| Alexander Adam - 1794 - 748 pagine
...body heavier than water, when immerfed in it, difplaces a quantity of water equal to its own bulk, and lofes as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of that bulk of water. By weighing metals in water, we can difcover their adulterations or mixtures with... | |
| John Imison - 1796 - 476 pagine
...immerged may be confide red as equally prefled on all fides. 15. Every folid immerfed in a fluid, lofes fo much of its weight, as is equal to the weight of a quantity of that fluid of the fame dimenfion with the folid. 1 6. The fluid acquires the weight the... | |
| Richard Helsham - 1802 - 500 pagine
...end of a balance and poifed, and then filled with water, preponderates with the weight of 200 grains. Since a folid when immerfed in a liquid, lofes as...lofs of weight in the fame liquid. Thus a cylinder of Exp. 3. block-tin, equal in dimenfions to the brafs cylinder, but fpecifically lighter, being immerfed... | |
| Alexander Adam - 1802 - 914 pagine
...body heavier than water, when immerfed in it, difplaces a quantity of water equal to its own bulk, and lofes as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of that bulk of witer. By weighing metals in water, we can difcover their adulterations or mixtures with... | |
| Thomas Hodson - 1806 - 488 pagine
...gravities. 7. When a body ii immerfed in a fluid that is fpecificalij lighter than the body, the body lofes as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of a quantity of the fluid of the fame bulk or magnitude. Therefore, the fpecific gravities of two bodies... | |
| 1812 - 352 pagine
...use of this instrument is founded on the theorem of Archimedes, that any body weighed in water, loses as much of its weight, as is equal to the weight of the same bulk of water. The accident which led to this theorem, and established a principle, whose... | |
| Jeremiah Joyce - 1815 - 680 pagine
...heavier than water, you may take it as an axiom, that " every body, when immersed in •water, loses as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of a bulk of water of the same magnitude." I will now place this empty box on ih* bason filled to the edge... | |
| Oliver Goldsmith - 1816 - 470 pagine
...lighter, it will swim. Universally, therefore, a body plunged in water, * Nollet's Lectures. loses as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of a body of water of its own bulk. Some light bodies, therefore, such as cork, lose much of their weight,... | |
| William Nicholson - 1821 - 356 pagine
...nothing at all. 5. A body immersed in a fluid, which is specifically lighter than itself, loses so much of its weight as is equal to the weight of a quantity of the fluid of the same bulk with itself. Hence a body loses more of its weight in a heavier... | |
| William Jillard Hort - 1822 - 308 pagine
...quantity of the water as is equal to the bulk or weight- of that body. A solid, weighed in a fluid, loses as much of its weight as is equal to the weight of the quantity of fluid displaced by it. A solid, immersed in a fluid, will sink, if its specific gravity... | |
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