| American Philosophical Society - 1893 - 806 páginas
...the author to an action of the discharge of the Leyden jar which had never before been recognized. The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not...imponderable fluid from one side of the jar to the other; the phenomenon requires us to admit the existence of a principal discharge in one direction and then several... | |
| 1881 - 826 páginas
...flow. "The discharge, whatever may be its ure is not correctly represented by the single transfer from side of the jar to the other: the phenomena require us to ait the existence of a principal discharge in one direction, and several reflex actions backward and... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1889 - 692 páginas
...the author to an action of the discharge of the Leyden jar, which had never before been recognised. The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not...fluid from one side of the jar to the other ; the phenomenon requires us to admit the existenee of a principal discharge in one direction and then several... | |
| Sir Oliver Lodge - 1889 - 446 páginas
...the author to an action of the discharge of the Leyden jar which had never before been recognized. The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not...fluid from one side of the jar to the other ; the phenomenon requires us to admit the existence of a principal discharge in one direction and then several... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1889 - 642 páginas
...before been recogriit**]. The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not correctly re]>r- sented (employing for simplicity the theory of Franklin)...fluid from one side of the jar to the other ; the phenomenon requires us to admit the exittencf of a principal discharge in one direction and then several... | |
| 1891 - 1160 páginas
...Entladung einer Le3r<lnerbatterie studirte. Kr sagt in einer 1842 veröffentlichten Abhandlung Folgendes: ' „The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not...(employing for simplicity the theory of Franklin) 1>y the single transfer of an imponderable fluid from one side of the jar to the other; the phenoinenon... | |
| American Electrotherapeutic Association - 1894 - 428 páginas
...whatever may be its nature, is not correctly represented by a single transfer of the imponderable liquid from one side of the jar to the other. The phenomena require to admit the existence of a number of discharges in one direction, and then several reflex actions... | |
| Joseph John Thomson - 1893 - 618 páginas
...the author to an action of the discharge of the Leyden jar which had never before been recognised. The discharge, whatever may be its nature, is not...(employing for simplicity the theory of Franklin) by the simple transfer of an imponderable fluid from one side of the jar to the other, the phenomenon requires... | |
| Joseph John Thomson - 1893 - 612 páginas
...nature, is not correctly represented (employing for simplicity the theory of Franklin) by the simple transfer of an imponderable fluid from one side of the jar to the other, the phenomenon requires us to admit the existence of a principal discharge in one direction, and then several... | |
| Charles Albert Perkins - 1896 - 304 páginas
...Leyden jars. Prof. Henry pointed out that "the discharge is not correctly represented by the simple transfer of an imponderable fluid from one side of the jar to the other ; the phenomenon requires us to admit the existence of a principal discharge in one direction, and then several... | |
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