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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78610 ***
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ SADI CARNOT
+
+ AT THE AGE OF 17.
+
+ (From a Portrait by Bailly, 1813.)
+]
+
+
+
+
+ REFLECTIONS
+ ON THE
+ MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT.
+
+
+ _FROM THE ORIGINAL FRENCH OF_
+ N.-L.-S. CARNOT,
+ _Graduate of the Polytechnic School_.
+
+
+ ACCOMPANIED BY
+ AN ACCOUNT OF CARNOT’S THEORY.
+ BY SIR WILLIAM THOMSON (LORD KELVIN).
+
+
+ EDITED BY
+
+ R. H. THURSTON, M.A., LL.D., DR.ENG’G;
+ _Director of Sibley College, Cornell University_;
+ “_Officier de l’Instruction Publique de France_,”
+ _etc., etc., etc._
+
+[Illustration: Classical laurel wreath with ribbon banner bearing Greek
+text]
+
+ _SECOND, REVISED, EDITION_.
+ FIRST THOUSAND.
+
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ JOHN WILEY & SONS.
+ LONDON: CHAPMAN & HALL, LIMITED.
+ 1897.
+
+
+ Copyright, 1890,
+ ROBERT H. THURSTON.
+
+
+ ROBERT DRUMMOND, ELECTROTYPER AND PRINTER, NEW YORK.
+
+ DEDICATED
+
+ TO
+
+ =Sadi Carnot,=
+
+ PRESIDENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC,
+
+ THAT DISTINGUISHED MEMBER OF THE PROFESSION OF ENGINEERING WHOSE WHOLE
+ LIFE HAS BEEN AN HONOR TO HIS PROFESSION AND TO HIS COUNTRY;
+
+ AND WHO, ELEVATED TO THE HIGHEST OFFICE WITHIN THE GIFT OF THE
+
+ FRENCH NATION,
+
+ HAS PROVEN BY THE QUIET DIGNITY AND THE EFFICIENCY WITH WHICH HE HAS
+ PERFORMED HIS AUGUST DUTIES THAT HE IS A WORTHY MEMBER OF A NOBLE
+ FAMILY, ALREADY RENDERED FAMOUS BY AN EARLIER SADI CARNOT, NOW IMMORTAL
+ IN THE ANNALS OF SCIENCE, AND IS HIMSELF DESERVING OF ENROLMENT IN A
+ LIST OF GREAT MEN WHICH INCLUDES THAT OTHER DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER, OUR
+ OWN FIRST PRESIDENT,
+
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ I.
+ PAGE
+ THE WORK OF N.-L.-SADI CARNOT. _By the Editor_, 1
+
+ II.
+ THE LIFE OF N.-L.-SADI CARNOT. _By Mons. H. Carnot_, 20
+
+ III.
+ REFLECTIONS ON THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT AND ON MACHINES FITTED TO
+ DEVELOP THAT POWER. _By Mons. N.-L.-Sadi Carnot_, 37
+
+ IV.
+ ACCOUNT OF CARNOT’S THEORY. _By Sir William Thomson_ (_Lord
+ Kelvin_), 127
+
+ APPENDIX.
+ A. EXTRACTS FROM UNPUBLISHED WRITINGS OF CARNOT, 205
+ B. CARNOT’S FOOT-NOTES, 237
+ C. NOTE BY THE EDITOR, 261
+
+
+
+
+ PUBLISHERS’ NOTE.
+
+
+The _raison d’être_ of the following translation of the famous work of
+Carnot is not the usual one, either with the Publishers or the
+Editor—expectation of gain in either purse or fame. Neither could
+reasonably be anticipated from the reproduction of the work of an author
+of more than a half-century ago, in a field then unrecognized, and
+to-day familiar to but few; and especially when, as is in this case the
+fact, the work itself has been long out of date as a scientific
+authority, even had it ever held such a position. It could not be
+presumed that a very large proportion of even the men of science of the
+English-speaking world would be sufficiently familiar with the subject,
+or interested in its origin, to purchase such a relic of a primitive
+period as is this little book. Nor could the translation of the work, or
+the gathering together by the Editor of related matter, be supposed
+likely to be productive of any form of compensation. The hook is
+published as matter of limited but most intense scientific interest, and
+on that score only.
+
+It has seemed to the Editor and to the Publishers that the product of
+the wonderful genius of Carnot,—the great foundation-stone of one of the
+most marvellous and important of modern sciences, the first statement of
+the grand though simple laws of Thermodynamics,—as illustrated in this
+one little treatise, should be made accessible to all who desire to
+study the work in English, and preserved, so far as its publication in
+this form could accomplish it, as a permanent memorial, in a foreign
+tongue, of such grand truths, and of such a great genius as was their
+discoverer. It is with this purpose that Publishers and Editor have
+cooperated in this project.
+
+The book consists, as will be seen on inspection, of the translation of
+Carnot’s _Réflexions sur la Puissance Motrice du Feu_, preceded by a
+notice written by the Editor calling attention to its remarkable
+features, and its extraordinary character as the product of a most
+remarkable genius; and by a biographical sketch of the great author,
+written by his brother, Mons. Hyppolyte Carnot, which sketch we find in
+the French copy of the work as published by Gauthier-Villars, the latest
+reproduction of the book in the original tongue. To the main portion of
+the book, Carnot’s _Réflexions_, is appended the celebrated paper of Sir
+William Thomson, his “Account of Carnot’s Theory,” in which that great
+physicist first points out to the world the treasure so long concealed,
+unnoticed, among the scientific literature, already mainly antiquated,
+of the first quarter of the nineteenth century. The distinguished writer
+of this paper has kindly interested himself in the scheme of the Editor,
+and has consented to its insertion as a natural and desirable commentary
+upon the older work, and especially as exhibiting the relations of the
+fundamental principles discovered and enunciated by Carnot to the modern
+view of the nature of thermodynamic phenomena—relations evidently
+understood by that writer, but not by the leaders of scientific thought
+of his time, and therefore ignored by him in the construction of his new
+science.
+
+The Appendix contains a number of Carnot’s own notes, too long to be
+inserted in the body of the paper in its present form, and which have
+therefore been removed to their present location simply as a matter of
+convenience in bookmaking.
+
+The dedication of the work to the grandnephew of the author, who by a
+singular coincidence happens to-day to occupy the highest position that
+any citizen can aspire to reach in that now prosperous Republic, will be
+recognized as in all respects appropriate by every reader of the work of
+the earlier Sadi Carnot who is familiar with the character, the history,
+the attainments, the achievements, of the later Sadi Carnot in so many
+and widely diverse fields. The Carnot talent and the Carnot character
+are equally observable in both men, widely as they are separated in time
+and in the nature of their professional labors. Both are great
+representatives of a noble family, whose honor and fame they have both
+splendidly upheld.
+
+The Publishers offer this little book to its readers as a small, yet in
+one sense not unimportant, contribution to the great cause of modern
+science, as a relic, a memorial, a corner-stone.
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE BY THE EDITOR.
+
+
+“_Je me suis proposé de grands desseins dans ce petit ouvrage_,” as
+Bernardin de Saint-Pierre says in the preface to his pathetic story of
+_Paul et Virginie_. I have sought to present to the great
+English-speaking world the work of a genius hitherto only known to a few
+men of science, and not well known, even among the people of France, for
+whose credit he has done so much. In placing before the readers of this
+translation his book—small of size but great in matter as it is—I feel
+that I have accomplished an easy task, but one of real importance. I
+have been asked, as Corresponding Member for the United States of the
+Société des Ingénieurs Civils de France, to communicate to my colleagues
+scientific and professional memoirs and whatever may be of interest to
+them—“_en un mot, que nous resserrions les liens qui font des ingénieurs
+en général une seule famille_.” That were a pleasant task; but a grander
+and a more agreeable one still is that of bringing “nearer in heart and
+thought” the members of that still larger community, the men of science
+of the world, and of weaving still more firmly and closely those bonds
+of kindly thought and feeling which are growing continually more
+numerous and stronger as the nations are brought to see that humanity is
+larger and more important than political divisions, and that the labors
+of educated men and of the guiding minds in the great industries are
+constantly doing more to promote a true brotherhood of mankind than ever
+have, or ever can, the greatest statesmen.
+
+When the wonderful intellectual accomplishments of men like the elder
+Sadi Carnot become known and appreciated by the world, much more will
+have been accomplished in this direction. It is perhaps from this point
+of view that the importance of such work will be most fully recognized.
+When the little treatise which is here for the first time published in
+English becomes familiar to those for whom it is intended, it will be,
+to many at least, a matter of surprise no less than pleasure to discover
+that France has produced a writer on this now familiar subject whose
+inspiration anticipated many of the principles that those founders of
+the modern science, Rankine and Clausius, worked out through the tedious
+and difficult methods of the higher mathematics, and which were hailed
+by their contemporaries as marvellous discoveries.
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE TO SECOND EDITION.
+
+
+The present edition of this little work is improved by the removal of a
+few errata observed in the first issue, and by the addition of a recent
+and excellent portrait of Lord Kelvin, as a frontispiece to his
+era-making paper, at page 127. This picture, taken within the last year,
+is thought by the friends of its distinguished subject to be one of the
+best yet produced. That it is satisfactory to him and his friends is
+indicated by the fact that the original of this reproduction was
+presented to the writer by Lady Kelvin, in 1895, immediately after it
+was taken, and the autograph supplied by her distinguished husband. The
+Editor takes this occasion to acknowledge cordially the letters of
+appreciation and commendation received from those who have agreed with
+M. Haton de la Goupillière that the translation of Carnot and its
+publication in this manner, with the famous paper of Lord Kelvin, will
+be considered as worthy of approval by English-speaking readers as well
+as “appreciated by the whole French nation.”
+
+
+
+
+ I.
+ THE WORK OF SADI CARNOT.
+
+
+ BY THE EDITOR.
+
+
+Nicolas-Léonard-Sadi Carnot was, perhaps, the greatest genius, in the
+department of physical science at least, that this century has
+produced. By this I mean that he possessed in highest degree that
+combination of the imaginative faculty with intellectual acuteness,
+great logical power and capacity for learning, classifying and
+organizing in their proper relations, all the facts, phenomena, and
+laws of natural science which distinguishes the real genius from other
+men and even from the simply talented man. Only now and then, in the
+centuries, does such a genius come into view. Euclid was such in
+mathematics; Newton was such in mechanics; Bacon and Compte were such
+in logic and philosophy; Lavoisier and Davy were such in chemistry;
+and Fourier, Thomson, Maxwell, and Clausius were such in mathematical
+physics. Among engineers, we have the examples of Watt as inventor and
+philosopher, Rankine as his mathematical complement, developing the
+theory of that art of which Watt illustrated the practical side; we
+have Hirn as engineer-experimentalist, and philosopher, as well;
+Corliss as inventor and constructor; and a dozen creators of the
+machinery of the textile manufactures, in which, in the adjustment of
+cam-work, the highest genius of the mechanic appears.
