There are no two groupatmospheres exactly alike, for the reason that no two groups of persons, large or small, are exactly alike.
Consequently, as no two persons are precisely alike in character, it follows that no two personalatmospheres are exactly alike.
Under a pressure of 17 atmospheres it is condensed to a colourless and very mobile fluid, which boils at 79.
As soon as the gas reaches 6 or 7 atmospheres the cocks of the buoy and reservoir are closed, and the connecting tube is removed.
If this is true they must keep each other's atmospheres in a state of intense commotion.
Under high pressure the gas can be liquefied, 28 atmospheresbeing required at 0°.
The gas is readily liquefied, a pressure of six atmospheres serving to liquefy it at 0°.
The fusible plug ought to be capable of more than resisting the pressure; but if it be so, its point of fusion would be one at which the steam would have a pressure of at least two atmospheres above its working pressure.
Neat acetylene must not be compressed to more than l-1/2 atmospheres except that an absolute pressure of 10 atmospheres is allowed when the gas is dissolved in acetone or otherwise rendered free from risk.
Thus at 10 atmospheresthe presence of the acetone is a source of safety; but at 20 atmospheres it becomes an extra danger.
Carburetted water-gas which, after compression under 16 atmospheres pressure, had an illuminating power of about 17.
Inasmuch as acetylene is prone to dissociate or decompose into its elements spontaneously whenever its pressure reaches 2 atmospheres or 30 lb.
But if, by dilution with another gas, the partial pressure of the acetylene is reduced, then the mixture may be subjected to a higher pressure than that of two atmospheres without acquiring explosiveness, as is fully shown in Chapter XI.
Centigrade; while, of course, liquefied acetylene cannot be kept at all at a temperature of 0° unless the pressure is 21 atmospheres or upwards.
Thus it becomes possible safely to compress mixtures of acetylene and oil-gas or coal-gas, whereas unadmixed acetylene cannot be safely kept under a pressure of two atmospheres absolute or more.
Gaseous acetylene, alone, in admixture, or in solution, must not be compressed above 2 atmospheres absolute except under special permission.
So long as the atmospheres of the molecules do not touch each other, no trace of cohesion manifests itself; but as soon as they come together force is born.
Experiment has demonstrated that such stress corresponds to twelve atmospheres in a space in which the temperature remains about 15°.
After judicious deductions and numerous experiments, Mr. Salleron has adopted for the normal pressure of highly sparkling wines five atmospheres at the temperature of the cellar, which does not exceed 10 degrees.
After numerous experiments, it has been found that first class bottles easily support a pressure of twelve atmospheres without distortion, while in those of an inferior quality the resistance is very variable.
After being submitted to a pressure of five atmospheres in this apparatus for a few hours, the corks are verified and then sorted out.
There are globes greater and globes less--atmospheres greater and atmospheres less.
Bands of this kind belong to chemical combinations, and this appears to show that somewhere in the atmospheres of these distant suns the temperature is low enough to allow stable chemical combinations to be formed.
The great breadth of the lines probably indicates that these stars are surrounded by hydrogen atmospheres of great dimensions.
In the astral atmospheresof the spiritual man, there are no clouds, and fear is unknown.
The air in (BC) is now under a pressure of two atmospheres (one atmosphere is due to the mercury column).
How much gas will it hold at 10 atmospheres and 32 deg.
Thus, when there are three atmospheres of gas under pressure, each bottle of soda-water contains four bottles full of gas, which are absorbed without perceptibly increasing its bulk.
And when I get feeling other people's atmospheres too much I lose my own, and then I can't paint.
Mental Atmospheres A well known American writer on this subject has said concerning this point: "There are many places today filled with the thought-vibrations of minds long since passed out of the body.
Persons moving into these towns are affected by the mental atmospheres thereof, and either sink to the general level, or else, if strong enough, help to change the mental tone of the place.
The same writer says, along the same general lines: "Many have of course noticed the differing mental atmospheres of stores, offices, and other places of business.
These differing mental atmospheres are caused by the different prevailing mental attitudes of the owners of the respective establishments.
By the use of a small air pump hundreds of atmospheres could be compressed into a very strong aluminum chest or cylinder.
This creates a semi-vacuum below, and the cooler atmospheres north and south of the equator rush in and fill the aforesaid vacuum.
And still we have to think of what an insignificant pressure three or four thousand atmospheres would be in the centre of the sun.
The 5000 atmospheres of pressure we have spoken of could have no such effect on so thick a shell as the earth's; and we cannot increase the number without diminishing its average density, as we have shown.
And also, that if the self-luminosity of a nebula arises from incandescent gas, the pressure in the gas of that nebula must be somewhere between 2 and 5 atmospheres above absolute zero of pressure.
A pressure of 400 atmospheres would be required to balance a column of average rock of one mile high.
On the opposite side of the barrel there is a valve connected with an air pump, through which air to about the pressure of four atmospheres is pumped in, to liquefy the chlorine gas that is generated, after which the valve is screwed down.
Pressure to the extent of four atmospheres causes chlorine gas to leave its vaporous form.
The atmospheres of such places cannot be tested by lowering a lighted candle into it, as these poisonous gases would not extinguish the flame.
Thus at a pressure of five atmospheres (a pressure of five times the ordinary atmospheric pressure--i.
In order to obtain liquid carbonic anhydride, the gas must be submitted to a pressure of thirty-six atmospheres at 0°.
Krafts); whilst under a pressure of 10 atmospheres about 34 per cent.
According to Roscoe and Dittmar at a pressure of three atmospheres the solution of constant boiling point contains 18 p.
Cailletet subjected gases to a pressure of several hundred atmospheres in narrow thick-walled glass tubes (fig.
Numbers of the stars haveatmospheres different from that of the earth and Montalluyah.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "atmospheres" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.