Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
In recent years John Herapath has emerged as an important figure in the early history of the dynamical theory of gases. In a series of papers published in 1821 and 1822 he outlined an elaborate theory of the states of matter, specific and latent heats, vapours and gases, culminating in a theory of the gravitational ether. This work was based on the rejection of the caloric theory of heat and was founded instead on the idea that the particles of matter were in constant motion; the forces of caloric were replaced by the transfer of momentum. Herapath's is one of the earliest of dynamical theories of gases to be worked out in any mathematical detail.
A paper on Herapath's theories was presented in August 1970 at the Aarhus Symposium on the interplay between mathematics and physics in the nineteenth century; the present paper evolved from it. It has benefited from correspondence with Stephen Brush and from detailed criticism by Robert Fox, to whom I am much indebted.
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5 Quoted by S. G. Brush in his introduction to the facsimile edition of Mathematical physics, op. cit. (1), p. xix.Google Scholar
6 Dalton, J., A new system of chemical philosophy (Manchester, 1808), i, part 1.Google Scholar
7 An excellent account of this theory, together with all the relevant illustrations, is given by Fox, R., The caloric theory of gases from Lavoisier to Regnault (Oxford, 1971), chapter 4.Google Scholar
8 Dalton, , op. cit. (6), p. 57, equation 8.Google Scholar
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11 Herapath, , op. cit. (2), ii. 450.Google Scholar
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13 Herapath, , op. cit. (3), p. 182, para. 3d, and p. 221, para. 49.Google Scholar
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22 Ibid., ii. 65.
23 Ibid., ii. 66.
24 Ibid., i. 237. Similar descriptions are given in Herapath, , op. cit. (2)Google Scholar, notably in Annals of philosophy, 2nd ser. i (1821), 278Google Scholar, but those in Mathematical physics are more detailed.
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27 Ibid., ii. 63.
29 Ibid., i. 16. In op. cit. (2), i. 344, the words ‘revolution’, ‘returns’, and ‘periods’ are similarly used.
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