+
+But Carnot exhibited that most marked characteristic of real genius, the
+power of applying such qualities as I have just enumerated to great
+purposes and with great result while still a youth. Genius is not
+dependent, as is talent, upon the ripening and the growth of years for
+its prescience; it is ready at the earliest maturity, and sometimes
+earlier, to exhibit its marvellous works; as, for example, note Hamilton
+the mathematician and Mill the logician; the one becoming master of a
+dozen languages when hardly more than as many years of age, reading
+Newton’s Principia at sixteen and conceiving that wonderful system,
+quaternions, at eighteen; the other competent to begin the study of
+Greek at three, learning Latin at seven and reading Plato before he was
+eight. Carnot had done his grandest work of the century in his province
+of thought, and had passed into the Unseen, at thirty-six; his one
+little volume, which has made him immortal, was written when he was but
+twenty-three or twenty-four. It is unnecessary, here, to enter into the
+particulars of his life; that has been given us in ample detail in the
+admirable sketch by his brother which is here republished. It will be
+quite sufficient to indicate, in a few words, what were the conditions
+amid which he lived and the relation of his work to that great science
+of which it was the first exposition.
+
+At the time of Carnot, the opinion of the scientific world was divided,
+as it had been for centuries, on the question of the true nature of heat
+and light, and as it still is, to a certain extent, regarding
+electricity. On the one hand it was held by the best-known physicists
+that heat is a substance which pervades all bodies in greater or less
+amount, and that heating and cooling are simply the absorption and the
+rejection of this “imponderable substance” by the body affected; while,
+on the other hand, it was asserted by a small but increasing number that
+heat is a “mode of motion,” a form of energy, not only imponderable, but
+actually immaterial; a quality of bodies, not a substance, and that it
+is identical, in its nature, with other forms of recognizable energy,
+as, for example, mechanical energy. A quarter of a century before Carnot
+wrote, the experiments of Rumford and of Davy had been crucial in the
+settlement of the question and in the proof of the correctness of the
+second of the two opposing parties; but their work had not become so
+generally known or so fully accepted as to be acknowledged as
+representative of the right views of the subject. The prevalent opinion,
+following Newton, was favorable to the first hypothesis; and it was in
+deference to this opinion that Carnot based his work on an inaccurate
+hypothesis; though, fortunately, the fact did not seriously militate
+against its value or his credit and fame.
+
+“With true philosophical caution, he avoids committing himself to this
+hypothesis; though he makes it the foundation of his attempt to discover
+how work is produced from heat.”[1]
+
+The results of Carnot’s reasoning are, fortunately, mainly independent
+of any hypothesis as to the nature of heat or the method or mechanism of
+development and transfer or transformation of its energy. Carnot was in
+error in assuming no loss of heat in a completed cycle and in thus
+ignoring the permanent transformation of a definite proportion into
+mechanical energy; but his proposition that efficiency increases with
+increase of temperature-range is still correct; as is his assertion of
+its independence of the nature of the working substance.
+
+Carnot’s “_Réflexions sur la Puissance Motrice du Feu_,” published in
+1824, escaped notice at the time, was only now and then slightly
+referred to later, until Clapeyron seized upon its salient ideas and
+illustrated them by the use of the Watt diagram of energy, and might,
+perhaps, have still remained unknown to the world except for the fact
+that Sir William Thomson, that greatest of modern mathematical
+physicists, fortunately, when still a youth and at the commencement of
+his own great work, discovered it, revealed its extraordinary merit,
+and, readjusting Carnot’s principles in accordance with the modern views
+of heat-energy, gave it the place that it is so well entitled to in the
+list of the era-making books of the age. But it still remained
+inaccessible to all who could not find the original paper until, only a
+few years since, it was reprinted by Gauthier-Villars, the great
+publishing house of Paris, accompanied by a biographical sketch by the
+younger brother, which it has been thought wise to reproduce with the
+translation of Carnot’s book. In making the translation, also, this
+later text has been followed; and now, for the first time, so far as is
+known to the writer, the work of Carnot is made accessible to the reader
+in English.
+
+The original manuscript of Carnot has been deposited by his brother in
+the archives of the French Academy of Sciences, and thus insured
+perpetual care. The work of Carnot includes not only the treatise which
+it is the principal object of this translation to give to our readers,
+but also a considerable amount of hitherto unpublished matter which has
+been printed by his brother, with the new edition of the book, as
+illustrative of the breadth and acuteness of the mind of the Founder of
+the Science of Thermodynamics.
+
+These previously unpublished materials consist of memoranda relating to
+the specific heats of substances, their variations, and various other
+facts and data, and principles as well; some of which are now recognized
+as essential elements of the new science, even of its fundamental part.
+The book is particularly rich in what have been generally supposed to be
+the discoveries of later writers, and in enunciations of principles now
+recognized as those forming the base and the supporting framework of
+that latest of the sciences. As stated by Tait, in his history of
+Thermodynamics, the “two grand things” which Carnot originated and
+introduced were his idea of a “cycle” and the notion of its
+“reversibility,” when perfect. “Without this work of Carnot, the modern
+theory of energy, and especially that branch of it which is at present
+by far the most important in practice, the dynamical theory of heat,
+could not have attained its now enormous development.” These
+conceptions, original with our author, have been, in the hands of his
+successors, Clausius and other Continental writers, particularly, most
+fruitful of interesting and important results; and Clapeyron’s happy
+thought of so employing the Watt diagram of energy as to render them
+easy of comprehension has proved a valuable aid in this direction.
+
+The exact experimental data needed for numerical computations in
+application of Carnot’s principles were inaccessible at the date of his
+writing; they were supplied, later, by Mayer, by Colding, by Joule, and
+by later investigators. Even the idea of equivalence, according to
+Hypolyte Carnot, was not originally familiar to the author of this
+remarkable work; but was gradually developed and defined as he
+progressed with his philosophy. It is sufficiently distinctly enunciated
+in his later writings. He then showed a familiarity with those notions
+which have been ascribed generally to Mayer and which made the latter
+famous, and with those ideas which are now usually attributed to Joule
+with similar result. He seems actually to have planned the very kind of
+research which Joule finally carried out. All these advanced views must,
+of course, have been developed by Carnot before 1832, the date of his
+illness and death, and ten or fifteen years earlier than they were made
+public by those who have since been commonly considered their
+discoverers. These until lately unpublished notes of Carnot contain
+equally well-constructed arguments in favor of the now accepted theory
+of heat as energy. While submitting to the authority of the greatest
+physicists of his time, and so far as to make their view the basis of
+his work, to a certain extent, he nevertheless adhered privately to the
+true idea. His idea of the equivalence of heat and other forms of energy
+was as distinct and exact as was his notion of the nature of that
+phenomenon. He states it with perfect accuracy.
+
+In making his measures of heat-energy, he assumes as a unit a measure
+not now common, but one which may be easily and conveniently reduced to
+the now general system of measurement. He takes the amount of power
+required to exert an energy equal to that needed to raise one cubic
+meter of water through a height of one meter, as his unit; this is 1000
+kilogrammeters, taken as his unit of motive power; while he says that
+this is the equivalent of 2.7 of his units of heat; which latter
+quantity would be destroyed in its production of this amount of power,
+or rather work. His unit of heat is thus seen to be 1000 ÷ 2.7, or 370
+kilogrammeters. This is almost identical with the figure obtained by
+Mayer, more than ten years later, and from presumably the same
+approximate physical data, the best then available, in the absence of a
+Regnault to determine the exact values. Mayer obtained 365, a number
+which the later work of Regnault enabled us to prove to be 15 per cent.
+too low, a conclusion verified experimentally by the labors of Joule and
+his successors. Carnot was thus _a_ discoverer of the equivalence of the
+units of heat and work, as well as the revealer of the principles which
+have come to be known by his name. Had he lived a little longer, there
+can be little doubt that he would have established the facts, as well as
+the principles, by convincing proof. His early death frustrated his
+designs, and deprived the world of one of its noblest intellects, just
+when it was beginning its marvellous career.
+
+The following sentence from Carnot illustrates in brief his wonderful
+prescience; one can hardly believe it possible that it should have been
+written in the first quarter of the nineteenth century: “_On peut donc
+poser en thèse générale que la puissance motrice est en quantité
+invariable dans la Nature; qu’elle n’est jamais, à proprement parler, ni
+produite, ni détruite. A la vérité, elle change de forme, c’est a dire
+qu’elle produit tantôt un genre de mouvement, tantôt un autre; mais elle
+n’est jamais anéantie._” It is this man who has probably inaugurated the
+development of the modern science of thermodynamics and the whole range
+of sciences dependent upon it, and who has thus made it possible to
+construct a science of the energetics of the universe, and to read the
+mysteries of every physical phenomenon of nature; it is this man who has
+done more than any contemporary in his field, and who thus displayed a
+more brilliant genius than any man of science of the nineteenth century:
+yet not even his name appears in the biographical dictionaries; and in
+the Encyclopædia Britannica it is only to be found incidentally in the
+article on Thermodynamics.
+
+Throughout his little book, we find numerous proofs of his clearness of
+view and of the wonderful powers of mind possessed by him. He opens his
+treatise by asserting that “_C’est à la chaleur que doivent être
+attribués les grands mouvements qui frappent nos regards sur la terre;
+c’est à elle que sont dues les agitations de l’atmosphère, l’ascension
+des nuages, la chute des pluies et des autres météores, les courants
+d’eau qui sillonnent la surface du globe et dont l’homme est parvenue à
+employer pour son usage une faible partie; enfin les tremblements de
+terre, les éruptions volcaniques reconnaissent aussi pour cause la
+chaleur._”
+
+Carnot was the first to declare that the maximum of work done by heat,
+in any given case of application of the heat-energy, is determined
+solely by the range of temperature through which it fell in the
+operation, and is entirely independent of the nature of the working
+substance chosen as the medium of transfer of energy and the vehicle of
+the heat. His assumption of the materiality of heat led, logically, to
+the conclusion that the same quantity of heat was finally stored in the
+refrigerator as had, initially, left the furnace, and that the effect
+produced was a consequence of a fall of temperature analogous to a fall
+of water; but, aside from this error—which he himself was evidently
+inclined to regard as such,—his process and argument are perfectly
+correct.[2]
+
+Throughout his whole work are distributed condensed assertions of
+principles now well recognized and fully established, which indicate
+that he not only had anticipated later writers in their establishment,
+but that he fully understood their real importance in a theory of
+heat-energy and of heat-engines. In fact, he often italicizes them,
+placing them as independent paragraphs to more thoroughly impress the
+reader with their fundamental importance. Thus he says: “_Partout où il
+existe une différence de température, il peut y avoir production de
+puissance motrice_;” and again, this extraordinary anticipation of
+modern science: “_le maximum de puissance résultant de l’emploi de la
+vapeur est aussi le maximum de puissance motrice réalisable par quelque
+moyen que ce soit_.”
