| James Thomson Bottomley - 1882 - 152 páginas
...necessary, some of which are merely hinted at here, and others not referred to at all. amount corresponding to the weight of a volume of water equal to the volume of the body immersed; for, according to the principle of Archimedes, the surrounding water affords... | |
| Robert Hamilton Pinkerton - 1893 - 372 páginas
...and that its specific gravity is a/ (a — b). The loss of weight in water is a - b grammes, and this is equal to the weight of a volume of water equal to the volume of the body. But a cubic centimetre of water weighs one gramme, and therefore the volume of a — b... | |
| 1897 - 672 páginas
...faint of discharge, plus the work necessary to overcome the friction and other resistances. Rule II.— The work done in one stroke of a pump is equal to...displaced by the piston during the stroke, multiplied by the total vertical distance in feet through which the water is to be raised, plus the work necessary... | |
| International Correspondence Schools - 1899 - 596 páginas
...point of discharge, plus the work necessary to mercóme the friction and other resistances. Rule II.— The work done in: one stroke of a pump is equal to t ite weight of a volume of water equal to t lie volume displaced by the piston during the stroke,... | |
| William Watson - 1899 - 990 páginas
...represents the loss of weight of the block when immersed in water, and this, by the principle of Archimedes, is equal to the weight of a volume of water equal to that of the block. Hence, knowing the volume of the block, ie the volume of the water displaced, the... | |
| 1902 - 542 páginas
...of discharge, plus t/te work necessary to overcome the friction and other resistances. Rule II.— The work done in one stroke of a pump is equal to...displaced by the piston during the stroke, multiplied by the total vertical distance in feet through which t/ie water is to be raised, plus the work necessary... | |
| William Watson - 1902 - 1012 páginas
...represents the loss of weight of the block when immersed in water, and this, by the principle of Archimedes, is equal to the weight of a volume of water equal to that of the block. Hence, knowing the volume of the block, ie the volume of the water displaced, the... | |
| 1905 - 696 páginas
...discharge, plus the work necessary to overcome the friction and other resistances. 2220. Bute.—The work done in one stroke of a pump is equal to the...displaced by the piston during the stroke, multiplied by the total vertical distance in feet through which the water is to be raised,plus the work necessary... | |
| Wilbert Goodchild - 1908 - 344 páginas
...let this weight be y. Now x — y is equal to the weight of the water displaced, or, in other words, to the weight of a volume of water equal to the volume of the mineral. Hence — "— is equal to the V/ x — y specific gravity of the substance. In all... | |
| John A. Newlin, Thomas Randall Carson Wilson - 1919 - 52 páginas
...in an oven-dry condition; that is, it is the ratio of the weight of the specimen of wood, oven-dry, to the weight of a volume of water equal to the volume of the specimen at the time of test. Because of the shrinkage which takes place in wood when it is... | |
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