... probably quite large enough to supply the wants of the human family to the end of its sojourn here. It has been calculated that an amount of condensation, which would diminish the diameter of the Sun by only the ten-thousandth part, would suffice... Report of the Annual Meeting - Página lixpor British Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting - 1858Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1858 - 924 páginas
...the condition of incompressibility, we have, in the future approximation of its parts, a fund of heat probably quite large enough to supply the wants of...condensation, which would diminish the diameter of the sun bv only the ten thousandth part, would suffice to restore the heat emitted in 2000 years. Again, on... | |
| 1859 - 448 páginas
...incompressibility, we have, in the future approximation of its parts, a fund of heat probably quite large enougli to supply the wants of the human family to the end...the ebb and flow of every tide, and must therefore re appear as beat. The amount of this must be considerable, and should not be overlooked in any estimation... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1859 - 528 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat . According to the computations of Bessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1859 - 524 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. According to the computations of Bessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1860 - 528 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led. to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. According to the computations of Bessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1862 - 532 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led. to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. According to the computations of Eessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1862 - 528 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led. to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. According to the computations of liessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
| 1864 - 304 páginas
...most interesting of modem science, and has led to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. Nay more, the great tidal wave is, in part, dragged as a brake along the surface of the earth... | |
| 1859 - 448 páginas
...the condition of inrompressibility, we have, in the future approximation of its parts, a fund of heat probably quite large enough to supply the wants of...the ebb and flow of every tide, and must therefore re appear as heat. The amount of this must be considerable, and should not be overlooked in any estimation... | |
| David Ames Wells - 1872 - 520 páginas
...most interesting of modern science, and has led to many important deductions. Thus, force is expended by friction in the ebb and flow of every tide, and must, therefore, reappear as heat. According to the computations of Bessel, the astronomer, 25,000 miles of water flow in every... | |
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