The Steam Engine And Gas And Oil Engines a book for the Use of Students Who Ha

Cover The Steam Engine And Gas And Oil Engines a book for the Use of Students Who Ha
The Steam Engine And Gas And Oil Engines a book for the Use of Students Who Ha
John Perry
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The student ought to verify columns 1 and 2 of Table I. Or of Table II. These tables are due to the very careful measurements of Regnault.
Now, having his table of numbers, let a student get a sheet of squared paper. Such sheets in which the length is 17 inches and the breadth is 10 inches, divided into tenths of an inch so that there are horizontal and vertical lines forming little squares each one-tenth of an inch in side, may be bought for sevenpence a quire. Mark off a scale of temperatures
... horizontally and another of pres- sures vertically. Any scales will do, depending upon the ranges of values in our experimental numbers. Now plot a point for the temperature 120 C. And the pressure 28'8 Ibs. Per square inch; and each point in the curve marked P and 6, Fig. 216, represents one pair of observed numbers. Having plotted all such points use a thin batten of wood to help in drawing the curve which passes through all the points. If there are errors of observation, their probable values will be seen when we have drawn the curve which lies most evenly among the points.

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