+
+“_La puissance motrice de la chaleur est indépendante des agents mis en
+œuvre pour la réaliser; sa quantité est fixée uniquement par les
+températures des corps entre lesquels se fait, en dernier résultat, le
+transport du calorique._”
+
+“_Lorsqu’un gaz passe, sans changer de température, d’un volume et d’une
+pression déterminés à une autre pression également déterminée, la
+quantité de calorique absorbée ou abandonnée est toujours la même,
+quelle que soit la nature du gaz choisi comme sujet d’expérience._”
+
+Perhaps as remarkable a discovery as any one of the preceding (and one
+which, like those, has been rediscovered and confirmed by later
+physicists; one which was the subject of dispute between Clausius, who
+proved its truth by the later methods which are now the source of his
+fame, and the physicists of his earlier days, who had obtained
+inaccurate measures of the specific heats of the gases;—values which
+were finally corrected by Regnault, thus proving Carnot and Clausius to
+be right—is thus stated by Carnot, and is italicized in his manuscript
+and book:
+
+“_La différence entre la chaleur spécifique sous pression constante et
+la chaleur spécifique sous volume constant est la même pour tous les
+gaz._”
+
+He bases his conclusion upon the simplest of thermodynamic
+considerations. He says that the increase of volumes with the same
+differences of temperature are the same, according to Gay-Lussac and
+Dalton; and that, therefore, according to the laws of thermodynamics as
+he has demonstrated them, the heat absorbed with equal augmentations of
+volume being the same, the two specific heats are constant, and their
+difference as well. As will be seen on referring to the text, he bases
+upon this principle a determination of the specific heats of constant
+volume, taking as his values of the determined specific heats of
+constant pressure those of Delaroche and Bérard, making the constant
+difference 0.300, that of air at constant pressure being taken as the
+standard and as unity. The establishment of this point, in the face of
+the opposition, and apparently of the facts, of the best physicists of
+his time, was one of those circumstances which did so much to win for
+Clausius his great fame. How much greater credit, then, should be given
+Carnot, who not only anticipated the later physicists in this matter,
+but who must have enunciated his principle under far more serious
+discouragements and uncertainty!
+
+It must be remembered, when reading Carnot, that all the “constants of
+nature” were, in his time, very inaccurately ascertained. It is only
+since the time of Regnault’s grand work that it has been the rule that
+such determinations have been published only when very exactly
+determined. No change has been attempted in Carnot’s figures, in any
+respect; as it would be far less satisfactory to read a paraphrased
+work, and the exact figures are now easily accessible to every one, and
+his computations may all be made, if desired, on the basis of modern
+data. Sir William Thomson has already performed this task in the paper
+appended.
+
+Throughout the whole of this treatise, small as it is, we find
+distributed a singular number of these anticipations of modern
+thermodynamic principles. Studying the relation of heat-energy to work
+done, he concludes:
+
+“_La chute du calorique produit plus de puissance motrice dans les
+degrés inférieurs que dans les degrés supérieurs._”
+
+We to-day admit that, since the one degree at a low temperature, and the
+corresponding quantity of heat, are larger fractions of the total
+temperature, and the total heat stored in the substance, than the one
+degree at a higher point on the scale of absolute temperature, this
+principle of Carnot has become obvious.
+
+In the enunciation of the essential principles of efficiency of the
+heat-engine, we find the proofs of this same wonderful prescience. He
+asserts that, for best effect: “(1) The temperature of the working fluid
+must be raised to the highest degree possible, in order to secure a
+commensurate range of temperature; (2) The cooling must be carried to
+the lowest point on the scale that may be found practicable; (3) The
+passage of the fluid from the upper to the lower limit of temperature
+must be produced by expansion;” i.e., “it is necessary that the cooling
+of the gas shall occur spontaneously by its rarefaction;” which is
+simply his method of stating the now universally understood principle
+that, for highest efficiency, the expansion must be adiabatic, from a
+maximum to a minimum temperature. He goes on to explain these
+principles, and then says that the advantage of high-pressure engines
+lies “_essentiellement dans la faculté de rendre utile une plus grande
+chute de calorique_.” This principle, as a practical system of
+operation, had already, as he tells us, been enunciated by M. Clement,
+and had been practised, as we well know, since the days of its
+originator, Watt; but Carnot saw clearly the thermodynamic principle
+which underlies it, and as clearly states it, for the first time.
+
+He sees clearly, too, the reasons for the attempts of Hornblower and of
+Woolf, premature as they proved and as he also sees, in the introduction
+of the compound engine, and even suggests that this idea might be still
+further developed by the use of a triple-expansion engine, a type which
+is to-day just coming into use, more than a half-century after Carnot’s
+date. He recognizes the advantages of the compound engine in better
+distribution of pressures and in distribution of the work of expansion,
+but does not, of course, perceive the then undiscovered limitation of
+the efficiency of the simple engine, due to “cylinder condensation,”
+which has finally led, perhaps more than any other circumstance, to its
+displacement so largely by the multi-cylinder machine. No one has more
+exactly and plainly stated the respective advantages to be claimed for
+air and the gases, used as working fluids in heat-engines, than does
+Carnot; nor does any one to-day better recognize the difficulties which
+lie in the path to success in that direction, in the necessity of
+finding a means of handling them at high temperatures and of securing
+high mean pressures.
+
+His closing paragraph shows his extraordinary foresight, and the
+precision with which that wonderful intellect detected the practical
+elements of the problem which the engineer, from the days of Savery, of
+Newcomen, and of Watt has been called upon to study, and the importance
+of the work, which he began, in the development of a theory of the
+action, or of the operation, of the heat-engines, which should give
+effective assistance in the development of their improved forms:
+
+“_On ne doit pas se flatter de mettre jamais à profit, dans la pratique,
+toute la puissance des combustibles. Les tentatives que l’on ferait pour
+approcher ce résultat seraient même plus nuisibles qu’utiles, si elles
+faisaient négliger d’autres considérations importantes. L’économie du
+combustible n’est qu’une des conditions à remplir par les machines à
+feu; dans beaucoup de circonstances, elle n’est que secondaire: elle
+doit souvent céder le pas à la sûreté, à la solidité, à la durée de la
+machine, au peu de place qu’il faut lui faire occuper, au peu de frais
+de son établissement, etc. Savoir apprécier, dans chaque cas, à leur
+juste valeur, les considérations de convenance et d’économie qui peuvent
+se présenter; savoir discerner les plus importantes de celles qui sont
+seulement accessoires, les balancer toutes convenablement entre elles,
+afin de parvenir, par les moyens les plus faciles, au meilleur résultat:
+tel doit être le principal talent de l’homme appelé à diriger, à
+co-ordonner entre eux les travaux de ses semblables, à les faire
+concourir vers un but utile de quelque genre qu’il soit._”
+
+Such was the work and such the character of this wonderful man. Those
+whose desire to follow more closely and to witness the process of
+development of the work of which this initial paper of Carnot was the
+introductory, should study the contribution of Sir William Thomson to
+this development, as published in 1849,—a paper which constitutes that
+physicist the virtual discoverer of Carnot and the godfather of the man
+and his thoughts. This paper constitutes the final chapter of this
+little book.
+
+From that time the additional progress so rapidly made in the new
+science was as inevitable as the development of a gold-field, once the
+precious metal has been found in paying quantities in the hitherto
+unvisited cañons and gorges of a distant and unexplored mountain-range.
+But great as is the work since done, and great as have been the
+discoveries and the discoverers of later years, none claims our
+gratitude and compels our respect in greater degree than does the
+original discoverer—
+
+ SADI CARNOT.
+
+
+
+
+ II.
+ LIFE OF SADI CARNOT.
+
+ BY M. H. CARNOT.
+
+
+As the life of Sadi Carnot was not marked by any notable event, his
+biography would have occupied only a few lines; but a scientific work by
+him, after remaining long in obscurity, brought again to light many
+years after his death, has caused his name to be placed among those of
+great inventors. In regard to his person, his mind, his character,
+nothing whatever has been known. Since there remains a witness of his
+private life—the sole witness, has he not a duty to fulfil? Ought he not
+to satisfy the natural and legitimate interest which attaches to any man
+whose work has deserved a portion of glory?
+
+Nicolas-Léonard-Sadi Carnot was born June 1, 1796, in the smaller
+Luxembourg. This was that part of the palace where our father then dwelt
+as a member of the Directory. Our father had a predilection for the name
+of Sadi, which recalled to his mind ideas of wisdom and poetry. His
+firstborn had borne this name, and despite the fate of this poor child,
+who lived but a few months, he called the second also Sadi, in memory of
+the celebrated Persian poet and moralist.
+
+Scarcely a year had passed when the proscription, which included the
+Director, obliged him to give up his life, or at least his liberty, to
+the conspirators of fructidor. Our mother carried her son far from the
+palace in which violation of law had just triumphed. She fled to St.
+Omer, with her family, while her husband was exiled to Switzerland, then
+to Germany.
+
+Our mother often said to me, “Thy brother was born in the midst of the
+cares and agitations of grandeur, thou in the calm of an obscure
+retreat. Your constitutions show this difference of origin.”
+
+My brother in fact was of delicate constitution. He increased his
+strength later, by means of varied and judicious bodily exercises. He
+was of medium size, endowed with extreme sensibility and at the same
+time with extreme energy, more than reserved, almost rude, but
+singularly courageous on occasion. When he felt himself to be contending
+against injustice, nothing could restrain him. The following is an
+anecdote in illustration.
+
+The Directory had given place to the Consulate. Carnot, after two years
+of exile, returned to his country and was appointed Minister of War.
+Bonaparte at the same time was still in favor with the republicans. He
+remembered that Carnot had assisted him in the beginning of his military
+career, and he resumed the intimate relation which had existed between
+them during the Directory. When the minister went to Malmaison to work
+with the First Consul, he often took with him his son, then about four
+years old, to stay with Madame Bonaparte, who was greatly attached to
+him.
+
+She was one day with some other ladies in a small boat on a pond, the
+ladies rowing the boat themselves, when Bonaparte, unexpectedly
+appearing, amused himself by picking up stones and throwing them near
+the boat, spattering water on the fresh toilets of the rowers. The
+ladies dared not manifest their displeasure, but the little Sadi, after
+having looked on at the affair for some time, suddenly placed himself
+boldly before the conqueror of Marengo, and threatening him with his
+fist, he cried “Beast of a First Consul, will you stop tormenting those
+ladies!”
+
+Bonaparte, at this unexpected attack, stopped and looked in astonishment
+at the child. Then he was seized with a fit of laughter in which all the
+spectators of the scene joined.
+
+At another time, when the minister, wishing to return to Paris, sought
+his son, who had been left with Madame Bonaparte, it was discovered that
+he had run away. They found him a long way off, in a mill, the mechanism
+of which he was trying to understand. This desire had been in the
+child’s mind for days, and the honest miller, not knowing who he was,
+was kindly answering all his questions. Curiosity, especially in regard
+to mechanics and physics, was one of the essential traits of Sadi’s
+mind.
