A Textbook of Physics, Band 2C. Griffin, 1904 |
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Seite 2
... constant amount greater than the distance between the successive centres . Fifteen or twenty circles may be thus drawn , and if the card is rotated about its centre , the motion of the curved lines on one side of the centre will ...
... constant amount greater than the distance between the successive centres . Fifteen or twenty circles may be thus drawn , and if the card is rotated about its centre , the motion of the curved lines on one side of the centre will ...
Seite 5
... constant , and that this constant value is the same as the velocity with which air - waves should travel as calculated on mechanical principles . 2. Sound travels through air or some material medium . — If an electric bell is suspended ...
... constant , and that this constant value is the same as the velocity with which air - waves should travel as calculated on mechanical principles . 2. Sound travels through air or some material medium . — If an electric bell is suspended ...
Seite 15
... constant velocity , we have only the third characteristic of form to connect with quality , and the conclu- sion that quality depends on form is , as we shall see hereafter , abundantly justified . In Fig . 10 there are three forms of ...
... constant velocity , we have only the third characteristic of form to connect with quality , and the conclu- sion that quality depends on form is , as we shall see hereafter , abundantly justified . In Fig . 10 there are three forms of ...
Seite 16
... corresponding decrement of volume per unit volume , and is constant for small changes , such as are implied in assuming that the curve of displacement is nearly flat . This implication will be evident from the expression for the volume 16.
... corresponding decrement of volume per unit volume , and is constant for small changes , such as are implied in assuming that the curve of displacement is nearly flat . This implication will be evident from the expression for the volume 16.
Seite 18
... constant , or E U2 = E U • ( 5. ) If , then , we once start longitudinal waves of the kind supposed , with the velocity given by ( 5 ) they will be propagated unchanged with that velocity.1 Newton's Value of U. - The result U = √E / p ...
... constant , or E U2 = E U • ( 5. ) If , then , we once start longitudinal waves of the kind supposed , with the velocity given by ( 5 ) they will be propagated unchanged with that velocity.1 Newton's Value of U. - The result U = √E / p ...
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amplitude axis beats Boilers BRYAN DONKIN cavity centre CHARLES GRIFFIN combination tones compression Crown 8vo curve of sines diameter diatonic scale disc displacement diagram dissonance distance disturbance drum Electrical energy Engineer equal EXETER STREET experiments fixed flame force fork frequency fundamental tone give given Handsome Cloth harmonic harmonic series heat holes Inst instrument intervals Large 8vo layer length LIMITED longitudinal longitudinal waves loops Lord Rayleigh lower Marine Mechanical membrane Metallurgy method mode of vibration motion moving musical nodal lines nodes observer obtained octave open end organ-pipe orifice overtones particle pendulum phase pipe piston pitch Plates position PRACTICAL Prof prong rarefaction ratio reed reflection represent resonance Revised scale simple harmonic motion stationary waves STRAND string superposition suppose swing temperature TEXT-BOOK tion transverse transverse waves tube tuned tuning-fork upper velocity of sound volume vowel wave-length Young's modulus
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Seite 33 - TRAVERSE TABLES: Computed to Four Places of Decimals for every Minute of Angle up to 100 of Distance. For the use of Surveyors and Engineers. BY RICHARD LLOYD GURDEN, Authorised Surveyor for the Governments of New South Wales and Victoria.
Seite 85 - CONTENTS. — The Materials of the Earth — A Mountain Hollow — Down the V-alley — Along the Shore — Across the Plains — Dead Volcanoes —A Granite Highland— The Annals of the Earth— The Surrey Hills— The Voids of the Mountains. "The FASCINATING 'OpEN-AiK STUDIES' of PROF. COLE give the subject a GLOW OF ANIMATION . . . cannot fall to arouse keen interest in geology."— Geological Magazine.
Seite 39 - KnOW Your Own Ship : A Simple Explanation of the Stability, Construction, Tonnage, and Freeboard of Ships. By THOS. WALTON, Naval Architect.
Seite 38 - is INVALUABLE. The NAVAL ARCHITECT will find brought togetner and ready to his hand, a mass of information which he would otherwise have to seek in an almost endless variety of publications, and some of which he would possibly not be able to obtain at all elsewhere."— Steamship.
Seite 38 - AND MAINTENANCE. A Manual for Shipbuilders, Ship Superintendents, Students, and Marine Engineers. BY THOMAS WALTON, NAVAL ARCHITECT, AUTHOR OF "KNOW YOUR OWN SHIP.
Seite 85 - SKETCHES OF BRITISH WILD FLOWERS IN THEIR HOMES. BY R. LLOYD PRAEGER, BA, MRIA Illustrated by Drawings from Nature by S. Rosamond Praeger, and Photographs by R. Welch.
Seite 57 - THE MINING ENGINEERS' REPORT BOOK AND DIRECTORS' AND SHAREHOLDERS' GUIDE TO MINING REPORTS. BY EDWIN R. FIELD, M.INST.MM With Notes on the Valuation of Property, and Tabulating Reports, Useful Tables, and Examples of Calculations, &c.
Seite 86 - It goes almost without saying that a Handbook of this subject will be in time one of the most generally useful works for the library or the desk.
Seite 82 - Properties, and Applications of the various substances described, and concise directions for their Commercial Valuation, and for the Detection of Adulterants. BY CHRISTOPHER RAWSON, FIC, FCS, Consulting Chemist to the Behar Indigo Planters' Association ; Co-Author of " A Manual of Dyeing ;
Seite 47 - Late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. THE STUDENT'S MECHANICS: An Introduction to the Study of Force and Motion. With Diagrams. Crown 8vo. Cloth, 45. 6d. " Clear in style and practical in method, 'THE STUDENT'S MECHANICS' is cordially to b» recommended from all points of view.