... moving in a circular direction, like a slowmoving whirlpool, the direction of the motion being the opposite of that of the exciting disc. In these cases the motion was circular, and the result was a circular spectral motion. "We may, however, vary... Proceedings - Página 44por Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1880Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| New Church gen. confer - 1879 - 622 páginas
...intensities of these forces, they are all only mechanical. Now the mechanical force of a sphere is either from the centre to the circumference or from the circumference to the centre. The geometry of the sphere admits of no third alternative, whilst it teaches that the fluxions of this... | |
| Hewson Clarke, John Dougall - 1817 - 928 páginas
...suffers but from a want of moisture ; it should therefore have no ridges, but be ploughed circularly from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre. It ought to be tilled after harvest ; and the first dry weather in spring should be laid hold of, to... | |
| Hewson Clarke, John Dougall - 1825 - 892 páginas
...suffers but from a want of moisture ; it should therefore have no ridges, but be ploughed circularly from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre. It ought to be tilled after harvest ; and the first dry weather in spring should be laid hold of, to... | |
| Thomas Curtis - 1829 - 814 páginas
...suffers but from want of moisture. Such a sou ought to have no ridges ; but be ploughed circularly from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre. It ought to be tilled after harvest: and the first dry »father in spring ought to be laid hold of... | |
| Franz Joseph Gall - 1835 - 330 páginas
...the circumference, and that the gray matter is formed before the white." Is the Nervous System formed from the Centre to the Circumference, or from the Circumference to the Centre ? " It is strange," exclaims Serres, " how they have interpreted nature in precisely the inverse direction.... | |
| Jeremiah Joyce - 1846 - 456 páginas
...rotating with its edge between the poles of a powerful horsesnoe magnet. The direction of the current was from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre, according to the direction of the rotation ; and the electricity is collected by means of wires applied,... | |
| Henry M. Noad - 1849 - 534 páginas
...plate revolves, in the neighbourhood of the magnet or vice versa, electrical currents are produced from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre, in the direction of the radii ; and the effect is precisely the same as in electro-magnetic rotations,... | |
| Auguste de La Rive - 1853 - 630 páginas
...inclined it nearly 70° to the dippingneedle in obtaining currents of induction which were always directed from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre, according to the direction of the rotation. In order to perceive this current, care was taken to place... | |
| 1853 - 776 páginas
...opinion, and in their devotional movements, it seemed a matter of indifference whether the action was from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre. But as lime wore on disputes began. Some insisted that the true motion was from the centre outward;... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1839 - 634 páginas
...(114. 121.), to tend to pass in the direction of the radii, through all parts of the plate, either from the centre to the circumference, or from the circumference to the centre, as the direction of the rotation of the plate was one way or the other. One of the wires of the galvanometer... | |
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