| 1886 - 1060 pągines
...imagine that at this primal stage all was in an ultragaseous state at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe;...as protyle is capable of radiating or reflecting* this vast sea of incandescent mist, to an astronomer in a distant star, might have appeared as a nebula... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1887 - 1176 pągines
...that at this primal stage all was in an ultragaseous state, at a temperature inconceivably hotter7 than anything now existing in the visible universe;...a distant 'star, might have appeared as a nebula, showing in the spectroscope a few isolated lines, forecasts of hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen spectra.... | |
| James Croll - 1889 - 142 pągines
...formed from the protyle, all was in an ultra- gaseous state, at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe;...yet have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point." What, then, produced this excessive temperature in this supposed ultra-gaseous... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889 - 806 pągines
...the original protyle, when all was in an ultra-gaseous state at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe; so high, indeed, that the chemical atoms could noj have been formed, being still far above their dissociation points. lu the course of time some process... | |
| Francis Preston Venable - 1904 - 322 pągines
...an " ultra-gaseous state, at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing ; so high that the chemical atoms could not yet have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point. * * * But in course of time, a process akin to cooling, probably internal, reduces... | |
| William Fretz Kemble, Charles Reginald Underhill - 1909 - 38 pągines
...radiation, and cooling but does not like the idea of the periodic motions thus required of the protyle) than anything now existing in the visible universe;...yet have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point. In so far as protyle is capable of radiating or reflecting light, this vast sea... | |
| Henry Truro Bray - 1914 - 444 pągines
...state at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe, so hot indeed that the chemical atoms could not yet have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point. In so far as protyle is capable of radiating or reflecting light, this vast sea... | |
| Geoffrey Martin - 1915 - 440 pągines
...imagine that in this primal stage all was an ultragaseous state, at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe...so high indeed, that the chemical atoms could not have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point. In so far as protyle is capable of... | |
| Francis William Aston - 1922 - 180 pągines
...that at this primal stage all was in an ultra-gaseous state, at a temperature inconceivably hotter than anything now existing in the visible universe;...yet have been formed, being still far above their dissociation point. In so far as protyle is capable of radiating or reflecting light, this vast sea... | |
| Francis William Aston - 1924 - 228 pągines
...above their dissociation point. In so far as protyle is capable of radiating or reflecting light,][this vast sea of incandescent mist, to an astronomer in a distant star, might have appeared as a nebula, showing in the spectroscope a few isolated lines, forecasts of hydrogen, carbon and nitrogen spectra.... | |
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