| Balfour Stewart, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1875 - 228 páginas
...hotter one. Clausius has, no doubt, since extended his original statement, so as to make it stand thus : Heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body. We do not consider even this sufficiently obvious for an axiom, were it certainly true, but, as will... | |
| Balfour Stewart - 1875 - 244 páginas
...one. Clausius has, no doubt, since extended his original statement, so as to make it stand thus: — Heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body. We do not consider even this sufficiently obvious for an axiom, were it certainly true, but, as will... | |
| Balfour Stewart, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1875 - 274 páginas
...one. Clausius has, no doubt, since extended his original statement, so as to make it stand thus: — Heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body. We do not consider even this sufficiently obvious for an axiom, were it certainly true, but, as will... | |
| Balfour Stewart, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1875 - 280 páginas
...one. Clausius has, no doubt, since extended his original statement, so as to make it stand thus: — Heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body. We do not consider even this sufficiently obvious for an axiom, were it certainly true, but, as will... | |
| Rudolf Julius Emmanuel Clausins - 1879 - 432 páginas
...merit, their correctness was here at once assailed, by the declaration that the fundamental principle, that heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body, is untrue. To prove this two phenomena relating to electric currents are adduced. But in a rejoinder... | |
| Rudolf Clausius - 1879 - 642 páginas
...all conceivable circumstances. He thereupon propounded the following as a fundamental principle : " Heat cannot, of itself, pass from a colder to a hotter body." The words - of itself,' here used for the sake of brevity, require, in order to be completely understood,... | |
| 1884 - 582 páginas
...intervention of any mechanism doing work. This would be contrary to the second law of thermodynamics, that heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body, a law which is found to hold whenever tested by direct experiment, and one which has never led to false... | |
| 1884 - 566 páginas
...intervention of any mechanism doing work. This would te contrary to the second law of thermodynamics, that heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body, a law which is found to hold whenever tested by direct experiment, and one which has never led to false... | |
| 1895 - 524 páginas
...consideration of Entropy and the Second Law. Carnot's cycle is first discussed, and by using the principle that heat cannot of itself pass from a colder to a hotter body, it is shown that the ratio of the hea't taken from one reservoir to that given up to the other is a... | |
| John Henry Kinealy - 1895 - 260 páginas
...all conceivable circumstances." He thereupon propounded the following as a fundamental principle : " Heat cannot, of itself , pass from a colder to a hotter body." 8. SPECIFIC HEAT. — There are two specific heats to every body ; they may be termed the apparent... | |
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