| Richard Green Parker - 1844 - 276 pages
...aay otner part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an oppusite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Nathan Scholfield - Conic sections - 1845 - 542 pages
...within the triangle formed by connecting those given objects. Let the given objects be three towns A, B and C which are all visible from a station S, which...ASB, and the point of intersection of those arcs is ihe station S, all of which is evident from Lemma II. Otherwise, on AB make an c, angle ABE=the supplement... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Physics - 1849 - 418 pages
...any other part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Physics - 1850 - 408 pages
...any other part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Physics - 1852 - 200 pages
...any other part of its orbit, and will canse the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Joseph Ray - Algebra - 1848 - 250 pages
...twice the distance from A to C ; the whole distance from A to D is 72 miles. Required the distance from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D. 35. What number is that, to which if its half, its fourth, and 26 more be added, the sum will be... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Electricity - 1856 - 502 pages
...any other part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion from E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Archibald Sandeman - Arithmetic - 1859 - 90 pages
...palpable manner. If the numbers to be added together be represented by rows of dots A, B ,C ,D stretching from A to B, from B to C, and from C to D, placed together so as to make a continuous row ; the number which is the sum of these numbers will... | |
| Richard Green Parker - Physics - 1861 - 488 pages
...other part of its orbit, and will cause the earth to move rapidly. But in its motion fioin E to A, from A to B, from B to C, and from C to F, the attraction of the sun, operating in an opposite direction, will cause its motion from the sun... | |
| Thomas Lund - Hydrostatics - 1864 - 188 pages
...is the third ; so that the forces are described in the same direction round the triangle, proceeding from A to B, from B to C, and from C to A again. 34., COR. 2. Since the forces, which keep the point at rest, are represented by the sides of... | |
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