+
+On account of this disposition so early manifested, Carnot did not
+hesitate to give a scientific direction to the studies of his son. He
+was able to undertake this task himself when the monarchical tendencies
+of the new government had determined him to retire. For a few months
+only Sadi followed the course of M. Bourdon at the Charlemagne Lycée to
+prepare himself for the Polytechnic School.
+
+The pupil made rapid progress. He was just sixteen years old when he was
+admitted to the school, the twenty-fourth on the list. This was in 1812.
+The following year he left it, first in artillery. But he was considered
+too young for the school of Metz, and he continued his studies at Paris
+for a year. To this circumstance is due the fact that he took part in
+March, 1814, in the military exploits of Vincennes, and not of the butte
+Chaumont, as almost all the historians of the siege of Paris declared.
+M. Chasles, one of Sadi’s school-fellows, took pains to rectify this
+error at a séance of the Institute in 1869.
+
+If the pupils of the Polytechnic School did not earlier enter into the
+campaign, it was not because they had not asked to do so. I find in my
+brother’s papers the copy of an address to the Emperor, signed by them
+December 29, 1813:
+
+“SIRE: The country needs all its defenders. The pupils of the
+Polytechnic School, faithful to their motto, ask to be permitted to
+hasten to the frontiers to share the glory of the brave men who are
+consecrating themselves to the safety of France. The battalion, proud of
+having contributed to the defeat of the enemy, will return to the school
+to cultivate the sciences and prepare for new services.”
+
+General Carnot was at Anvers, which he had just been defending against
+the confederate English, Prussians, and Swedes, where the French flag
+yet floated, when he wrote to his son, April 12, 1814:
+
+“MY DEAR SADI: I have learned with extreme pleasure that the battalion
+of the Polytechnic School has distinguished itself, and that you have
+performed your first military exploits with honor. When I am recalled, I
+shall be very glad if the Minister of War will give you permission to
+come to me. You will become acquainted with a fine country and a
+beautiful city, where I have had the satisfaction of remaining in peace
+while disaster has overwhelmed so many other places.”
+
+Peace being restored, Sadi rejoined his father at Anvers and returned
+with him into France.
+
+In the month of October he left the Polytechnic School, ranking sixth on
+the list of young men destined to service in the engineer corps, and
+went to Metz as a cadet sub-lieutenant at the school. Many scientific
+papers that he wrote there were a decided success. One is particularly
+referred to as very clever, a memoir on the instrument called the
+_theodolite_ which is used in astronomy and geodesy.
+
+I obtain these details from M. Ollivier, who was of the same rank as
+Sadi and who, later, was one of the founders of the _École Centrale_.
+Among his other comrades besides M. Chasles, the learned geometrician
+just now referred to, was Gen. Duvivier, lamented victim of the
+insurrection of June 1848. I ought also to mention M. Robelin, Sadi’s
+most intimate friend, who came to help me nurse him during his last
+illness, and who published a notice concerning him in the _Revue
+encyclopédique_, t. lv.
+
+The events of 1815 brought General Carnot back into politics during the
+“_Cent Jours_” which ended in a fresh catastrophe.
+
+This gave Sadi a glimpse of human nature of which he could not speak
+without disgust. His little sub-lieutenant’s room was visited by certain
+superior officers who did not disdain to mount to the third floor to pay
+their respects to the son of the new minister.
+
+Waterloo put an end to their attentions. The Bourbons re-established on
+the throne, Carnot was proscribed and Sadi sent successively into many
+trying places to pursue his vocation of engineer, to count bricks, to
+repair walls, and to draw plans destined to be hidden in portfolios. He
+performed these duties conscientiously and without hope of recompense,
+for his name, which not long before had brought him so many flatteries,
+was henceforth the cause of his advancement being long delayed.
+
+In 1818 there came an unlooked-for royal ordinance, authorizing the
+officers of all branches of the service to present themselves at the
+examinations for the new corps of the staff. Sadi was well aware that
+favor had much more to do with this matter than ability, but he was
+weary of garrison life. The stay in small fortresses to which the nature
+of his work confined him did not offer sufficient resources to his love
+of study. Then he hoped, and his hope was realized, that a request for a
+furlough would be obtained without difficulty, and would insure him the
+leisure that he sought. In spite of the friendly opposition of some
+chiefs of the engineer corps, testifying to a sincere regret at the
+removal from their register of a name which had gained honor among them,
+Sadi came to Paris to take the examination, and was appointed lieutenant
+on the staff, January 20, 1819.
+
+He hastened to obtain his furlough, and availed himself of it to lead,
+in Paris and in the country round about Paris, a studious life
+interrupted but once, in 1821, by a journey to Germany to visit our
+father in his exile at Magdeburg. We had then the pleasure of passing
+some weeks all three together.
+
+When, two years later, death took from us this revered father and I
+returned alone to France, I found Sadi devoting himself to his
+scientific studies, which he alternated with the culture of the arts. In
+this way also, his tastes had marked out for him an original direction,
+for no one was more opposed than he to the traditional and the
+conventional. On his music-desk were seen only the compositions of Lully
+that he had studied, and the concerti of Viotti which he executed. On
+his table were seen only Pascal, Molière, or La Fontaine, and he knew
+his favorite books almost by heart. I call this direction original,
+because it was anterior to the artistic and literary movement which
+preceded the revolution of 1830. As to the sympathy of Sadi for the
+author of the _Provinciales_, it was due not only to the respect of the
+young mathematician for one of the masters of science, but his devoutly
+religious mind regarded with horror hypocrisy and hypocrites.
+
+Appreciating the useful and the beautiful, Sadi frequented the museum of
+the Louvre and the Italian Theatre, as well as the Jardin des Plantes
+and the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers. Music was almost a passion
+with him. He probably inherited this from our mother, who was an
+excellent pianist, to whom Dalayrac and especially Monsigny, her
+compatriot, had given instruction. Not content with being able to play
+well on the violin, Sadi carried to great length his theoretical
+studies.
+
+His insatiable intellect, moreover, would not allow him to remain a
+stranger to any branch of knowledge. He diligently followed the course
+of the College of France and of the Sorbonne, of the École des Mines, of
+the Museum, and of the Bibliothèque. He visited the workshops with eager
+interest, and made himself familiar with the processes of manufacture;
+mathematical sciences, natural history, industrial art, political
+economy,—all these he cultivated with equal ardor. I have seen him not
+only practise as an amusement, but search theoretically into,
+gymnastics, fencing, swimming, dancing, and even skating. In even these
+things Sadi acquired a superiority which astonished specialists when by
+chance he forgot himself enough to speak of them, for the satisfaction
+of his own mind was the only aim that he sought.
+
+He had such a repugnance to bringing himself forward that, in his
+intimate conversations with a few friends, he kept them ignorant of the
+treasures of science which he had accumulated. They never knew of more
+than a small part of them. How was it that he determined to formulate
+his ideas about the motive power of heat, and especially to publish
+them? I still ask myself this question,—I, who lived with him in the
+little apartment where our father was confined in the Rue du Parc-Royal
+while the police of the first Restoration were threatening him. Anxious
+to be perfectly clear, Sadi made me read some passages of his manuscript
+in order to convince himself that it would be understood by persons
+occupied with other studies.
+
+Perhaps a solitary life in small garrisons, in the work-room and in the
+chemical laboratory, had increased his natural reserve. In small
+companies, however, he was not at all taciturn. He took part voluntarily
+in the gayest plays, abandoning himself to lively chat. “The time passed
+in laughing is well spent,” he once wrote. His language was at such
+times full of wit, keen without malice, original without eccentricity,
+sometimes paradoxical, but without other pretension than that of an
+innocent activity of intelligence. He had a very warm heart under a cold
+manner. He was obliging and devoted, sincere and true in his dealings.
+
+Towards the end of 1826, a new royal ordinance having obliged the staff
+lieutenants to return to the ranks, Sadi asked and obtained a return to
+the engineer corps, in which he received the following year, as his rank
+of seniority, the grade of captain.
+
+Military service, however, weighed upon him. Jealous of his liberty, in
+1828, he laid aside his uniform that he might be free to come and go at
+will. He took advantage of his leisure to make journeys and to visit our
+principal centres of industry.
+
+He frequently visited M. Clement Desormes, professor at the
+_Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers_, who had made great advances in
+applied chemistry. M. Desormes willingly took counsel with him. He was a
+native of Bourgogne, our family country, which circumstance, I believe,
+brought them together.
+
+It was before this period (in 1824) that Sadi had published his
+_Réflexions sur la puissance motrice du feu_. He had seen how little
+progress had been made in the theory of machines in which this power was
+employed. He had ascertained that the improvements made in their
+arrangement were effected tentatively, and almost by chance. He
+comprehended that in order to raise this important art above empiricism,
+and to give it the rank of a science, it was necessary to study the
+phenomena of the production of motion by heat, from the most general
+point of view, independently of any mechanism, of any special agent; and
+such had been the thought of his life.
+
+Did he foresee that this small brochure would become the foundation of a
+new science? He must have attached much importance to it to publish it,
+and bring himself out of his voluntary obscurity.
+
+In fact (as his working notes prove), he perceived the existing relation
+between heat and mechanical work; and after having established the
+principle to which savants have given his name, he devoted himself to
+the researches which should enable him to establish with certainty the
+second principle, that of equivalence, which he already clearly divined.
+Thermodynamics was established from that time.
+
+But these researches were rudely interrupted by a great event—the
+Revolution of July, 1830.
+
+Sadi welcomed it enthusiastically—not, however, it is evident, as a
+personal advantage.
+
+Several old members of the Convention were still living, even of those
+who had become celebrated; no favor of the new government was accorded
+them. To the son of Philippe-Egalité was ascribed a saying which, if it
+was untrue, at least agreed well with the sentiment of his position: “I
+can do nothing for the members of the Convention themselves,” he said,
+“but for their families whatever they will.”
+
+However it may be, some of those about him vaguely questioned my brother
+as to his desires in case one of us should be called to the Chamber of
+Peers, of which Carnot had been a member in 1815. We had on this
+occasion a brief conference. Unknown to us both, this distinction could
+be offered only to a title in some sort hereditary. We could not accept
+it without forsaking the principles of Carnot, who had combated the
+heredity of the peerage. The paternal opinion therefore came to second
+our distaste for the proposition, and dictated our reply.
+
+Sadi frequented the popular reunions at this period without forsaking
+his _rôle_ of a simple observer.
+
+Nevertheless he was, when occasion demanded it, a man of prompt and
+energetic action. One incident will suffice to prove this, and to show
+the _sang-froid_ which characterized him.
+
+On the day of the funeral of Gen. Lamarque, Sadi was walking
+thoughtfully in the vicinity of the insurrection. A horseman preceding a
+company, and who was evidently intoxicated, passed along the street on
+the gallop, brandishing his sabre and striking down the passers-by. Sadi
+darted forward, cleverly avoided the weapon of the soldier, seized him
+by the leg, threw him to the earth and laid him in the gutter, then
+continued on his way to escape from the cheers of the crowd, amazed at
+this daring deed.
