| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1921 - 440 lapas
...the properties of a substance as a contraction caused by fall of temperature. Thus Bridgman says:* "The volume of many metals at 0° C. and 12,000 kg....conditions." A change of about 8% in the value of (kf -f- fe) X would account for the maximum Peltier effect between compressed and uncompressed bismuth,... | |
| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1921 - 450 lapas
...temperature. Thus Bridgman says: 2 "The volume of many metals at 0° C. and 12,000 kg. [per cm. 5 ] is less than the volume at atmospheric pressure at...conditions." A change of about 8% in the value of (k f -5- k) X would account for the maximum Peltier effect between compressed and uncompressed bismuth,... | |
| Werner Weisbach - 1917 - 964 lapas
...enough to justify the extension of the range. The volume of many of the metals at 0°C and 12000 kg. is less than the volume at atmospheric pressure at...tends towards zero at 0° Abs., but at 0° C at the sathe volume the resistance is only a few per cent less than under normal conditions. Any valid theory... | |
| 1917 - 970 lapas
...enough to justify the extension of the range. The volume of many of the metals at 0°C and 12000 kg. is less than the volume at atmospheric pressure at...a few per cent less than under normal conditions. Any valid theory must explain the surprisingly little effect of the element of volume alone apart from... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1917 - 1060 lapas
...enough to justify the extension of the range. The volume of many of the metals at 0°C and 12000 kg. is less than the volume at atmospheric pressure at...a few per cent less than under normal conditions. Any valid theory must explain the surprisingly little effect of the element of volume alone apart from... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1917 - 978 lapas
...enough to justify the extension of the range. The volume of many of the metals at 0°C and 12000 kg. is less than the volume at atmospheric pressure at...a few per cent less than under normal conditions. Any valid theory must explain the surprisingly little effect of the element of volume alone apart from... | |
| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1921 - 394 lapas
...experiments is to be attributed to an increase of X sufficient to overbalance the decrease of (kf -3- k). A priori one might expect X to decrease with increase...conditions." A change of about 8% in the value of (kf -f- k) X would account for the maximum Peltier effect between compressed and uncompressed bismuth,... | |
| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1920 - 1136 lapas
...the properties of a substance as a contraction caused by fall of temperature. Thus Bridgman says:* "The volume of many metals at 0° C. and 12,000 kg....conditions." A change of about 8% in the value of (kf -5- k) X would account for the maximum Peltier effect between compressed and uncompressed bismuth,... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1920 - 716 lapas
...toward zero at 0° Abs., but under great pressure at 0° C., at the same volume as at the absolute zero, the resistance is only a few per cent less than under normal conditions. Any valid theory must explain the surprisingly little effect of the element of volume alone apart from... | |
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