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4. Preliminary Note “On a New Method of obtaining very perfect Vacua.”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
Professor Andrews, in the “Philosophical Magazine” for 1852, recalled the attention of physicists to the method originally devised by Davy of making a vacuum so perfect, that the residual gas exercised no appreciable pressure as registered by the depression of a barometric column. This he effected by filling the vessel to be exhausted with carbonic acid gas, having previously inserted a cup containing a concentrated solution of caustic potash. On rapidly exhausting with an air-pump, and leaving time for the absorption of the residual carbonic acid by the caustic potash, he obtained a vacuum as perfect as a Torricellian. Andrews' method was afterwards employed by Gassiot in his well-known investigations on the passage of electricity through attenuated media.
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- Proceedings 1873-74
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1875
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