| Industrial arts - 1868 - 896 pages
...been introduced to express in a convenient way the lifting of one pound to the height of a foot. Thus, the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water one degree Fahrenheit being taken as a standard, 772 foot-pounds constitute what is callud the mechanical equivalent... | |
| Massachusetts. State Board of Agriculture - Agriculture - 1896 - 806 pages
...40 pounds of mangels feed, in comparison with thirty pounds of corn silage, — the same * A calorie is the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a kilogram of water from 0° to 1° centigrade. NUTRIKMTS PKB ACRE. Put ACRE. CROPS. Yield per Digestible... | |
| Industrial arts - 1858 - 448 pages
...by the consumption of heat, for each foot-pound thus gained a definite quantity of heat disappears. The quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water a degree of the centigrade thermometer, corresponds to a mechanical force by which a pound weight would... | |
| Chemistry - 1865 - 338 pages
...express in a convenient or systematic way the lifting of 771 pounds to the height of one foot. Thus the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water one degree being taken as a standard, 772 foot pounds statute, u what is called the mechanical equivalent of heat.... | |
| Industrial arts - 1859 - 448 pages
...by the consumption of heat, for each foot-pound thus gained a definite quantity of heat disappears. The quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water a degree of the centigrade thermometer, corresponds to a mechanical force by which a pound weight would... | |
| Sir William Fairbairn - Machinery - 1861 - 328 pages
...water, at or near its point of maximum density, to raise its temperature 1° Fahrenheit. The French thermal unit is the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of 1 kilogramme of water at or near its point of maximum density 1° centigrade. It will be convenient... | |
| John Tyndall - Heat - 1863 - 500 pages
...introduced to express, in a convenient way, the lifting of one pound to the height of a foot. Thus the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water one degree being taken as a standard, 772 foot-pounds-constitute what is called the mechanical equivalent of heat.... | |
| John Tyndall - Heat - 1863 - 538 pages
...introduced to express, in a convenient way, the lifting of one pound to the height of a foot. Thus the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water one degree being taken, as a standard, 772 foot-pounds constitute what is called the mechanical equivalent of... | |
| 1864 - 670 pages
...foot-pound," has been introduced to express the lifting of one pound to the height of one foot. And the quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water one degree being taken as the standard of measurement, 772 foot-pounds constitute what 18 termed the " mechanical... | |
| Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - Force and energy - 1865 - 512 pages
...by the consumption of heat, for each foot-pound thus gained a definite quantity of heat disappears. The quantity of heat necessary to raise the temperature of a pound of water a degree of the centigrade thermometer, corresponds to a mechanical force by which a pound weight would... | |
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