Indian-ink, porcelain, asbestos, fluor-spar, minium, cinnabar, binoxide of lead, sulphate of zinc, tourinaline, graphite, and charcoal. In the second class are placed bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold,... Elementary Chemistry, Theoretical and Practical - Pagina 90door George Fownes - 1855 - 555 pagina’sVolledige weergave - Over dit boek
| John Henry Pepper - 1860 - 474 pagina’s
...paramagnetic gas. Bodies that point equatorially, or are diamagnetic, like Faraday* 's heavy glass. Bismuth. Antimony. Zinc. Tin. Cadmium. Sodium. Mercury....Gold. Arsenic. Uranium. Rhodium. Iridium. Tungsten. Rock crystal. The mineral acids. Alum. Glass. Litharge. Common salt. Nitre. Sulphur. Resin. Spermaceti.... | |
| Leopold Gmelin - 1861 - 608 pagina’s
...(silicoborate of lead). — Among the metals, the order of diamagnetic energy appears to be as follows : Bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury,...lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, rhodium, indium, tungsten. Some remarkable results are obtained when solutions of magnetic liquids in sealed... | |
| George Fownes - 1863 - 854 pagina’s
...fluor-spar, minium, cinnabar, binoxide of lead, sulphate of zinc, tourmaline, graphite, and charcoal. In tbe second class are placed bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin,...alcohol, ether, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, resin, wiv, olive oil, oil of turpentine, caoutchouc, sugar, starch, gum, and wood. These are diamagnetid... | |
| John Henry Pepper - 1866 - 472 pagina’s
...a paramagnetic gas. Bodies that point eqitatorially, or are diamagnetic, like Farada/s heavy glass. Bismuth. Antimony. Zinc. Tin. Cadmium. Sodium. Mercury....Gold. Arsenic. Uranium. Rhodium. Iridium. Tungsten. Rock crystal. The mineral acids. Alum. Glass. Litharge. Common salt. Nitre. Sulphur. Resin. Spermaceti.... | |
| Robert M. Ferguson - 1866 - 296 pagina’s
...vermilion, charcoal, proto and per salts of iron, salts of manganese, oxygen, air. Diamagnetic. — Bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, tungsten, rock-crystal, mineral acids, alum, glass, litharge, nitre, phosphorus, sulphur, resin, water,... | |
| John Livingston Ludlow - 1867 - 858 pagina’s
...line, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, rhodium, indium, tungsten, phosphorus, iodine, sulphur, chlorine, hydrogen,...turpentine, caoutchouc, sugar, starch, gum, and wood. When these two classes are combined, what effect is produced ? — Their peculiar properties are destroyed.... | |
| David Thomas Ansted - 1867 - 522 pagina’s
...characterised by the latter arrangement, bismuth is the most remarkable, and after it come phosphorus, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead,...gold, arsenic, uranium, rhodium, iridium, tungsten. All these substances are said to be diamagnetic in contradistinction to those that are magnetic. It... | |
| David Thomas Ansted - 1867 - 518 pagina’s
...characterised by the latter arrangement, bismuth is the most remarkable, and after it come phosphorus, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, rhodium, indium, tungsten. All these substances are said to be diamagnetic in contradistinction to those that... | |
| Robert M. Ferguson - 1867 - 310 pagina’s
...vermilion, charcoal, proto and per salts of iron, salts of manganese, oxygen, air. Diamagnetic. — Bismuth, antimony, zinc, tin, cadmium, sodium, mercury, lead, silver, copper, gold, arsenic, uranium, tungsten, rock-crystal, mineral acids, alum, glass, litharge, nitre, phosphorus, sulphur, resin, water,... | |
| George Fownes - 1869 - 882 pagina’s
...asbestos, fluor-spar, minium, cinnabar, binoxide of lead, sulphate of zinc, tourinaline, graphite, and charcoal. In the second class are placed bismuth,...caoutchouc, sugar, starch, gum, and wood. These are diamngnetic. If diamagnetic and paramagnetic bodies are combined, their peculiar properties are destroyed.... | |
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