of one turn of thick mobility
which is in turn easily resolved 1
[or] avoided by surrounding the head with several turns 2
turning towards and entering into 3
a single turn of cotton thread 4
at the turning point 5
secured by a few turns of fine 6
turning now 7
in my laboratory. Turning now to the theoretical discussion of the simple case 8
could, in their turn, 9
turn the areas of 10
reversible manner. When, however, we turn 11
Thus the distinction between bodies turns on the character of the impulses, and is a difference of degree rather than of kind 12
found to persist in other parts on turning 13
turn the two 14
52 turns of gutta-percha covered wire, wound 15
36,000 turns 16
about 6,000 turns, and 17
anyone who can “read mirror” can read off the signals as quickly as they can be sent 18
2000 turns 19
1000 turns 20
1.6 turns 21
100 or 200 turns 22
in closely adjacent turns and in one layer 23
passes from turn to turn 24
of one turn of thick 25
mobility, and this in turn depends on temperature. For every rise 26
in the lee of each of these two ripples orginates a new ripple there, and in this way, fresh ripples are begun with each succeeding swing of the water till the whole sand is ripple-marked 27
turns (and two other) from Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 74 (1905)
Pennsylvania State University copy, digitized October 17, 2013
from these papers, respectively —
- 1
Henry E. Armstrong. “The retardation of combustion by oxygen” (86-89) - 2
E. P. Perman and G. A. S. Atkinson. “The decomposition of ammonia by heat” (110-117) - 3-6
Orme Masson. “On the wetting of cotton by water and by water vapour” (230-254) - 7-8
James Walker. “Theory of amphoteric electrolytes—Part II.” (271-280) - 9
Charles Hutches Burgess and Alfred Holt, Jr. “Some physical characters of the sodium borates, &c.” (285-295) - 10
Charles Chree. “An analysis of the results of the Falmouth magnetograms on ‘quiet’ days during the twelve years 1891 to 1902” (323-326) - 11
Henry J. S. Sand. “The rôle of diffusion during catalysis by colloidal metals and similar substances” (356-369) - 12
George W. Walker. “On the drift produced in ions by electromagnetic disturbances, and a theory of radio-activity” (414-420) - 13
Alice M. Waller. “On the ‘blaze-currents’ of the gall bladder of the frog” (423-446) - 14-20
J. A. Fleming. “On the conversion of electric oscillations into continuous currents by means of a vacuum valve” (476-487) - 21-25
J. A. Fleming. “On an instrument for the measurement of long electric waves, and also small inductances and capacities” (488-498) - 26
G. T. Beilby. “Phosphorescence caused by the beta and gamma rays of radium” (511-518 ) - 27
Hertha Ayrton (1854-1923 *). “The origin and growth of ripple-mark” (565-566); and entire (not abstract) at archive.org
tags:
cotton; quiet days; sands; turns; waves
H. Ayrton