Annals of Philosophy, Band 1;Band 17

Cover
Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1821
 

Inhalt


Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Beliebte Passagen

Seite 318 - Observations are printing on some of the General Principles, and on the particular Nature and Treatment of the different Species of Inflammation, by JH James, Surgeon to the Devon and Exeter Hospital, Ac.
Seite 334 - I am inclined to attribute the difference in this respect, to the greater intensity with which it is necessary to employ common electricity ; for, that positive and negative electricity, so excited, have each the same chemical power as they are observed to have in the electric pile, may be ascertained...
Seite 330 - ... degrees six tablespoonfuls of the best salad oil, three teaspoonfuls of tarragon vinegar, and two tablespoonfuls of French vinegar ; continue to stir till the sauce is like a thick smooth cream. Stand it in a cool place, or on ice, for an hour. Cut about ten ounces of cold boiled fowl into neat pieces a quarter of an inch thick and an inch and a half square. Wipe each leaf of the salad, and break it into inch pieces ; cut the onions quite small ; put half of the salad into a bowl ; on that lay...
Seite 316 - For the best paper on the theory of the motions and perturbations of the satellites of Saturn." The investigation to be so conducted as to take expressly into Consideration the influence of the rings and the figure of the planet, as modified by the attraction of the rings on the...
Seite 396 - No attraction or repulsion appears between a magnetized needle and iron-bars ; the latter being free [from permanent magnetism, whenever the iron is in the plane of the magnetic equator ; consequently, by measuring the angle of no-attraction, in a bar placed north and south, we discover the magnetic dip. 3. Before a magnet can attract iron, that is totally free from both permanent magnetism and that of position, it infuses into the iron a magnetism of contrary polarity to that of the attracting pole....
Seite 154 - An Inquiry into the Nature and Treatment of Gravel, Calculus, and other diseases connected with a deranged operation of the urinary organs.
Seite 396 - A bar of soft steel, without magnetic virtue, has its magnitude of position fixed in it by hammering it when in a vertical position-; and loses its magnetism by being struck, when in the plane of the magnetic equator. . 11. An electrical discharge, made to pass through a bar of iron, devoid of magnetism, when nearly in the position of the magnetic axis, renders the bar magnetic ; the upper end becoming a south pole, and the lower end a north pole ; but the discharge does not produce any polarity,...
Seite 472 - A Treatise on Indigestion, and its consequences, called Nervous and Bilious complaints ; with Observations on the Organic Diseases in which they sometimes terminate; by APW Philip, MDFRS 8vo.
Seite 472 - Chart ; in which is exhibited, at one View, the Symptoms, Treatment, and Modes of detecting the various Poisons, Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal, according to the latest Experiments and Observations.
Seite 396 - ... or filed, bent or twisted, when in the position of the magnetic axis, or near this position; the upper end 'becoming a south pole, and the lower end a north pole ; but the magnetism is destroyed by the same means, if the bar be held in the plane of the magnetic equator. 7. Iron heated to redness, and quenched in water, in a vertical position, becomes magnetic ; the upper end gaining south polarity, and the lower end north. 8. Hot iron receives more magnetism of position than the* same when cold.

Bibliografische Informationen