| 1864 - 654 pāgines
...properties alluded to are such as can be applied to the scrutiny of organic substances ; and therefore tho examination of the bright lines in flames and incandescent...become universal. But while the chemist who attends to inorpanic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognised modes of research,... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1866 - 730 pāgines
...Vice-President, in the Chair. PROFE88OR GG STOKE8, MADCL SEC. RS On the Discrimination of Organic Bodies by their Optical Properties. THE chemist who deals...compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally -recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic chemist, especially one... | |
| George Gabriel Stokes - 1904 - 391 pāgines
...pp. 388— 95, Ann. der Phys., cxxvi, 1865, pp. 619—23, Journ. de Pharm., i, 1865, pp. 292—8.] THE chemist who deals with the chemistry of inorganic...compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic chemist, especially one... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1866 - 742 pāgines
...substances ; and therefore the examination of the bright lines in flames and incandescent va|>ours is not considered. This application of optical observation,...until the publication of the researches of Professors IJunsen and KirchhofF, in consequence of which it has now become universal. But while the chemist who... | |
| 1864 - 1214 pāgines
...the examination of the bright lines in flames and incandescent vapours is not considered. ‘I'his application of optical observation, though not new...principle (for it was clearly enunciated by Mr. Fox ‘I'albot more than thirty years ago), was hardly followed out in relation to chemistry, and remained... | |
| 1864 - 1632 pāgines
...reagents. Accordingly he may afford to dispense with the aids supplied by the optical properties of bodips, though even to him they might be of material assistance....compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic chemist, especially one... | |
| 1865 - 786 pāgines
...to the scrutiny of organic substances ; and therefore the examination of the bright lines in ņames and incandescent vapours is not considered. This application...compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic chemist, especially one... | |
| |