| David Brewster - 1831 - Страниц: 328
...not the result of any quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton Was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| 1832 - Страниц: 498
...not the result of any quality inherent in the colored body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| David Brewster - 1838 - Страниц: 334
...quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is mt rely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton Was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| 1845 - Страниц: 334
...not the result of any quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton Was the first person who placed this great truth in the slearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| William Gordon - 1847 - Страниц: 144
...result of any quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, hut is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. 565. The consequences of the prodigious velocity of 112 COLOURS. light, which travels from the sun... | |
| George Grant - 1849 - Страниц: 322
...not the result of any quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| George Grant - 1849 - Страниц: 318
...not the result of aay quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it maybe tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found th^fc all... | |
| George Grant - 1849 - Страниц: 316
...not the result of any quality inherent in the coloured body, or in the particles by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which they happen to be placed. Newton was the first person who placed this great truth in the clearest evidence. He found that all... | |
| William Thomas Brande, George William Cox - 1865 - Страниц: 978
...tile negatives so to speak, of associated or superimposed spectra, Colours of Hutitral liodics. — Newton proved that the colour of any body is not the...that one body is red, and another violet, because tho one is disposed to reflect the red or least refrangible rays, and the other the violet or most... | |
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