| Henry Minchin Noad - 1844 - 512 pagine
...particle, which represents it to the mind, and there is an immensity of facts which justify us in believing that the atoms of matter are in some way endowed or...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity. Now, to decompose a single grain of acidulated water, an electric... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 634 pagine
...some third kind of power or agent, yet there is an immensity of facts which justify us in believing that the atoms of matter are in some way endowed or...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity. As soon as we perceive, through the teaching of Dalton, that chemical... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1855 - 566 pagine
...particle, which represents it to the mind, and there is an immensity of facts which justify us in believing that the atoms of matter are in some way endowed or...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity. Now, to decompose a single grain of acidulated water, an electric... | |
| Edward Cornelius Towne - 1887 - 52 pagine
...ultimately be found subordinate to it." " There is an immensity of facts which justify us in believing that the atoms of matter are in some way endowed or...powers, to which they owe their most striking qualities. ... It is wonderful to observe how small a quantity of a compound body is decomposed by a certain portion... | |
| 1895 - 710 pagine
...greater, ignorance of electricity, . . . yet there is an immensity of facts which justify us in believing that the atoms of matter are in some way endowed or...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity. As soon as we perceive, through the teaching of Dalton, that chemical... | |
| Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1910 - 502 pagine
...it would take to liberate n atoms of hydrogen.f The quantitative law seemed to FaradayJ to indicate that " the atoms of matter are in some way endowed...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity." Looking at the facts of electrolytic decomposition from this... | |
| Ernest William Hobson - 1923 - 532 pagine
...of electrolysis. In this connection he made the statement, of great significance at the present day, that " the atoms of matter are in some way endowed...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity." The concentration of Faraday's attention on the dielectric media... | |
| Ernest William Hobson - 1923 - 538 pagine
...of electrolysis. In this connection he made the statement, of great significance at the present day, that "the atoms of matter are in some way endowed...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity." The concentration of Faraday's attention on the dielectric media... | |
| Dorothy Mabel Turner - 1927 - 208 pagine
...may well quote Faraday's views on it. 2 ' The atoms of matter are in some way associated or endowed with electrical powers, to which they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity. • • • The harmony which [this view] introduces into the... | |
| E. U. Condon, Halis Odabasi - 1980 - 684 pagine
...atomicity of electric charge. In Section 852 of his Experimental Researches in Electricity he wrote: "The atoms of matter are in some way endowed or associated...they owe their most striking qualities, and amongst them their mutual chemical affinity." In Section 869 he wrote: "Or if we adopt the atomic theory or... | |
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