|
Definition of Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles
1. Noun. French physicist and author of Charles's law which anticipated Gay-Lussac's law (1746-1823).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles
Literary usage of Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A History of Physics in Its Elementary Branches: Including the Evolution of by Florian Cajori (1899)
"The first to deduce the law as we now know it was Jacques Alexandre Cesar
Charles (1746-1823), who was professor of physics at the Conservatoire des Arts et ..."
2. Second Year College Chemistry by William Henry Chapin (1922)
"... is evident that lowering the temperature of a gas to —273° C. would bring both
its volume * Regnault, (1842). f Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles (~1823), ..."
3. The Complete Photographer by Roger Child Bayley (1906)
"... changed it even more powerfully and quickly than violet light itself. Prof.
Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles, a public lecturer on physics in Paris, ..."
4. An Introduction to the Principles of Physical Chemistry from the Standpoint by Edward Wight Washburn (1921)
"... (22) " Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles (1746-1823). French mathematician and
physicist, Professor of Physics at the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers. ..."
5. Patriot-Improvers: Biographical Sketches of Members of the American by Whitfield Jenks Bell (1997)
"... of Montargis Guillaume Grivel, writer and author of Theorie de I'Education
Jacques-Alexandre-Cesar Charles, aeronaut Pierre-Jean-Georges Cabanis, ..."