+
+Before 1830, Sadi had formed part of a _Réunion polytechnique
+industrielle_, made up of old pupils of the school, with a plan of study
+in common. After 1830, he was a member of the _Association
+polytechnique_, consisting also of graduates, the object being the
+popular propagation of useful knowledge. The president of this
+association was M. de Choiseul-Praslin; the vice-presidents, MM. de
+Tracy, Auguste Comte, etc.
+
+The hopes of the democracy meanwhile seeming to be in abeyance, Sadi
+devoted himself anew to study, and pursued his scientific labors with
+all the greater energy, as he brought to bear upon them the political
+ardor now so completely repressed. He undertook profound researches on
+the physical properties of gases and vapors, and especially on their
+elastic tensions. Unfortunately, the tables which he prepared from his
+comparative experiments were not completed; but happily the excellent
+works of Victor Regnault, so remarkable for their accuracy, have
+supplied to science, in this respect, the blanks of which Sadi Carnot
+was conscious.
+
+His excessive application affected his health towards the end of June,
+1832. Feeling temporarily better, he wrote gayly to one of his friends
+who had written several letters to him: “My delay this time is not
+without excuse. I have been sick for a long time, and in a very
+wearisome way. I have had an inflammation of the lungs, followed by
+scarlet-fever. (Perhaps you know what this horrible disease is.) I had
+to remain twelve days in bed, without sleep or food, without any
+occupation, amusing myself with leeches, with drinks, with baths, and
+other toys out of the same shop. This little diversion is not yet ended,
+for I am still very feeble.”
+
+This letter was written at the end of July.
+
+There was a relapse, then brain fever; then finally, hardly recovered
+from so many violent illnesses which had weakened him morally and
+physically, Sadi was carried off in a few hours, August 24, 1832, by an
+attack of cholera. Towards the last, and as if from a dark presentiment,
+he had given much attention to the prevailing epidemic, following its
+course with the attention and penetration that he gave to everything.
+
+Sadi Carnot died in the vigor of life, in the brightness of a career
+that he bade fair to run with glory, leaving memory of profound esteem
+and affection in the hearts of many friends.
+
+His copy-books, filled with memoranda, attest the activity of his mind,
+the variety of his knowledge, his love of humanity, his clear sentiments
+of justice and of liberty. We can follow therein the traces of all his
+various studies. But the only work that he actually completed is this
+which is here published. It will suffice to preserve his name from
+oblivion.
+
+His moral character has other claims on our recognition. Our only
+ambition here is to present a sketch of it. But, much better than
+through the perusal of these few pages, Sadi Carnot can be appreciated
+by reading the thoughts scattered through his memoranda, which are to be
+carefully collected. There are many practical rules of conduct which he
+records for himself; many observations that he desires to fix in his
+memory; sometimes an impression that has just come to him, grave or gay;
+sometimes too, though rarely, a trace of ill-humor directed against men
+or society. He never thought that these notes, the outpouring of his
+mind, would be read by other eyes than his own, or that they would some
+day be used to judge him. I find in them, for my part, touching
+analogies with the thoughts of my father, although the father and son
+had, unfortunately, lived almost always apart, by force of
+circumstances.[3]
+
+
+
+
+ III.
+ REFLECTIONS ON THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT, AND ON MACHINES FITTED TO
+ DEVELOP THAT POWER.[4]
+
+ BY S. CARNOT.
+
+
+Every one knows that heat can produce motion. That it possesses vast
+motive power no one can doubt, in these days when the steam-engine is
+everywhere so well known.
+
+To heat also are due the vast movements which take place on the earth.
+It causes the agitations of the atmosphere, the ascension of clouds, the
+fall of rain and of meteors, the currents of water which channel the
+surface of the globe, and of which man has thus far employed but a small
+portion. Even earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are the result of heat.
+
+From this immense reservoir we may draw the moving force necessary for
+our purposes. Nature, in providing us with combustibles on all sides,
+has given us the power to produce, at all times and in all places, heat
+and the impelling power which is the result of it. To develop this
+power, to appropriate it to our uses, is the object of heat-engines.
+
+The study of these engines is of the greatest interest, their importance
+is enormous, their use is continually increasing, and they seem destined
+to produce a great revolution in the civilized world.
+
+Already the steam-engine works our mines, impels our ships, excavates
+our ports and our rivers, forges iron, fashions wood, grinds grains,
+spins and weaves our cloths, transports the heaviest burdens, etc. It
+appears that it must some day serve as a universal motor, and be
+substituted for animal power, waterfalls, and air currents.
+
+Over the first of these motors it has the advantage of economy, over the
+two others the inestimable advantage that it can be used at all times
+and places without interruption.
+
+If, some day, the steam-engine shall be so perfected that it can be set
+up and supplied with fuel at small cost, it will combine all desirable
+qualities, and will afford to the industrial arts a range the extent of
+which can scarcely be predicted. It is not merely that a powerful and
+convenient motor that can be procured and carried anywhere is
+substituted for the motors already in use, but that it causes rapid
+extension in the arts in which it is applied, and can even create
+entirely new arts.
+
+The most signal service that the steam-engine has rendered to England is
+undoubtedly the revival of the working of the coal-mines, which had
+declined, and threatened to cease entirely, in consequence of the
+continually increasing difficulty of drainage, and of raising the
+coal.[5] We should rank second the benefit to iron manufacture, both by
+the abundant supply of coal substituted for wood just when the latter
+had begun to grow scarce, and by the powerful machines of all kinds, the
+use of which the introduction of the steam-engine has permitted or
+facilitated.
+
+Iron and heat are, as we know, the supporters, the bases, of the
+mechanic arts. It is doubtful if there be in England a single industrial
+establishment of which the existence does not depend on the use of these
+agents, and which does not freely employ them. To take away to-day from
+England her steam-engines would be to take away at the same time her
+coal and iron. It would be to dry up all her sources of wealth, to ruin
+all on which her prosperity depends, in short, to annihilate that
+colossal power. The destruction of her navy, which she considers her
+strongest defence, would perhaps be less fatal.
+
+The safe and rapid navigation by steamships may be regarded as an
+entirely new art due to the steam-engine. Already this art has permitted
+the establishment of prompt and regular communications across the arms
+of the sea, and on the great rivers of the old and new continents. It
+has made it possible to traverse savage regions where before we could
+scarcely penetrate. It has enabled us to carry the fruits of
+civilization over portions of the globe where they would else have been
+wanting for years. Steam navigation brings nearer together the most
+distant nations. It tends to unite the nations of the earth as
+inhabitants of one country. In fact, to lessen the time, the fatigues,
+the uncertainties, and the dangers of travel—is not this the same as
+greatly to shorten distances?[6]
+
+The discovery of the steam-engine owed its birth, like most human
+inventions, to rude attempts which have been attributed to different
+persons, while the real author is not certainly known. It is, however,
+less in the first attempts that the principal discovery consists, than
+in the successive improvements which have brought steam-engines to the
+condition in which we find them to-day. There is almost as great a
+distance between the first apparatus in which the expansive force of
+steam was displayed and the existing machine, as between the first raft
+that man ever made and the modern vessel.
+
+If the honor of a discovery belongs to the nation in which it has
+acquired its growth and all its developments, this honor cannot be here
+refused to England. Savery, Newcomen, Smeaton, the famous Watt, Woolf,
+Trevithick, and some other English engineers, are the veritable creators
+of the steam-engine. It has acquired at their hands all its successive
+degrees of improvement. Finally, it is natural that an invention should
+have its birth and especially be developed, be perfected, in that place
+where its want is most strongly felt.
+
+Notwithstanding the work of all kinds done by steam-engines,
+notwithstanding the satisfactory condition to which they have been
+brought to-day, their theory is very little understood, and the attempts
+to improve them are still directed almost by chance.
+
+The question has often been raised whether the motive power of heat[7]
+is unbounded, whether the possible improvements in steam-engines have an
+assignable limit,—a limit which the nature of things will not allow to
+be passed by any means whatever; or whether, on the contrary, these
+improvements may be carried on indefinitely. We have long sought, and
+are seeking to-day, to ascertain whether there are in existence agents
+preferable to the vapor of water for developing the motive power of
+heat; whether atmospheric air, for example, would not present in this
+respect great advantages. We propose now to submit these questions to a
+deliberate examination.
+
+The phenomenon of the production of motion by heat has not been
+considered from a sufficiently general point of view. We have considered
+it only in machines the nature and mode of action of which have not
+allowed us to take in the whole extent of application of which it is
+susceptible. In such machines the phenomenon is, in a way, incomplete.
+It becomes difficult to recognize its principles and study its laws.
+
+In order to consider in the most general way the principle of the
+production of motion by heat, it must be considered independently of any
+mechanism or any particular agent. It is necessary to establish
+principles applicable not only to steam-engines[8] but to all imaginable
+heat-engines, whatever the working substance and whatever the method by
+which it is operated.
+
+Machines which do not receive their motion from heat, those which have
+for a motor the force of men or of animals, a waterfall, an air-current,
+etc., can be studied even to their smallest details by the mechanical
+theory. All cases are foreseen, all imaginable movements are referred to
+these general principles, firmly established, and applicable under all
+circumstances. This is the character of a complete theory. A similar
+theory is evidently needed for heat-engines. We shall have it only when
+the laws of Physics shall be extended enough, generalized enough, to
+make known beforehand all the effects of heat acting in a determined
+manner on any body.
+
+We will suppose in what follows at least a superficial knowledge of the
+different parts which compose an ordinary steam-engine; and we consider
+it unnecessary to explain what are the furnace, boiler, steam-cylinder,
+piston, condenser, etc.
+
+The production of motion in steam-engines is always accompanied by a
+circumstance on which we should fix our attention. This circumstance is
+the re-establishing of equilibrium in the caloric; that is, its passage
+from a body in which the temperature is more or less elevated, to
+another in which it is lower. What happens in fact in a steam-engine
+actually in motion? The caloric developed in the furnace by the effect
+of the combustion traverses the walls of the boiler, produces steam, and
+in some way incorporates itself with it. The latter carrying it away,
+takes it first into the cylinder, where it performs some function, and
+from thence into the condenser, where it is liquefied by contact with
+the cold water which it encounters there. Then, as a final result, the
+cold water of the condenser takes possession of the caloric developed by
+the combustion. It is heated by the intervention of the steam as if it
+had been placed directly over the furnace. The steam is here only a
+means of transporting the caloric. It fills the same office as in the
+heating of baths by steam, except that in this case its motion is
+rendered useful.
+
+We easily recognize in the operations that we have just described the
+re-establishment of equilibrium in the caloric, its passage from a more
+or less heated body to a cooler one. The first of these bodies, in this
+case, is the heated air of the furnace; the second is the condensing
+water. The re-establishment of equilibrium of the caloric takes place
+between them, if not completely, at least partially, for on the one hand
+the heated air, after having performed its function, having passed round
+the boiler, goes out through the chimney with a temperature much below
+that which it had acquired as the effect of combustion; and on the other
+hand, the water of the condenser, after having liquefied the steam,
+leaves the machine with a temperature higher than that with which it
+entered.
