Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A/Volume 184
I. Transmission of Sunlight through the Earth’s Atmosphere. By Captain W. de W. Abney, C.B., D.C.L., F.R.S. |
page 1 |
II. The Potential of an Anchor Ring. By F. W. Dyson, B.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Communicated by Professor J. J. Thomson, F.R.S. |
43 |
III. Bakerian Lecture.—The Rate of Explosion in Gases. By Harold B. Dixon, M.A., F.R.S., late Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford; Professor of Chemistry in Owens College, Manchester |
97 |
IV. On the Residues of Powers of Numbers for any Composite Modulus, Real or Complex. By Geoffrey T. Bennett, B.A. Communicated by Professor Cayley, F.R.S. |
189 |
V. Ionic Velocities. By W. C. Dampier Whetham, B.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Communicated by Professor J. J. Thomson, F.R.S. |
337 |
VI. The Value of the Mechanical Equivalent of Heat, deduced from some Experiments performed with the view of establishing the relation between the Electrical and Mechanical Units; together with an Investigation into the Capacity for Heat of Water at different Temperatures. By E. H. Griffiths, M.A., Assistant Lecturer, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Communicated by R. T. Glazebrook, F.R.S. |
361 |
VII. On the Thickness and Electrical Resistance of Thin Liquid Films. By A. W. Reinold, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Physics in the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, and A. W. Rücker, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Physics in the Royal College of Science, London |
505 |
VIII. On the Measurement of the Magnetic Properties of Iron. By Thomas Gray, B.Sc., F.R.S.E. Communicated by Lord Kelvin, P.R.S. |
531 |
IX. On the Composition of Water by Volume. By Alexander Scott, M.A., D.Sc., Jacksonian Demonstrator in the University of Cambridge. Communicated by Lord Rayleigh, Sec.R.S. |
543 |
X. The Absolute Thermal Conductivities of Iron and Copper. By R. Wallace Stewart, B.Sc. (Lond.), Assistant Lecturer and Demonstrator in Physics, University College, Bangor. Communicated by Lord Kelvin, P.R.S. |
569 |
XI. On Thermal Relation in Absolute Measure. By J. T. Bottomley, M.A., D.Sc., F.R.S. |
591 |
XII. Harmonic Analysis of Hourly Observations of Air Temperature and Pressure at British Observatories.—Part I. Temperature. By Lieut.-General R. Strachey, F.R.S., Chairman of the Meteorological Council |
617 |
XIII. The Variation of Molecular Surface-Energy with Temperature. By William Ramsay, F.R.S., and John Shields, D.Sc., Ph.D. |
647 |
XIV. Aberration Problems.—A Discussion concerning the Motion of the Ether near the Earth, and concerning the Connexion between Ether and Gross Matter; with some new Experiments. By Oliver J. Lodge, F.R.S. |
727 |
XV. On the Results of an Examination of the Orientations of a number of Greek Temples with a view to connect these Angles with the Amplitudes of certain Stars at the time the Temples were founded, and an endeavour to derive therefrom the Dates of their Foundation by consideration of the Changes produced upon the Right Association and Declination of the Stars by the Precession of the Equinoxes. By F. C. Penrose, F.R.A.S., Architect. Communicated by Professor J. Norman Lockyer, F.R.S. |
805 |
XVII. Memoir on the Theory of the Compositions of Numbers. By P. A. MacMahon, Major R.A., F.R.S. |
835 |
XVIII. On the Evidences of a Submergence of Western Europe, and of the Mediterranean Coasts, at the Close of the Glacial or so-called Post-glacial Period, and immediately preceding the Neolithic or Recent Period. By Joseph Prestwich, D.C.L., F.R.S., F.G.S., Corr. Inst. of France, &c. |
903 |
XIX. Magnetic Qualities of Iron. By J. A. Ewing, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Mechanism and Applied Mechanics in the University of Cambridge, and Miss Helen G. Klaassen, Lecturer in Physics, Newnham College |
985 |
XX. The Potential of an Anchor Ring.—Part II. By F. W. Dyson, M.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Isaac Newton Student in the University of Cambridge. Communicated by Professor J. J. Thomson, F.R.S. |
1041 |
XXI. On the Annual and Semi-Annual Seismic Periods. By Charles Davison, M.A., Mathematical Master at King Edward’s High School, Birmingham. Communicated by Professor J. H. Poynting, F.R.S. |
1107 |
XXII. On the Differential Covariants of Plane Curves, and the Operators employed in their Development. By R. F. Gwyther, M.A., Fielden Lecturer in Mathematics, Owens College, Manchester. Communicated by Professor Horace Lamb, F.R.S. |
1171 |