... foot-tons of energy which have hitherto escaped notice. To unlock this boundless store and subdue it to the service of man is a task which awaits the electrician of the future. The latest researches give well-founded hopes that this vast storehouse... Nature - Página 631892Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
 | 1892
...is opening out. The facts of electrolysis are by no means either completely detected or coordinated. They point to the great probability that electricity...trillion times greater than gravitational attraction is * Speech delivered at the third annual dinner of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, London, November... | |
 | 1892
...much, and so on." * Helmholtz considers it to be probable that electricity is as atomic as matter, and that an electrical atom is as definite a quantity as a chemical atom. This, however, must not yet be regarded as a certainty, for it is possible that all the facts at present... | |
 | 1896
...nature of electricity. Helmholtz considered it probable that electricity is as atomic as matter and that an electrical atom is as definite a quantity as a chemical atom and Professor Crooks says that the theory which now meets with most favour as best representing the... | |
 | 1897
...of the stupendous force which the omnipresent ether holds within itself, Professor Crookes says:* " It has been computed that in a single cubic foot of the ether that fills all space there are locked up ten thousand foot -tons of energy which have hitherto escaped... | |
 | Lilian Whiting - 1917 - 243 páginas
...related to practical needs, science would undergo vast changes. Sir William Crookes estimates that within a single cubic foot of the ether which fills all space there are locked up thousands of tons of energy which have not yet been brought to knowledge. Here are infinite resources... | |
 | 1892
...produce no sensible effect upon, our ears. " — {Encyclopedia Britannica, pth ed , art. Mechanics. cubic foot of the ether, which fills all space, there are locked up ten thousand foot-tons of energy which have hitherto escaped notice. To tiulock this boundess store... | |
 | Edmund Edward Fournier d'Albe - 1924 - 412 páginas
...Electricity," he wrote : Helmholtz considers it to be probable that electricity is as atomic as matter, and that an electrical atom is as definite a quantity as a chemical atom. This, however, must not yet be regarded as a certainty, for it is possible that all the facts at present... | |
 | 1892
...much, and so on." * Helmholtz considers it to be probable that electricity is as atomic as matter, and that an electrical atom is as definite a quantity as a chemical atom. This, however, must not yet be regarded as a certainty, for it is possible that all the facts at present... | |
 | Sir Norman Lockyer - 1892
...opening out. The facts of electrolysis are by no means either completely detected or co-ordina:ed. They point to the great probability that electricity...been computed that, in a single cubic foot of the eiher which fills all space, there are locked up 10,000 foot-tons of energy which have hitherto escaped... | |
 | 1892
...electricity was atomic, that an electrical atom was as definite a quantity as a chemical atom. It had been computed that in a single cubic foot of the ether which filled all space there were locked up 1o,ooo foot tons of energy which had hitherto escaped notice.... | |
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