A History of MechanicsCourier Corporation, 7 лист. 2012 р. - 688 стор. "A remarkable work which will remain a document of the first rank for the historian of mechanics." — Louis de Broglie |
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... equal to that of the same volume of a fluid (on) is immersed in that fluid, it will sink until no part of it remains ... equal to the first, with which it is contiguous and continuous, and such that the sections of its faces are KM and ...
... equal to BHTC—and it has been assumed that the body immersed has, volume for volume, the same heaviness as the fluid. If therefore one takes away the parts which are equal to each other, the remainder will be unequal. Consequently it is ...
... equal to the difference between its weight and that of an equal volume of fluid. Proposition VII. —- If a body is placed in a fluid which is lighter than itself, it will fall to the bottom. In the fluid the body will be lighter by an ...
... equal parts which would be at the same time of equal weight and of unequal weight, which is absurd. ” Now suspend the body from a point )1 and draw the vertical yd through the point of suspension when equilibrium is established. Take a ...
... equal distances in the same medium-—-air or water-—in times which are equal to each other, are said to be equal in virtus. Bodies that travel equal distances in unequal times are of different virtus, and that which takes the shorter ...