+
+The production of motive power is then due in steam-engines not to an
+actual consumption of caloric, but _to its transportation from a warm
+body to a cold body_, that is, to its re-establishment of equilibrium—an
+equilibrium considered as destroyed by any cause whatever, by chemical
+action such as combustion, or by any other. We shall see shortly that
+this principle is applicable to any machine set in motion by heat.
+
+According to this principle, the production of heat alone is not
+sufficient to give birth to the impelling power: it is necessary that
+there should also be cold; without it, the heat would be useless. And in
+fact, if we should find about us only bodies as hot as our furnaces, how
+can we condense steam? What should we do with it if once produced? We
+should not presume that we might discharge it into the atmosphere, as is
+done in some engines;[9] the atmosphere would not receive it. It does
+receive it under the actual condition of things, only because it fulfils
+the office of a vast condenser, because it is at a lower temperature;
+otherwise it would soon become fully charged, or rather would be already
+saturated.[10]
+
+Wherever there exists a difference of temperature, wherever it has been
+possible for the equilibrium of the caloric to be re-established, it is
+possible to have also the production of impelling power. Steam is a
+means of realizing this power, but it is not the only one. All
+substances in nature can be employed for this purpose, all are
+susceptible of changes of volume, of successive contractions and
+dilatations, through the alternation of heat and cold. All are capable
+of overcoming in their changes of volume certain resistances, and of
+thus developing the impelling power. A solid body—a metallic bar for
+example—alternately heated and cooled increases and diminishes in
+length, and can move bodies fastened to its ends. A liquid alternately
+heated and cooled increases and diminishes in volume, and can overcome
+obstacles of greater or less size, opposed to its dilatation. An
+aeriform fluid is susceptible of considerable change of volume by
+variations of temperature. If it is enclosed in an expansible space,
+such as a cylinder provided with a piston, it will produce movements of
+great extent. Vapors of all substances capable of passing into a gaseous
+condition, as of alcohol, of mercury, of sulphur, etc., may fulfil the
+same office as vapor of water. The latter, alternately heated and
+cooled, would produce motive power in the shape of permanent gases, that
+is, without ever returning to a liquid state. Most of these substances
+have been proposed, many even have been tried, although up to this time
+perhaps without remarkable success.
+
+We have shown that in steam-engines the motive power is due to a
+re-establishment of equilibrium in the caloric; this takes place not
+only for steam-engines, but also for every heat-engine—that is, for
+every machine of which caloric is the motor. Heat can evidently be a
+cause of motion only by virtue of the changes of volume or of form which
+it produces in bodies.
+
+These changes are not caused by uniform temperature, but rather by
+alternations of heat and cold. Now to heat any substance whatever
+requires a body warmer than the one to be heated; to cool it requires a
+cooler body. We supply caloric to the first of these bodies that we may
+transmit it to the second by means of the intermediary substance. This
+is to re-establish, or at least to endeavor to re-establish, the
+equilibrium of the caloric.
+
+It is natural to ask here this curious and important question: Is the
+motive power of heat invariable in quantity, or does it vary with the
+agent employed to realize it as the intermediary substance, selected as
+the subject of action of the heat?
+
+It is clear that this question can be asked only in regard to a given
+quantity of caloric,[11] the difference of the temperatures also being
+given. We take, for example, one body _A_ kept at a temperature of 100°
+and another body _B_ kept at a temperature of 0°, and ask what quantity
+of motive power can be produced by the passage of a given portion of
+caloric (for example, as much as is necessary to melt a kilogram of ice)
+from the first of these bodies to the second. We inquire whether this
+quantity of motive power is necessarily limited, whether it varies with
+the substance employed to realize it, whether the vapor of water offers
+in this respect more or less advantage than the vapor of alcohol, of
+mercury, a permanent gas, or any other substance. We will try to answer
+these questions, availing ourselves of ideas already established.
+
+We have already remarked upon this self-evident fact, or fact which at
+least appears evident as soon as we reflect on the changes of volume
+occasioned by heat: _wherever there exists a difference of temperature,
+motive power can be produced_. Reciprocally, wherever we can consume
+this power, it is possible to produce a difference of temperature, it is
+possible to occasion destruction of equilibrium in the caloric. Are not
+percussion and the friction of bodies actually means of raising their
+temperature, of making it reach spontaneously a higher degree than that
+of the surrounding bodies, and consequently of producing a destruction
+of equilibrium in the caloric, where equilibrium previously existed? It
+is a fact proved by experience, that the temperature of gaseous fluids
+is raised by compression and lowered by rarefaction. This is a sure
+method of changing the temperature of bodies, and destroying the
+equilibrium of the caloric as many times as may be desired with the same
+substance. The vapor of water employed in an inverse manner to that in
+which it is used in steam-engines can also be regarded as a means of
+destroying the equilibrium of the caloric. To be convinced of this we
+need but to observe closely the manner in which motive power is
+developed by the action of heat on vapor of water. Imagine two bodies
+_A_ and _B_, kept each at a constant temperature, that of _A_ being
+higher than that of _B_. These two bodies, to which we can give or from
+which we can remove the heat without causing their temperatures to vary,
+exercise the functions of two unlimited reservoirs of caloric. We will
+call the first the furnace and the second the refrigerator.
+
+If we wish to produce motive power by carrying a certain quantity of
+heat from the body _A_ to the body _B_ we shall proceed as follows:
+
+(1) To borrow caloric from the body _A_ to make steam with it—that is,
+to make this body fulfil the function of a furnace, or rather of the
+metal composing the boiler in ordinary engines—we here assume that the
+steam is produced at the same temperature as the body _A_.
+
+(2) The steam having been received in a space capable of expansion, such
+as a cylinder furnished with a piston, to increase the volume of this
+space, and consequently also that of the steam. Thus rarefied, the
+temperature will fall spontaneously, as occurs with all elastic fluids;
+admit that the rarefaction may be continued to the point where the
+temperature becomes precisely that of the body _B_.
+
+(3) To condense the steam by putting it in contact with the body _B_,
+and at the same time exerting on it a constant pressure until it is
+entirely liquefied. The body _B_ fills here the place of the
+injection-water in ordinary engines, with this difference, that it
+condenses the vapor without mingling with it, and without changing its
+own temperature.[12]
+
+The operations which we have just described might have been performed in
+an inverse direction and order. There is nothing to prevent forming
+vapor with the caloric of the body _B_, and at the temperature of that
+body, compressing it in such a way as to make it acquire the temperature
+of the body _A_, finally condensing it by contact with this latter body,
+and continuing the compression to complete liquefaction.
+
+By our first operations there would have been at the same time
+production of motive power and transfer of caloric from the body _A_ to
+the body _B_. By the inverse operations there is at the same time
+expenditure of motive power and return of caloric from the body _B_ to
+the body _A_. But if we have acted in each case on the same quantity of
+vapor, if there is produced no loss either of motive power or caloric,
+the quantity of motive power produced in the first place will be equal
+to that which would have been expended in the second, and the quantity
+of caloric passed in the first case from the body _A_ to the body _B_
+would be equal to the quantity which passes back again in the second
+from the body _B_ to the body _A_; so that an indefinite number of
+alternative operations of this sort could be carried on without in the
+end having either produced motive power or transferred caloric from one
+body to the other.
+
+Now if there existed any means of using heat preferable to those which
+we have employed, that is, if it were possible by any method whatever to
+make the caloric produce a quantity of motive power greater than we have
+made it produce by our first series of operations, it would suffice to
+divert a portion of this power in order by the method just indicated to
+make the caloric of the body _B_ return to the body _A_ from the
+refrigerator to the furnace, to restore the initial conditions, and thus
+to be ready to commence again an operation precisely similar to the
+former, and so on: this would be not only perpetual motion, but an
+unlimited creation of motive power without consumption either of caloric
+or of any other agent whatever. Such a creation is entirely contrary to
+ideas now accepted, to the laws of mechanics and of sound physics. It is
+inadmissible.[13] We should then conclude that _the maximum of motive
+power resulting from the employment of steam is also the maximum of
+motive power realizable by any means whatever_. We will soon give a
+second more rigorous demonstration of this theory. This should be
+considered only as an approximation. (See page 59.)
+
+We have a right to ask, in regard to the proposition just enunciated,
+the following questions: What is the sense of the word _maximum_ here?
+By what sign can it be known that this maximum is attained? By what sign
+can it be known whether the steam is employed to greatest possible
+advantage in the production of motive power?
+
+Since every re-establishment of equilibrium in the caloric may be the
+cause of the production of motive power, every re-establishment of
+equilibrium which shall be accomplished without production of this power
+should be considered as an actual loss. Now, very little reflection
+would show that all change of temperature which is not due to a change
+of volume of the bodies can be only a useless re-establishment of
+equilibrium in the caloric.[14] The necessary condition of the maximum
+is, then, _that in the bodies employed to realize the motive power of
+heat there should not occur any change of temperature which may not be
+due to a change of volume_. Reciprocally, every time that this condition
+is fulfilled the maximum will be attained. This principle should never
+be lost sight of in the construction of heat-engines; it is its
+fundamental basis. If it cannot be strictly observed, it should at least
+be departed from as little as possible.
+
+Every change of temperature which is not due to a change of volume or to
+chemical action (an action that we provisionally suppose not to occur
+here) is necessarily due to the direct passage of the caloric from a
+more or less heated body to a colder body. This passage occurs mainly by
+the contact of bodies of different temperatures; hence such contact
+should be avoided as much as possible. It cannot probably be avoided
+entirely, but it should at least be so managed that the bodies brought
+in contact with each other differ as little as possible in temperature.
+When we just now supposed, in our demonstration, the caloric of the body
+_A_ employed to form steam, this steam was considered as generated at
+the temperature of the body _A_; thus the contact took place only
+between bodies of equal temperatures; the change of temperature
+occurring afterwards in the steam was due to dilatation, consequently to
+a change of volume. Finally, condensation took place also without
+contact of bodies of different temperatures. It occurred while exerting
+a constant pressure on the steam brought in contact with the body _B_ of
+the same temperature as itself. The conditions for a maximum are thus
+found to be fulfilled. In reality the operation cannot proceed exactly
+as we have assumed. To determine the passage of caloric from one body to
+another, it is necessary that there should be an excess of temperature
+in the first, but this excess may be supposed as slight as we please. We
+can regard it as insensible in theory, without thereby destroying the
+exactness of the arguments.
