¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Porosities
1. porosity [n] - See also: porosity
Lexicographical Neighbors of Porosities
Literary usage of Porosities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1879)
"... the porosities through which lie thought the, blood to flow from the arteries
into the veins. While we acknowledge our incompetency to act as referee in ..."
2. Transactions of the American Ceramic Society Containing the Papers and by American Ceramic Society, American Ceramic Society Meeting (1912)
"THE RELATION BETWEEN THE CRUSHING STRENGTH AND porosities OF CLAY PRODUCTS.1 By
GH BROWN. The crushing strength of a structural clay product is not of so ..."
3. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1921)
"The relationships that total porosities of coherent sands may bear to the rates
of production, as well as to the ultimate productions from such sands, ..."
4. Proceedings of the Liverpool Geological Society by Liverpool Geological Society (1901)
"Cases 1 to 4 give the theoretical porosities of four different arrangements of
rounded grains of equal size, and all other possible arrangements would ..."
5. Proceedings of the Liverpool Geological Society by Liverpool Geological Society (1904)
"In Case 6 there are three different porosities, all derived by introducing small
spheres into the pores of Case 4. These combinations are as follows:—(A) A ..."
6. Transactions by American Institute of Mining Engineers, Metallurgical Society of AIME, Society of Mining Engineers of AIME. (1921)
"The relationships that total porosities of coherent sands may bear to the rates
of production, as well as to the ultimate productions from such sands, ..."
7. The Iron Ores of Great Britain and Ireland: Their Mode of Occurrence, Age by J. D. Kendall (1893)
"I7'O These examples do not show so great a difference in the porosities as was
stated above, but that is easily accounted for when it is borne in mind that ..."