| Denison Olmsted - 1851 - 492 Seiten
...to another boat of equal weight, the boats will move towards each other with equal velocities ; but a man in a boat pulling a rope attached to a large ship State the proposition respecting the collision of two perfectly elastic bodies Case of two equal bodies,... | |
| John Lee Comstock - 1852 - 576 Seiten
...but that he really mo\ es the ship is certain, when it is considered that a thousand boa s pulling in the same manner would make the ship meet them half way. It appears, therefore, that an equal force acting on bodies containing different quantities of matter,... | |
| Neil Arnott - 1853 - 536 Seiten
...resistances, there will be a corresponding difference in the velocities, the smaller boat moving the fastest. scale. If the two were hanging near each other as...would make the ship meet them half way. A pound of leud and the earth attract each other with equal force, but that force makes the lead approach sixteen... | |
| John Lee Comstock - 1854 - 418 Seiten
...but that he really mo\ es the ship is certain, when it is considered that a thousand boa: s pulling in the same manner would make the ship meet them half way. It appears, therefore, that an equal force acting on bodies containing different quantities of mutter,... | |
| Denison Olmsted - 1858 - 468 Seiten
...to another boat of equal weight, the boats will move towards each other with equal velocities ; but a man in a boat pulling a rope attached to a large ship State the proposition respecting the collision of two perfectly elastic bodies Case of two equal bodies,... | |
| Marcius Willson - 1860 - 372 Seiten
...pendulums, they would approach and meet; but the little one would perform more than half of the journey. 23. A man in a boat pulling a rope attached to a large...thousand men in a thousand boats, pulling simultaneously 12 in the same manner, would make the ship meet them half way. 24. A pound of lead and the earth attract... | |
| Marcius Willson - 1860 - 368 Seiten
...they would approach and meet ; but the little one would perform more than half of the journey. 23. A man in a boat pulling a rope attached to a large...boat, a thousand men in a thousand boats, pulling simultaneously12 in the same manner, would make the ship meet them half way. 24. A pound of lead and... | |
| John Francis Woodhull - 1918 - 280 Seiten
...other as pendulums, they would approach and meet ; but the little one would perform a greater part of the journey, in proportion to its littleness. A...the boat; but he really moves the ship a little, for a thousand men in a thousand boats, pulling simultaneously in the same way, would make the ship meet... | |
| John Francis Woodhull - 1918 - 282 Seiten
...rope attached to a large ship, seems only to move the boat; but he really moves the ship a little, for a thousand men in a thousand boats, pulling simultaneously in the same way, would make the ship meet them halfway. A pound of lead and the earth attract each other with equal... | |
| |