| 1813 - 524 sider
...other, in this respect, in the following order; it being understood that the first gives up electricity to the second; the second to the third; the third to the fourth; and so on : Silver, Copper, Iron, Tin, Lead, Zinc. It is to this transference of electricity, that... | |
| William Nicholson - 1813 - 344 sider
...other, in this respect, in the following order ; it being understood that the first gives up electricity to the second ; the second to the third; the third to the fourth ; and so on : Silver, Copper, Iron, Tin, Lead, Zinc. His theory It is to this transference of electricity,... | |
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1813 - 550 sider
...other, in this respect, in the following order; it being understood that the first gives up electricity to the second ; the second to the third; the third to the fourth ; and so on : Silver, Copper, Iron, Tin, Lead, Zinc. It is to this transference of electricity, that... | |
| Isaac Dalby - 1813 - 538 sider
...quantities of the same kind, the ratio of the first to the last is compounded of the ratios of the first to the second, the second to the third, the third to the fourth, and «o on to the last. Let a, b, c, d, e, be a rank of quantities, then the fractions denoting the... | |
| William Henry - 1819 - 440 sider
...arrange the powers in the following order, it being understood that the first gives up its electricity to the second ; the second to the third ; the third to the fourth, and so on. Silver. Copper. Iron. Tin. Lead. Zinc. The metals, then, have been denominated by Volta,... | |
| Euclides - 1821 - 294 sider
...second (i, e. of the ratio of A : B). kind (A, D, C, F) the first is said to have to the last (A : F) a ratio compounded of the ratios which the first...the second to the third, the third to the fourth (A : D and D : C and C : F) and so on to the last. Note. By die duplicate ratio of A to B is meant the... | |
| William Brown - 1823 - 650 sider
...to the first booth. These delivered him over to the persons in that booth, who, in their turn, went to the second ; the second to the third ; the third to the fourth, and so on (the company at each booth always asking him if he would eat or drink) till he came to the... | |
| Pierce Morton - 1830 - 584 sider
...subduplicaie ratio of that which it has to C, the subtriplicate ratio of that which it has to D, and so on. 12. If there be any number of magnitudes of the same kind, А, В, С, t), the first A is said to have to the last D a ratio which is compounded of the ratios... | |
| 1835 - 684 sider
...subduplicate ratio of that which it has to C, the subtriplicate ratio of that which it has to D, and so on. 12. If there be any number of magnitudes of the same kind, A, B, C, D, the first A is said to have to the last D a ratio which is compounded of the ratios of A to... | |
| Oliver Byrne - 1841 - 144 sider
...series, r has no right whatever to the term ratio ; and, in the second, the ratio of the first term to the second, the second to the third, the third to the fourth, is expressed by f , and not by r. J Magnitudes are said to have a ratio to one another, when they are... | |
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