Page:Reflections on the Motive Power of Heat.djvu/248

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APPENDIX A.

crystallization—are they not forms of combinations of integrant molecules?


Supposing heat due to a vibratory movement, how can the passage from the solid or the liquid to the gaseous state be explained?


When motive power is produced by the passage of heat from the body A to the body B, is the quantity of this heat which arrives at B (if it is not the same as that which has been taken from A, if a portion has really been consumed to produce motive power) the same whatever may be the substance employed to realize the motive power?

Is there any way of using more heat in the production of motive power, and of causing less to reach the body B? Could we even utilize it entirely, allowing none to go to the body B? If this were possible, motive power could be created without consumption of combustible, and by mere destruction of the heat of bodies.


Is it absolutely certain that steam after having operated an engine and produced motive power can raise the temperature of the water of condensation as if it had been conducted directly into it?


Reasoning shows us that there cannot be loss of