Page:Reflections on the Motive Power of Heat.djvu/251

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APPENDIX A.
227

duced; same experiments on several metals and on wood.


To strike a piece of lead in various ways, to measure the motive power consumed and the heat produced. Same experiments on other metals.


To strongly agitate water in a small cask or in a double-acting pump having a piston pierced with a small opening.

Experiment of the same sort on the agitation of mercury, alcohol, air and other gases. To measure the motive power consumed and heat produced.


To admit air into a vacuum or into air more or less rarefied; id. for other gases or vapors. To examine the elevation of temperature by means of the manometer and the thermometer of Bréguet. Estimation of the error of the thermometer in the time required for the air to vary a certain number of degrees. These experiments would serve to measure the changes which take place in the temperature of the gas during its changes of volume. They would also furnish means of comparing these changes with the quantities of motive power produced or consumed.


Expel the air from a large reservoir in which it is compressed, and check its velocity in a large pipe in