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Definition of Thermostatics
1. Noun. The aspect of thermodynamics concerned with thermal equilibrium.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Thermostatics
Literary usage of Thermostatics
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science in Fire-fighting by Luke Flanagan (1920)
"To make clear the variety of ways in which the scientific principles involved in
thermostatics apply to the practical work of fire control will require much ..."
2. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial ScienceChemistry (1898)
"... and that this temperature is во easily obtained and so constant as to be of
great use in the future of thermometry and thermostatics. ..."
3. Theory of Heat by James Clerk Maxwell (1872)
"In the same way the theory of the equilibrium of heat might be called thermostatics,
and that of the motion of heat ..."
4. Theory of Heat by James Clerk Maxwell (1872)
"In the same way the theory of the equilibrium of heat might be called thermostatics,
and that of the motion of heat ..."
5. Theory of Heat by James Clerk Maxwell (1904)
"In the same way the theory of the equilibrium of heat might be called thermostatics,
and that of the motion of heat ..."
6. Theory of Heat by James Clerk Maxwell (1871)
"In the same way the theory of the equilibrium of heat might be called thermostatics,
and that of the motion of heat ..."