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" A solid immersed in a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid displaced. "
The Franklin Elementary Algebra - Page 151
by Edwin Pliny Seaver, George Augustus Walton - 1881 - 297 pages
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Chemical Manipulation: Being Instructions to Students in Chemistry, on the ...

Michael Faraday - Chemistry - 1827 - 678 pages
...of fluids. If a bull »f glass suspended from the balance be wholly immersed in a liquid, it will be buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid it displaces, and seem to lose weight to that amount. By being immersed therefore in succession into...
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Chemical Problems and Reactions: To Accompany Stöckhardt's Elements of Chemistry

Josiah Parsons Cooke (Jr.) - Chemistry - 1859 - 146 pages
...many cubic centimetres of oxygen ? How many of mixed gases ? 85. A solid immersed in a liquid or a gas is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid or gas which it displaces. The excess of the buoyancy over its own weight is called its ascensional...
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Elements of Chemical Physics

Josiah P. Cooke, Jr. - 1860 - 754 pages
...with alcohol, or with any other liquid. CHEMICAL PHYSICS. Fig 232. It appears, then, that the cylinder is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid which it displaces. But this statement expresses only one half of the truth ; for it is a necessary...
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Chemical Problems and Reactions: To Accompany Stockhardt's Elements of Chemistry

Josiah Parsons Cooke (Jr.) - Chemistry - 1863 - 148 pages
...many cubic centimetres of oxygen ? How many of mixed gases ? 85. A solid immersed in a liquid or a gas is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid or gas which it displaces. The excess of the buoyancy over its own weight is called its ascensional...
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Introductory Course of Natural Philosophy for the Use of Schools and Academies

Adolphe Ganot - Physics - 1865 - 518 pages
...APPLICATION TO BALLOONING. Buoyant Effort of the Atmosphere. 14O. It has been shown that a body plunged into a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. That a similar effect is produced upon a body in the atmosphere, may be shown...
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Principles of Physics, Or, Natural Philosophy: Designed for the Use of ...

Benjamin Silliman - Physics - 1866 - 756 pages
...carax'an route. IV. BUOYANCY OF LIQUIDS. 205. Theorem of Archimedes. — Solids immersed in liquids art buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid displaced. This very important principle was discovered by Archimedes, about 230 years B. c., and is called after...
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Introductory Course of Natural Philosophy for the Use of Schools and Academies

Adolphe Ganot, William Guy Peck - Physics - 1871 - 510 pages
...AL f, 0 OXINO . Buoyant Bfifort of tho Atmosphere. 140, It has been shown that a body plunged into a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight, of the displaced liquid. That a similar effect is produced upon a body in the atmosphere, may be shown...
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Introductory Course of Natural Philosophy for the Use of High Schools and ...

Adolphe Ganot - Physics - 1881 - 550 pages
...TO BALLOONING. 200. Buoyant Effort of the Atmosphere. — It has been shown that a body plunged into a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced liquid. That a similar effect is produced upon a body in the atmosphere, may be shown...
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The Overland Monthly

California - 1920 - 620 pages
...Jimmy. The Sj^jder was again on the dry-goods box. "Gentlemen," he said, "Archimedes proved that a body immersed in a liquid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the water displaced. Was he right, I ask you?" There was no reply and the Spider waited the usual...
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The Physical Properties of Gases

Arthur Lalanne Kimball - Gas - 1890 - 264 pages
...buoyed up was exactly equal to its weight ; therefore the iron, being supported by the same force, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the liquid that it replaces. This important fact is true not only of liquids. but of gases also, and so we find...
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