¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Conductivities
1. conductivity [n] - See also: conductivity
Lexicographical Neighbors of Conductivities
Literary usage of Conductivities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Smithsonian Physical Tables by Smithsonian Institution, Thomas Gray (1896)
"RELATION BETWEEN THERMAL AND ELECTRICAL conductivities. That there is a close
relation between the thermal and the electrical conductivities of metal was ..."
2. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1905)
"The Effects of Temperature and Pressure on the Thermal conductivities of Bodies.
Part I. — The Effect of Temperature on the Thermal conductivities of some ..."
3. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"Going -fey Matthiesen'e old numbers, we find them to agite fairly with Wiedemann
and Franz's thermic conductivities, which supports an obvious and pretty ..."
4. Report of the Annual Meeting (1895)
"On the Thermal conductivities of Mixtures of Liquids. By CHARLES H. LEES, D.Sc.
The author has carried out a number of determinations of the thermal ..."
5. A Treatise on the Principles of Chemistry by Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir (1889)
"The numbers for nitric acid are given, and beside them are placed the equivalent
conductivities of methane sulphonic acid:— ^•/. ..."
6. The Freezing-point Lowering, Conductivity, and Viscosity of Solutions of by Harry Clary Jones (1913)
"The conductivities of single solutions of these salts and of their mixture were
... Molecular conductivities of Potassium Chloride and Ammonium Chloride. ..."
7. Practical Electricity: A Laboratory and Lecture Course for First Year by William Edward Ayrton (1897)
"Comparison of Electric and Heat conductivities. —The reciprocals of the numbers
given in column 4 of Table No. VII.,. page 259, will express the relative ..."
8. A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism by James Clerk Maxwell (1904)
"D is the sum of the products of the conductivities taken (n— 1) at a time, omitting
all those terms which contain the products of the conductivities of ..."