Now it is one great object of this work, to show the importance and advantage of ascertaining the relative weights of the ultimate particles, both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary particles which constitute one compound particle,... Elementary Chemistry - Page 196by Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir, Charles Slater - 1887 - 368 pagesFull view - About this book
| William Nicholson - Science - 1810 - 844 pages
...simple •' and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary " particles* which constitute one compound particle, and the "number of less compound...into the " formation of one more compound particle." He then goes on to state, that when two bodies A and B are disposed * I hope I shall not be thought... | |
| Arthur Aikin - 1809 - 832 pages
...particles, both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple element^ particles which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound particles which enter into the formaaoa of one more compound particle." He begins by hiving down aseries of propositions concerning... | |
| 1812 - 564 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary particles which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound particles which enter into the composition of one more compound particle." But if our astonishment was great at the grandeur of the... | |
| William Higgins - Atomic theory - 1814 - 194 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary particles which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound •particle. " If there are two bodies, A and B, which are disposed to combine, the following is the order in which... | |
| Charles Daubeny - Atomic theory - 1831 - 226 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies; the number of simple elementary particles which constitute one compound particle ; and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound particle." To illustrate these views, he has placed at the end of his volume a plate, in which thirty-seven bodies,... | |
| John Frederic Daniell - Chemistry - 1839 - 606 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary particles irhiclt contt/tiite one compound particle, and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound particle. " If there are two bodies, x and n, which arc disposed to combine, the following is the order in which... | |
| American literature - 1846 - 608 pages
...particles both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary bodies which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound particle." Here is expressed with the greatest ease all that was wanted. The succession of his investigations... | |
| Pharmacy - 1845 - 612 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary particles which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound...which enter into the formation of one more compound panicle." In the second volume of his work, published in 1810, he confirmed these views by facts derived... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1846 - 620 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple elementary bodies which consti-j lute one compound particle, and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound particle." Here is expressed with the greatest ease all that was wanted. The succession of his investigations... | |
| John Joseph Griffin - Chemistry - 1847 - 584 pages
...both of simple and compound bodies, the number of simple and elementary particles which constitute one compound particle, and the number of less compound...into the formation of one more compound particle. " If there are two bodies, A and B, which are disposed to combine, the following is the order in which... | |
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