+
+A more substantial objection may be made to our demonstration, thus:
+When we borrow caloric from the body _A_ to produce steam, and when this
+steam is afterwards condensed by its contact with the body _B_, the
+water used to form it, and which we considered at first as being of the
+temperature of the body _A_, is found at the close of the operation at
+the temperature of the body _B_. It has become cool. If we wish to begin
+again an operation similar to the first, if we wish to develop a new
+quantity of motive power with the same instrument, with the same steam,
+it is necessary first to re-establish the original condition—to restore
+the water to the original temperature. This can undoubtedly be done by
+at once putting it again in contact with the body _A_; but there is then
+contact between bodies of different temperatures, and loss of motive
+power.[15] It would be impossible to execute the inverse operation, that
+is, to return to the body _A_ the caloric employed to raise the
+temperature of the liquid.
+
+This difficulty may be removed by supposing the difference of
+temperature between the body _A_ and the body _B_ indefinitely small.
+The quantity of heat necessary to raise the liquid to its former
+temperature will be also indefinitely small and unimportant relatively
+to that which is necessary to produce steam—a quantity always limited.
+
+The proposition found elsewhere demonstrated for the case in which the
+difference between the temperatures of the two bodies is indefinitely
+small, may be easily extended to the general case. In fact, if it
+operated to produce motive power by the passage of caloric from the body
+_A_ to the body _Z_, the temperature of this latter body being very
+different from that of the former, we should imagine a series of bodies
+_B_, _C_, _D_ ... of temperatures intermediate between those of the
+bodies _A_, _Z_, and selected so that the differences from _A_ to _B_,
+from _B_ to _C_, etc., may all be indefinitely small. The caloric coming
+from _A_ would not arrive at _Z_ till after it had passed through the
+bodies _B_, _C_, _D_, etc., and after having developed in each of these
+stages maximum motive power. The inverse operations would here be
+entirely possible, and the reasoning of page 52 would be strictly
+applicable.
+
+According to established principles at the present time, we can compare
+with sufficient accuracy the motive power of heat to that of a
+waterfall. Each has a maximum that we cannot exceed, whatever may be, on
+the one hand, the machine which is acted upon by the water, and
+whatever, on the other hand, the substance acted upon by the heat. The
+motive power of a waterfall depends on its height and on the quantity of
+the liquid; the motive power of heat depends also on the quantity of
+caloric used, and on what may be termed, on what in fact we will call,
+the _height of its fall_,[16] that is to say, the difference of
+temperature of the bodies between which the exchange of caloric is made.
+In the waterfall the motive power is exactly proportional to the
+difference of level between the higher and lower reservoirs. In the fall
+of caloric the motive power undoubtedly increases with the difference of
+temperature between the warm and the cold bodies; but we do not know
+whether it is proportional to this difference. We do not know, for
+example, whether the fall of caloric from 100 to 50 degrees furnishes
+more or less motive power than the fall of this same caloric from 50 to
+zero. It is a question which we propose to examine hereafter.
+
+We shall give here a second demonstration of the fundamental proposition
+enunciated on page 56, and present this proposition under a more general
+form than the one already given.
+
+When a gaseous fluid is rapidly compressed its temperature rises. It
+falls, on the contrary, when it is rapidly dilated. This is one of the
+facts best demonstrated by experiment. We will take it for the basis of
+our demonstration.[17]
+
+If, when the temperature of a gas has been raised by compression, we
+wish to reduce it to its former temperature without subjecting its
+volume to new changes, some of its caloric must be removed. This caloric
+might have been removed in proportion as pressure was applied, so that
+the temperature of the gas would remain constant. Similarly, if the gas
+is rarefied we can avoid lowering the temperature by supplying it with a
+certain quantity of caloric. Let us call the caloric employed at such
+times, when no change of temperature occurs, _caloric due to change of
+volume_. This denomination does not indicate that the caloric appertains
+to the volume: it does not appertain to it any more than to pressure,
+and might as well be called _caloric due to the change of pressure_. We
+do not know what laws it follows relative to the variations of volume:
+it is possible that its quantity changes either with the nature of the
+gas, its density, or its temperature. Experiment has taught us nothing
+on this subject. It has only shown us that this caloric is developed in
+greater or less quantity by the compression of the elastic fluids.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 1.
+]
+
+This preliminary idea being established, let us imagine an elastic
+fluid, atmospheric air for example, shut up in a cylindrical vessel,
+_abcd_ (Fig. 1), provided with a movable diaphragm or piston, _cd_. Let
+there be also two bodies, _A_ and _B_, kept each at a constant
+temperature, that of _A_ being higher than that of _B_. Let us picture
+to ourselves now the series of operations which are to be described:
+
+(1) Contact of the body _A_ with the air enclosed in the space _abcd_ or
+with the wall of this space—a wall that we will suppose to transmit the
+caloric readily. The air becomes by such contact of the same temperature
+as the body _A_; _cd_ is the actual position of the piston.
+
+(2) The piston gradually rises and takes the position _ef_. The body _A_
+is all the time in contact with the air, which is thus kept at a
+constant temperature during the rarefaction. The body _A_ furnishes the
+caloric necessary to keep the temperature constant.
+
+(3) The body _A_ is removed, and the air is then no longer in contact
+with any body capable of furnishing it with caloric. The piston
+meanwhile continues to move, and passes from the position _ef_ to the
+position _gh_. The air is rarefied without receiving caloric, and its
+temperature falls. Let us imagine that it falls thus till it becomes
+equal to that of the body _B_; at this instant the piston stops,
+remaining at the position _gh_.
+
+(4) The air is placed in contact with the body _B_; it is compressed by
+the return of the piston as it is moved from the position _gh_ to the
+position _cd_. This air remains, however, at a constant temperature
+because of its contact with the body _B_, to which it yields its
+caloric.
+
+(5) The body _B_ is removed, and the compression of the air is
+continued, which being then isolated, its temperature rises. The
+compression is continued till the air acquires the temperature of the
+body _A_. The piston passes during this time from the position _cd_ to
+the position _ik_.
+
+(6) The air is again placed in contact with the body _A_. The piston
+returns from the position _ik_ to the position _ef_; the temperature
+remains unchanged.
+
+(7) The step described under number 3 is renewed, then successively the
+steps 4, 5, 6, 3, 4, 5, 6, 3, 4, 5; and so on.
+
+In these various operations the piston is subject to an effort of
+greater or less magnitude, exerted by the air enclosed in the cylinder;
+the elastic force of this air varies as much by reason of the changes in
+volume as of changes of temperature. But it should be remarked that with
+equal volumes, that is, for the similar positions of the piston, the
+temperature is higher during the movements of dilatation than during the
+movements of compression. During the former the elastic force of the air
+is found to be greater, and consequently the quantity of motive power
+produced by the movements of dilatation is more considerable than that
+consumed to produce the movements of compression. Thus we should obtain
+an excess of motive power—an excess which we could employ for any
+purpose whatever. The air, then, has served as a heat-engine; we have,
+in fact, employed it in the most advantageous manner possible, for no
+useless re-establishment of equilibrium has been effected in the
+caloric.
+
+All the above-described operations may be executed in an inverse sense
+and order. Let us imagine that, after the sixth period, that is to say
+the piston having arrived at the position _ef_, we cause it to return to
+the position _ik_, and that at the same time we keep the air in contact
+with the body _A_. The caloric furnished by this body during the sixth
+period would return to its source, that is, to the body _A_, and the
+conditions would then become precisely the same as they were at the end
+of the fifth period. If now we take away the body _A_, and if we cause
+the piston to move from _ef_ to _cd_, the temperature of the air will
+diminish as many degrees as it increased during the fifth period, and
+will become that of the body _B_. We may evidently continue a series of
+operations the inverse of those already described. It is only necessary
+under the same circumstances to execute for each period a movement of
+dilatation instead of a movement of compression, and reciprocally.
+
+The result of these first operations has been the production of a
+certain quantity of motive power and the removal of caloric from the
+body _A_ to the body _B_. The result of the inverse operations is the
+consumption of the motive power produced and the return of the caloric
+from the body _B_ to the body _A_; so that these two series of
+operations annul each other, after a fashion, one neutralizing the
+other.
+
+The impossibility of making the caloric produce a greater quantity of
+motive power than that which we obtained from it by our first series of
+operations, is now easily proved. It is demonstrated by reasoning very
+similar to that employed at page 56; the reasoning will here be even
+more exact. The air which we have used to develop the motive power is
+restored at the end of each cycle of operations exactly to the state in
+which it was at first found, while, as we have already remarked, this
+would not be precisely the case with the vapor of water.[18]
+
+We have chosen atmospheric air as the instrument which should develop
+the motive power of heat, but it is evident that the reasoning would
+have been the same for all other gaseous substances, and even for all
+other bodies susceptible of change of temperature through successive
+contractions and dilatations, which comprehends all natural substances,
+or at least all those which are adapted to realize the motive power of
+heat. Thus we are led to establish this general proposition:
+
+_The motive power of heat is independent of the agents employed to
+realize it; its quantity is fixed solely by the temperatures of the
+bodies between which is effected, finally, the transfer of the caloric._
+
+We must understand here that each of the methods of developing motive
+power attains the perfection of which it is susceptible. This condition
+is found to be fulfilled if, as we remarked above, there is produced in
+the body no other change of temperature than that due to change of
+volume, or, what is the same thing in other words, if there is no
+contact between bodies of sensibly different temperatures.
+
+Different methods of realizing motive power may be taken, as in the
+employment of different substances, or in the use of the same substance
+in two different states—for example, of a gas at two different
+densities.
+
+This leads us naturally to those interesting researches on the aeriform
+fluids—researches which lead us also to new results in regard to the
+motive power of heat, and give us the means of verifying, in some
+particular cases, the fundamental proposition above stated.[19]
+
+We readily see that our demonstration would have been simplified by
+supposing the temperatures of the bodies _A_ and _B_ to differ very
+little. Then the movements of the piston being slight during the periods
+3 and 5, these periods might have been suppressed without influencing
+sensibly the production of motive power. A very little change of volume
+should suffice in fact to produce a very slight change of temperature,
+and this slight change of volume may be neglected in presence of that of
+the periods 4 and 6, of which the extent is unlimited.
+
+If we suppress periods 3 and 5, in the series of operations above
+described, it is reduced to the following:
+
+(1) Contact of the gas confined in _abcd_ (Fig. 2) with the body _A_,
+passage of the piston from _cd_ to _ef_.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 2. FIG. 3.
+]
+
+(2) Removal of the body _A_, contact of the gas confined in _abef_ with
+the body _B_, return of the piston from _ef_ to _cd_.
+
+(3) Removal of the body _B_, contact of the gas with the body _A_,
+passage of the piston from _cd_ to _ef_, that is, repetition of the
+first period, and so on.
+
+The motive power resulting from the _ensemble_ of operations 1 and 2
+will evidently be the difference between that which is produced by the
+expansion of the gas while it is at the temperature of the body _A_, and
+that which is consumed to compress this gas while it is at the
+temperature of the body _B_.
