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Definition of Kinetic theory of heat
1. Noun. A theory that the temperature of a body increases when kinetic energy increases.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Kinetic Theory Of Heat
Literary usage of Kinetic theory of heat
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"According to the kinetic theory of heat, the molecules of matter always have a
certain amount of independent motion, and the effect of adding heat is to ..."
2. The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel by James McIntyre Camp, Charles Blaine Francis (1920)
"According to the kinetic theory of heat, the molecules of matter always have a
certain amount of independent motion, and the effect of adding heat is to ..."
3. The Kinetic Theory of Gases: Elementary Treatise with Mathematical Appendices by Oskar Emil Meyer (1899)
"Low Conductivity of Gases ONLY very little was known respecting the conduction
of heat in gases before the development of the kinetic theory of heat. ..."
4. Practical Thermodynamics: A Treatise on the Theory and Design of Heat by Forrest E. Cardullo (1911)
"... and collectively termed the properties of gases and vapors and their mixtures,
may be entirely explained by the kinetic theory of heat. ..."
5. Chemical News and Journal of Physical Science (1870)
"The former of these is the kinetic theory of heat, ... TI Among other passages
which benr upon tlie kinetic theory of heat, I find the following in the ..."
6. Thermodynamics by John Edward Emswiler (1921)
"At the present time the kinetic theory of heat is universally accepted. 205.
The Kinetic Theory of Heat.—The kinetic theory assumes that heat is a " mode of ..."