About this book
My library
Books on Google Play
CONTENTS OF VOLUME 1.
NO. 1.
[Issued November 1, 1904.]
1. RECOMPARISON OF THE UNITED STATES PROTOTYPE METER....L. A. Fischer
2. A STUDY OF THE SILVER VOLTAMETER..
3. THE SO-CALLED INTERNATIONAL ELECTRICAL UNITS..
4. THE SPECTRA OF MIXED GASES
Page.
5
.K. E. Guthe
Frank A. Wolff
21
39
77
83
95
P. G. Nutting
5. ON SECONDARY SPECTRA AND THE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH THEY MAY
BE PRODUCED .P. G. Nutting
6. SOME NEW RECTIFYING EFFECTS IN CONDUCTING GASES......P. G. Nutting
7. ON FIBERS RESEMBLING QUARTZ IN THEIR ELASTIC PROPERTIES. K. E. Guthe
8. On the Temperature of tHE ARC.............C. W. Waidner and G. K. Burgess
NO. 2.
[Issued February 1, 1905.]
9. THE ABSOLUTE MEASUREMENT OF INDUCTANCE..E. B. Rosa and F. W. Grover
10. THE ABSOLUTE MEASUREMENT OF CAPACITY...E. B. Rosa and F. W. Grover
11. OPTICAL PYROMETRY............. ..C. W. Waidner and G. K. Burgess
12. ON THE THEORY OF THE MATTHEWS AND THE RUSSELL-LÉONARD PHOTOм-
ETERS FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF MEAN SPHERICAL AND MEAN HEMI-
SPHERICAL INTENSITIES.
101
109
125
153
189
13. THE TESTING OF CLINICAL THERMOMETERS.. C. W. Waidner and L. A. Fischer
NO. 3.
[Issued November 1, 1905.]
14. MEASUREMENT OF INDUCTANCE BY ANDERSON'S METHOD, USING ALTERNAT-
ING CURRENTS AND A VIBRATION GALVANOMETER
E. B. Rosa and F. W. Grover
291
15. USE OF SERPENTINE IN STANDARDS OF INDUCTANCE.
16. THE SILVER COULOMETER
17. HISTORY OF STANDARD WEIGHTS AND MEASURES OF UNITED STATES....
.. L. A. Fischer
18. WATTMETER METHODS OF MEASURING POWER EXPENDED UPON CONDENS-
ERS AND CIRCUITS OF LOW POWER FACTOR
19. THE RELATIVE INTENSITIES OF METAL AND GAS SPECTRA FROM ELECTRIC-
ALLY CONDUCTING GASES. P. G. Nutting
20. THE USE OF WHITE WALLS IN A PHOTOMETRIC LABORATORY.. E. P. Hyde
21. INFLUENCE OF WAVE FORM ON THE RATE OF INTEGRATING INDUCTION WATT-
METERS... E. B. Rosa, M. G. Lloyd, and C. E. Reid
22. DETECTOR FOR SMALL ALTERNATING CURRENTS AND ELECTRICAL WAVES...
L. W. Austin
23. THE POSITIVE CHARGES CARRIED BY THE CANAL RAYS..
24. RADIATION FROM PLATINUM AT HIGH TEMPERATURES.
25. A FIVE-THOUSAND VOLT GENERATOR SET