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Alphabetical    [«  »]
bag 3
balance 12
balanced 1
ball 40
ballarat 1
balloon 1
balls 13
Frequency    [«  »]
41 find
41 just
41 over
40 ball
40 end
40 means
40 much
Michael Faraday
Lectures on the Forces of Matter

IntraText - Concordances

ball

   Lecture
1 I | the inflated India-rubber ball, which consequently assumed 2 I | to sink it thus in the ball of air.~Let me now give 3 I | high as the position of the ball at the two ends of its journey, 4 I | journey, you see that the ball is in a higher position 5 I | one end of the stick, the ball falls toward the centre, 6 I | substance were hung where this ball is, it would swing to and 7 I | of taking a small ivory ball, we take a mountain, and 8 I | take a mountain, and put a ball like this near it, we find 9 I | compared with the billiard ball, the latter is drawn slightly 10 I | piece of thread and an ivory ball, and hang that upon the 11 I | both the pasteboard and the ball and string are as near as 12 I | of paper and that ivory ball fall with different velocities 13 I | take a feather and an ivory ball, and let them fall, you 14 I | times; that is to say, the ball falls faster than the feather. 15 II | that if, instead of a small ball I took a larger one, like 16 II | exerted; or, if I made this ball larger and larger, until, 17 II | Earth itself as the large ball - that then the attraction 18 II | manner [dropping the ivory ball]. You sit there upright, 19 III| this: I will take a red hot ball of iron [Mr. Anderson, by 20 III| to the lecturer a red-hot ball of iron, about two inches 21 III| liquid, the heat of the ball is rapidly going off. A 22 III| the heat contained in this ball. In the course of a very 23 III| power of an India-rubber ball; for you see; if I introduce 24 V | evident by means of this ball, this bubble of air [a light 25 V | air [a light India-rubber ball, inflated and suspended 26 V | attraction between this ball and this shellac at present; 27 V | rooms slightly moving the ball about, but there is no attraction. 28 V | then holding it near the ball], look at the attraction 29 V | it has; how it draws the ball toward it; and then, as 30 V | and just as much as that ball was attracted by the shellac, 31 V | shellac was attracted by the ball. Now I will suspend this 32 V | it will not attract this ball if I bring it near it), 33 V | that only attracted a light ball, but here I have several 34 V | of repulsion of the pith ball at the end of the straw, 35 V | by placing before us this ball, which has just been brought 36 V | be transferred from the ball, and I have only now to 37 V | transfer the heat from the ball to the wire, and from the 38 V | long the heat stops in this ball. I might touch it with the 39 V | first heated, first one ball will fall and then the more 40 V | more to reach the first ball?~Here is another experiment


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