| Michael Faraday - 1861 - 238 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left L behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...jar, and you perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid—not so well as in the air, because the carbonic acid contains' the oxygen combined; but it does... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1861 - 236 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...another piece, and now that it is heated I introduce it CARBON FROM CARBONIC ACID. 151 into the jar, and you perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid —... | |
| Michael Faraday, Hermann von Helmholtz, William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Simon Newcomb, Sir Archibald Geikie - 1910 - 380 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid— not so well as in the air, because the carbonic acid contains the oxygen combined; but it does burn, and takes... | |
| 1910 - 398 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...jar, and you perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid—not so well as in the air, because the carbonic acid contains the oxygen combined; but it does... | |
| 1910 - 380 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...jar, and you perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid—not so well as in the air, because the carbonic acid contains the oxygen combined; but it does... | |
| Frank A. J. L. James - 2007 - 401 pągines
...it will burn by taking oxygen, so that you will see what is left behind. I am going, then, to burn this potassium in the carbonic acid, as a proof of...perceive that it burns in the carbonic acid — not so well as in the air, because the carbonic acid contains the oxygen combined, but it does burn, and takes... | |
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