| 1875 - 860 páginas
...absorb ; whence he infers "that the meteorite has been extruded from a dense mass of hydrogen gas," and may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, the hydrogen of the stars. The corona, then, is erupted solar matter and meteor systems — reflecting... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1867 - 662 páginas
...of Lenarto has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in. •which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us hydrogen of the stars. It has been found difficult, on trial, to impregnate malleable iron with more than an... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1867 - 654 páginas
...iron of Lenarto has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us hydrogen of the stars. It has been found difficult, on trial, to impregnate malleable iron with more than an... | |
| 1867 - 682 páginas
...iron of Leuarto has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, hydrogen of the stare. It has been found difficult, on trial, to impregnate malleable iron with more than an... | |
| United States. Congress. House - 1869 - 516 páginas
...telluric origin. Common iron bears the impress of the mode by which it has been manufactured in the large proportion of carbonic oxide and carbonic acid as...imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, hydrogen from the stare." Speaking of the amount of gas given up by this meteoric iron being three times the amount found... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1869 - 488 páginas
...meteorite has yielded abundance of hydrogen gas almost entirely free from gaseous carbon componpds. On these results Dr. Graham remarks, " The iron of...further says, "The inference is that this meteorite has beens extruded from a dense atmosphere of hydrogen gas, for which we must look beyond the light cometary... | |
| William Mattieu Williams - 1870 - 254 páginas
...iron of Lenarto has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, the hydrogen of the stars. " It has been found difficult to impregnate malleable iron with more than... | |
| Royal Astronomical Society - 1871 - 718 páginas
...of Lenarlo iron has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, the hydrogen of the stars." Other circumstances relating to the Corona itself seem to require some... | |
| 1871 - 296 páginas
...of Lenarto iron has no doubt come from such an atmosphere, in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, the hydrogen of the stars." Other circumstances relating to the Corona itself seem to require some... | |
| James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch - 1871 - 866 páginas
...iron of Lenarto has no doubt come from such au atmosplicre,in which hydrogen greatly prevailed. This meteorite may be looked upon as holding imprisoned within it, and bearing to us, the hydrogen of the stars.' So far, then, is the theory we are dealing with from being negatived by... | |
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