RefNo | AP/38/9 |
Level | Item |
Title | Paper, 'On the thermal effects of fluids in motion' by William Thomson and J P [James Prescott] Joule |
Date | 1856 |
Description | Thomson and Joule outline an experiment into the depression of temperature observed when steam of high pressure issues from a small orifice into the open air. A short pipe an inch and a half diameter is screwed into an elbow pipe inserted into the top of a high pressure steam boiler. A cotton plug placed in the short pipe has a fine wire of platinum alloy passed through it, the ends of which are connected with iron wires passing away to a sensitive galvanometer. Thomson and Joule find that for each pound of pressure by which the steam on the pressure side exceeds that of the atmosphere on the exit side there is a cooling effect of 0.2 degrees Celsius.
Subject: Physics Received 11 February 1856.
This paper was published in full in volume 8 of the Proceedings of the Royal Society as 'On the thermal effects of fluids in motion'. |
Extent | 3p |
Format | Manuscript |
PhysicalDescription | Ink on paper |
Digital images | View item on Science in the Making |
AccessStatus | Open |
RelatedMaterial | DOI: 10.1098/rspl.1856.0012 |
Fellows associated with this archive
Code | PersonName | Dates |
NA8289 | Thomson; William (1824 - 1907); Baron Kelvin of Largs; mathematician and physicist | 1824 - 1907 |
NA7041 | Joule; James Prescott (1818 - 1889); physicist | 1818 - 1889 |