Your search
Results 17 resources
-
A biography of the early nineteenth-century German chemist whose teaching and laboratory methods widely influenced the development of the science of chemistry.
-
The heats of reaction of CuO-Cu(OH)2-H2O samples with aqueous HClO4 have been obtained as a function of concentration. Extrapolated to the normal standard state, the values are ΔH°298 = -15.00 and -15.37 kcal. per mole for CuO and Cu(OH)2, respectively. These data are consistent with thermochemical paths based on data in the literature. The entropy of Cu2+(aq) has been determined as -21.5 ± 1.5 cal. per mole 0 K. No evidence was obtained for stable “hydrates” of CuO in the H2O/CuO range 0 to 1.25. © 1969, American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
-
1. The effects of temperature acclimation on electrical properties of earthworm axons (Lumbricus terrestris) were studied using intracellular stimulating and recording techniques. 2. Cold acclimation, compared to warm acclimation, was associated with decreased action potential duration and cable input resistance and increased maximum rate of rise and decline of the action potential and increased excitation threshold. In each case the direction of change occurring during acclimation to 5° C was opposite to that occurring immediately after cooling to 5° C, i.e., the acclimation changes were compensatory. 3. The significance of these changes is discussed with regard to their influence on over-all nerve function after thermal acclimation. © 1969 Springer-Verlag.
-
The most commonly used measurement of radiation damage to seeds is seedling height, the mean height a lot of seeds attains at some time during exponential growth. If planted immediately post-irradiation, seeds of a dose lot give a normal height distribution, but if stored before planting give very abnormal and even bimodal height distributions. By within-seed comparisons of chromosome abnormality (from roots excised at 24-36 hr) with height (attained by 7-9 days) in irradiated barley seeds, it is shown that damage to height and to chromosomes are closely correlated, even within a treatment in which great heterogeneity occurs. The two effects have equal radiosensitivity, but different shoulders to their dose curves. Seedling height is not depressed until 25-30 per cent of the cells bear chromosomal abnormalities. The heterogeneity observed is not due to a between-seed heterogeneity in dose or in oxygen content, and probably not in moisture. These experiments show that the heterogeneity arises from factors that operate on post-irradiation (indirect) storage damage, but are without effect on during-irradiation damage (direct). © 1969 Pergamon Press Ltd.
Explore
Department
- Biology (2)
- Chemistry (2)
- Computer Science (1)
- Counseling and School Psychology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Environment, Geography and Marine Sciences (1)
- History (1)
- New Haven Teachers College (2)
- Political Science (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Public Health (1)
- Recreation, Tourism and Sport Management (1)
- Social Work (1)
- Special Education (1)
- Unidentified (1)
Resource type
- Book (8)
- Journal Article (9)