| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1868 - 662 Seiten
...carbon, necessarily suggests the identity of the substances by which in both cases the light was emitted. The great fixity of carbon seems, indeed, to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference from these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached sufficiently... | |
| 1868 - 1022 Seiten
...carbon, necessarily suggests the ideutity of the substances by which in both cases the light was emitted. The great fixity of carbon seems, indeed, to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference from these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached sufficiently... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1868 - 654 Seiten
...carbon, necessarily suggests the identity of the substances by which in both cases the light was emitted. The great fixity of carbon seems, indeed, to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference from these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached sufficiently... | |
| sir Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1869 - 396 Seiten
...emitted by highly-heated vapour of carbon, appear to be almost decisive of the nature of cometary light. The great fixity of carbon seems indeed to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference of these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached the sun sufficientiy... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1870 - 514 Seiten
...emitted by highly-heated vapour of carbon, appear to be almost decisive of the nature of coinetary light. The great fixity of carbon seems indeed to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference of these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached the sun sufficiently... | |
| Henry E. Roscoe - 1869 - 372 Seiten
...emitted by highly-heated vapour of carbon, appear to be almost decisive of the nature of cometary light. The great fixity of carbon seems indeed to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference of these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached the sun sufficiently... | |
| 1869 - 826 Seiten
...necessarily suggests the identity »f the substances by which in both cases the light was emitted. The great fixity of carbon seems, indeed, to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference from these prismatic observations. Some omets have approached sufficiently... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - 1873 - 542 Seiten
...emitted by highly-heated vapour of carbon, appear to be almost decisive of the nature of cometary light. The great fixity of carbon seems indeed to raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference of these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached the sun sufficiently... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1874 - 562 Seiten
...element. In 1868, however, the idea of nitrogen comets was abolished, as the idea of nitrogen nebulas has been since ; and the three bands, which were again...raise some difficulty in the way of accepting the apparently obvious inference of these prismatic observations. Some comets have approached the sun sufficiently... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1874 - 562 Seiten
...element. In 1868, however, the idea of nitrogen comets was abolished, as the idea of nitrogen nebulae has been since ; and the three bands, which were again...in that year, were found to coincide with those of olefiant gas. Hence it was suggested by Huggins that they consisted of carbon vapour. He writes : —... | |
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