Quartz ...
William Allen Miller, 1855
6
Elements of Chemistry: Theoretical and Practical: Chemical ...
_ (164) Influence qf Structure on Diathermacy—I t by no means ward/,
nquwnccessarily follows that a body which is transparent to light is _ l - : I r I also
able to allow the passage of heat, and vice versd; sulphate ' " ' ' I of co h' l t th s e
of blue li ht ...
William Allen Miller, 1867
7
An Elementary Handbook of Physica
Diathermacy. — It may be said, generally, that no substance whatever is entirely
diathermic (i. e., allows heat to pass entirely through it), any more than any is
entirely transparent. It is also worthy of especial notice that transparency and ...
8
First Principles of Physics: Or Natural Philosophy, Designed ...
DIATHERMACY OF DIFFERENT LIQUIDS. The independence of transparency
and diathermacy is well seen in the above table ; the bisulphid of carbon
transmitted three times as many heat-rays as ether, four times as many as alcohol
, and ...
9
Transactions of the National Eclectic Medical Association of ...
DIATHERMACY OF THE AIR. A striking and to most persons a novel feature of
high altitudes is the clearness of the air as shown by the intensity of the sunshine.
The following table shows the difference in temperature in the sun and in the ...
National Eclectic Medical Association of the United States of America, 1885
Tyndall has certainly lost sight of this when he attributes the diathermacy of the
air in winter only to the small amount of vapour of water. The same is the case
when he points to the relatively small nocturnal radiation on clear nights in many
...