| Chemistry - 1773 - 682 pages
...ones." "Approach Caused by Vibration," by Sir W. Thomson, Phil. Mag.t 1871, vol. xli.( p. 423:— 41 The average pressure at any point of an incompressible...balloon observed by Schellbach is temptingly suggestive of the conclusion he has drawn, that there is attraction or repulsion accordingly as the density of... | |
| Biology - 1874 - 802 pages
...gravity are transmitted." By a delicate mathematical analysis, Thomson arrives at the theorem that the ''average pressure at any point of an incompressible,...round in any manner, through a finite space of it," would explain the attractions just described. Moreover, he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Science - 1871 - 646 pages
...much occupied in mathematical investigations connected with vortex-motion. According to this theorem, the average pressure at any point of an incompressible...space of it, is equal to a constant diminished by (he product of the density into half the square of the velocity. This immediately explains the attractions... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin - Electricity - 1872 - 650 pages
...occupied in mathematical investigations connected with vortex-motion. 741. According to this theorem, the average pressure at any point of an incompressible...the density into half the square of the velocity. This immediately explains the attractions demonstrated in your experiments : for in each case the average... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin - Electric power - 1872 - 684 pages
...occupied in mathematical investigations connected with vortex-motion. 741. According to this theorem, the average pressure at any point of an incompressible frictionless fluid originally at rest, * [The proposition as originally published without limitation ia obviously false, although that it... | |
| Science - 1874 - 1060 pages
...gravity are transmitted." By a delicate mathematical analysis, Thomson arrives at the theorem that the " average pressure at any point of an incompressible,...round in any manner, through a finite space of it," would explain the attractions just described. Moreover, he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
| English periodicals - 1874 - 580 pages
...arrives at the theorem that the " average pressure at any point of an incompressible, frictiouless fluid originally at rest, but set in motion and kept...round in any manner, through a finite space of it," would explain the attractions just described. Moreover he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1875 - 392 pages
...gravity are transmitted." By a delicate mathematical analysis, Thomson arrives at the theorem that the "average pressure at any point of an incompressible,...round in any manner, through a finite space of it" would explain the attractions just described. Moreover, he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1875 - 390 pages
...gravity are transmitted." By a delicate mathematical analysis, Thomson arrives at the theorem that the "average pressure at any point of an incompressible,...round in any manner, through a finite space of it" would explain the attractions just described. Moreover, he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
| Science - 1875 - 800 pages
...analysis, Thomson arrives at the theorem that the " average pressure at any point of an incompressiblc, frictionless fluid, originally at rest, but set in...round in any manner, through a finite space of it," would explain the attractions just described. Moreover, he is persuaded by other effects besides those... | |
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