| Amédée Guillemin - 1877 - 750 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the causes of such behaviour, and it may be suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of...photosphere, just as if a person •were to look at a candle flame through a yard thickness of ignited sodium vapour, he would only see bright sodium lines,... | |
| 1877 - 1146 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the causes of such behaviour; and it maybe suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of a dark line may If that the intensity of the light from a great thickness of ignited oxygen overpowers the effect of... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1878 - 832 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the causes of such behavior, and it may be suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of...photosphere just as if a person were to look at a candle flame through a yard thickness of ignited sodium vapor, he would only see bright sodium lines,... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1878 - 808 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the causes of such behavior, and it may be suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of...photosphere just as if a person were to look at a candle flame through a yard thickness of ignited sodium vapor he would only see bright sodium lines,... | |
| 1878 - 556 sider
...explanation of the exceptional behavior of the lines of these elements, but remarks that "it may be suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of...photosphere, just as, if a person were to look at a candle flame through a yard thickness of ignited sodium vapor, he would only see bright sodium lines... | |
| 1878 - 832 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the onuses of such behavior, and it inny be suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of...oxygen overpowers the effect of the photosphere, just at, if a person were to look at a candle-flame through k yard thickness of ignited sodium vapor, lie... | |
| 1878 - 460 sider
...the writer, is also demanded by the same and by some other now known facts. Professor Draper suggests that " the reason of the non-appearance of a dark...oxygen overpowers the effect of the photosphere." He adds that " such an explanation would necessitate the hypothesis that ignited gases, such as oxygen,... | |
| 1878 - 592 sider
...lines under similar conditions. It is suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of an oxygen dark line may be that the intensity of the light from...ignited oxygen overpowers the effect of the photosphere. Admitting this, we must admit that a relatively large proportion of the sun's light is due to ignited... | |
| 1878 - 832 sider
...It :» easy to speculate on the e; uses of i-ueb behavior, and it may be suggested that the rtason of the non-appearance of a dark line may be, that...intensity of the light from a great thickness of ignited c»\gm overpowers the effect of the photosphere, just », if a person were to look at a candle-flume... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1878 - 830 sider
...obviously may behave differently. It is easy to speculate on the causes of such behavior, and it maybe suggested that the reason of the non-appearance of a dark line may he that the intensity of the light from a great thickness of ignited Oxygen overpowers the effect of... | |
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