... the eighth element starting from a given one is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music. Elementary Chemistry - Page 265by Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir, Charles Slater - 1887 - 368 pagesFull view - About this book
| Chemistry - 1897 - 370 pages
...when placed in the order of their atomic weights, " the eighth element, starting from a given one, is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music." To this regularity he gave the name " The Law of Octaves." The development of this idea, as all chemists... | |
| Chemistry - 1864 - 348 pages
...and that immediately above it is 7 ; in other words, the eighth element starting from a given one sa kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music. The differences between the numbers of the other members of a group are frequently twice as great ;... | |
| John A. R. Newlands - Atomic weights - 1884 - 74 pages
...group and that immediately above it is 7 ; in other words, the eighth element starting from a given one is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music. The differences between the numbers of the other members of a group are frequently twice as great ;... | |
| Thomas Lauder Brunton, Francis Henry Williams - Drugs - 1885 - 1204 pages
...classification. Mr. Newlands also pointed out that the eighth clement starting from a given one, was a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music,1 Mendelejeff has not only greatly developed this system of classification, but has afforded... | |
| William Ripley Nichols, William B. Lindsay, Frank Humphreys Storer - Chemistry - 1894 - 480 pages
...that of the element at the beginning of the series. In the words of Newlands, " The eighth element, starting from a given element, is a kind of repetition...first, like the eighth note of an octave in music." This periodic recurrence of properties is well shown by comparing the elements between lithium and... | |
| Chemical engineering - 1898 - 472 pages
...that when placed in the order of their atomic weights " the eighth element, starting from a given one, is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music." To this regularity he gave the name " The Law of Octaves." The development of this idea, as all chemists... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - Discoveries in science - 1899 - 816 pages
...elements be arranged in the order of their atomic weights "the eighth element, starting from a giveu one, is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music.'' The discovery of Newlauds of a fact which later developed into the Periodic Law dors not, however,... | |
| Science - 1899 - 950 pages
...their atomic weights ' the eighth element, starting from a given one, is a kind 608 APBIL28, 1899.] 609 of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music.' This discovery of Newlands of a fact which later developed into the Periodic Law does not, however,... | |
| Science - 1901 - 624 pages
...and that immediately above it is seven; in other words, the eighth element starting from a given one, is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music." While this regularity appeared in the case of the elements of low atomic weight, it failed when applied... | |
| Harry Clary Jones - Chemistry, Physical and theoretical - 1902 - 594 pages
...group and that immediately above it is 7; in other words, the eighth element starting from a given one is a kind of repetition of the first, like the eighth note of an octave in music." In the following year Newlands announced his " Law of Octaves " in a very brief note : * "If the elements... | |
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