+
+Let us suppose that operations 1 and 2 be performed on two gases of
+different chemical natures but under the same pressure—under atmospheric
+pressure, for example. These two gases will behave exactly alike under
+the same circumstances, that is, their expansive forces, originally
+equal, will remain always equal, whatever may be the variations of
+volume and of temperature, provided these variations are the same in
+both. This results obviously from the laws of Mariotte and MM.
+Gay-Lussac and Dalton—laws common to all elastic fluids, and in virtue
+of which the same relations exist for all these fluids between the
+volume, the expansive force, and the temperature.
+
+Since two different gases at the same temperature and under the same
+pressure should behave alike under the same circumstances, if we
+subjected them both to the operations above described, they should give
+rise to equal quantities of motive power.
+
+Now this implies, according to the fundamental proposition that we have
+established, the employment of two equal quantities of caloric; that is,
+it implies that the quantity of caloric transferred from the body _A_ to
+the body _B_ is the same, whichever gas is used.
+
+The quantity of caloric transferred from the body _A_ to the body _B_ is
+evidently that which is absorbed by the gas in its expansion of volume,
+or that which this gas relinquishes during compression. We are led,
+then, to establish the following proposition:
+
+_When a gas passes without change of temperature from one definite
+volume and pressure to another volume and another pressure equally
+definite, the quantity of caloric absorbed or relinquished is always the
+same, whatever may be the nature of the gas chosen as the subject of the
+experiment._
+
+Take, for example, 1 litre of air at the temperature of 100° and under
+the pressure of one atmosphere. If we double the volume of this air and
+wish to maintain it at the temperature of 100°, a certain quantity of
+heat must be supplied to it. Now this quantity will be precisely the
+same if, instead of operating on the air, we operate upon carbonic-acid
+gas, upon nitrogen, upon hydrogen, upon vapor of water or of alcohol,
+that is, if we double the volume of 1 litre of these gases taken at the
+temperature of 100° and under atmospheric pressure.
+
+It will be the same thing in the inverse sense if, instead of doubling
+the volume of gas, we reduce it one half by compression. The quantity of
+heat that the elastic fluids set free or absorb in their changes of
+volume has never been measured by any direct experiment, and doubtless
+such an experiment would be very difficult, but there exists a datum
+which is very nearly its equivalent. This has been furnished by the
+theory of sound. It deserves much confidence because of the exactness of
+the conditions which have led to its establishment. It consists in this:
+
+Atmospheric air should rise one degree Centigrade when by sudden
+compression it experiences a reduction of volume of ¹⁄₁₁₆.[20]
+
+Experiments on the velocity of sound having been made in air under the
+pressure of 760 millimetres of mercury and at the temperature of 6°, it
+is only to these two circumstances that our datum has reference. We
+will, however, for greater facility, refer it to the temperature 0°,
+which is nearly the same.
+
+Air compressed ¹⁄₁₁₆, and thus heated one degree, differs from air
+heated directly one degree only in its density. The primitive volume
+being supposed to be _V_, the compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆ reduces it to _V_ −
+¹⁄₁₁₆ _V_.
+
+Direct heating under constant pressure should, according to the rule of
+M. Gay-Lussac, increase the volume of air ¹⁄₂₆₇ above what it would be
+at 0°: so the air is, on the one hand, reduced to the volume _V_ − ¹⁄₁₁₆
+_V_; on the other, it is increased to _V_ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ _V_.
+
+The difference between the quantities of heat which the air possesses in
+both cases is evidently the quantity employed to raise it directly one
+degree; so then the quantity of heat that the air would absorb in
+passing from the volume _V_ − ¹⁄₁₁₆ _V_ to the volume _V_ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ _V_ is
+equal to that which is required to raise it one degree.
+
+Let us suppose now that, instead of heating one degree the air subjected
+to a constant pressure and able to dilate freely, we inclose it within
+an invariable space, and that in this condition we cause it to rise one
+degree in temperature. The air thus heated one degree will differ from
+the air compressed ¹⁄₁₁₆ only by its ¹⁄₁₁₆ greater volume. So then the
+quantity of heat that the air would set free by a reduction of volume of
+¹⁄₁₁₆ is equal to that which would be required to raise it one degree
+Centigrade under constant volume. As the differences between the volumes
+_V_ − ¹⁄₁₁₆ _V_, _V_, and _V_ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ _V_ are small relatively to the
+volumes themselves, we may regard the quantities of heat absorbed by the
+air in passing from the first of these volumes to the second, and from
+the first to the third, as sensibly proportional to the changes of
+volume. We are then led to the establishment of the following relation:
+
+The quantity of heat necessary to raise one degree air under constant
+pressure is to the quantity of heat necessary to raise one degree the
+same air under constant volume, in the ratio of the numbers
+
+ ¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ to ¹⁄₁₁₆;
+
+or, multiplying both by 116 × 267, in the ratio of the numbers 267 + 116
+to 267.
+
+This, then, is the ratio which exists between the capacity of air for
+heat under constant pressure and its capacity under constant volume. If
+the first of these two capacities is expressed by unity, the other will
+be expressed by the number (267)/(267 + 116), or very nearly 0.700;
+their difference, 1 − 0.700 or 0.300, will evidently express the
+quantity of heat which will produce the increase of volume in the air
+when it is heated one degree under constant pressure.
+
+According to the law of MM. Gay-Lussac and Dalton, this increase of
+volume would be the same for all other gases; according to the theory
+demonstrated on page 87, the heat absorbed by these equal increases of
+volume is the same for all the elastic fluids, which leads to the
+establishment of the following proposition:
+
+_The difference between specific heat under constant pressure and
+specific heat under constant volume is the same for all gases._
+
+It should be remarked here that all the gases are considered as taken
+under the same pressure, atmospheric pressure for example, and that the
+specific heats are also measured with reference to the volumes.
+
+It is a very easy matter now for us to prepare a table of the specific
+heat of gases under constant volume, from the knowledge of their
+specific heats under constant pressure. Here is the table:
+
+ TABLE OF THE SPECIFIC HEAT OF GASES.
+ ───────────────────────┬───────────────────────┬───────────────────────
+ NAMES OF GASES. │ Specific Heat under │Specific Heat at Const.
+ │ Const. Press. │ Vol.
+ ───────────────────────┼───────────────────────┼───────────────────────
+ Atmospheric Air, │ 1.000 │ 0.700
+ Hydrogen Gas, │ 0.903 │ 0.603
+ Carbonic Acid, │ 1.258 │ 0.958
+ Oxygen, │ 0.976 │ 0.676
+ Nitrogen, │ 1.000 │ 0.700
+ Protoxide of Nitrogen, │ 1.350 │ 1.050
+ Olefiant Gas, │ 1.553 │ 1.253
+ Oxide of Carbon, │ 1.034 │ 0.734
+ ───────────────────────┴───────────────────────┴───────────────────────
+
+The first column is the result of the direct experiments of MM.
+Delaroche and Bérard on the specific heat of the gas under atmospheric
+pressure, and the second column is composed of the numbers of the first
+diminished by 0.300.
+
+The numbers of the first column and those of the second are here
+referred to the same unit, to the specific heat of atmospheric air under
+constant pressure.
+
+The difference between each number of the first column and the
+corresponding number of the second being constant, the relation between
+these numbers should be variable. Thus the relation between the specific
+heat of gases under constant pressure and the specific heat at constant
+volume, varies in different gases.
+
+We have seen that air when it is subjected to a sudden compression of
+¹⁄₁₁₆ of its volume rises one degree in temperature. The other gases
+through a similar compression should also rise in temperature. They
+should rise, but not equally, in inverse ratio with their specific heat
+at constant volume. In fact, the reduction of volume being by hypothesis
+always the same, the quantity of heat due to this reduction should
+likewise be always the same, and consequently should produce an
+elevation of temperature dependent only on the specific heat acquired by
+the gas after its compression, and evidently in inverse ratio with this
+specific heat. Thus we can easily form the table of the elevations of
+temperature of the different gases for a compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆.
+
+ TABLE OF THE ELEVATION OF TEMPERATURE<BR>OF
+ _Gases through the Effect of Compression_.
+ ──────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────
+ NAMES OF GASES. │ Elevation of Temperature for a Reduction of
+ │ Volume of ¹⁄₁₁₆.
+ ──────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────
+ │ °
+ Atmospheric Air, │ 1.000
+ Hydrogen Gas, │ 1.160
+ Carbonic Acid, │ 0.730
+ Oxygen, │ 1.035
+ Nitrogen, │ 1.000
+ Protoxide of Nitrogen,│ 0.667
+ Olefiant Gas, │ 0.558
+ Carbonic Oxide, │ 0.955
+ ──────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────
+
+A second compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆ (of the altered volume), as we shall
+presently see, would also raise the temperature of these gases nearly as
+much as the first; but it would not be the same with a third, a fourth,
+a hundredth such compression. The capacity of gases for heat changes
+with their volume. It is not unlikely that it changes also with the
+temperature.
+
+We shall now deduce from the general proposition stated on page 68 a
+second theory, which will serve as a corollary to that just
+demonstrated.
+
+Let us suppose that the gas enclosed in the cylindrical space _abcd_
+(Fig. 2) be transported into the space _a′b′c′d′_ (Fig. 3) of equal
+height, but of different base and wider. This gas would increase in
+volume, would diminish in density and in elastic force, in the inverse
+ratio of the two volumes _abcd_, _a′b′c′d′_. As to the total pressure
+exerted in each piston _cd_, _c′d′_, it would be the same from all
+quarters, for the surface of these pistons is in direct ratio to the
+volumes.
+
+Let us suppose that we perform on the gas inclosed in _a′b′c′d′_ the
+operations described on page 70, and which were taken as having been
+performed upon the gas inclosed in _abcd_; that is, let us suppose that
+we have given to the piston _c′d′_ motions equal to those of the piston
+_cd_, that we have made it occupy successively the positions _c′d′_
+corresponding to _cd_, and _e′f′_ corresponding to _ef_, and that at the
+same time we have subjected the gas by means of the two bodies _A_ and
+_B_ to the same variations of temperature as when it was inclosed in
+_abcd_. The total effort exercised on the piston would be found to be,
+in the two cases, always the same at the corresponding instants. This
+results solely from the law of Mariotte.[21] In fact, the densities of
+the two gases maintaining always the same ratio for similar positions of
+the pistons, and the temperatures being always equal in both, the total
+pressures exercised on the pistons will always maintain the same ratio
+to each other. If this ratio is, at any instant whatever, unity, the
+pressures will always be equal.
+
+As, furthermore, the movements of the two pistons have equal extent, the
+motive power produced by each will evidently be the same; whence we
+should conclude, according to the proposition on page 68, that the
+quantities of heat consumed by each are the same, that is, that there
+passes from the body _A_ to the body _B_ the same quantity of heat in
+both cases.
+
+The heat abstracted from the body _A_ and communicated to the body _B_,
+is simply the heat absorbed during the rarefaction of the gas, and
+afterwards liberated by its compression. We are therefore led to
+establish the following theorem:
+
+_When an elastic fluid passes without change of temperature from the
+volume U to the volume V, and when a similar ponderable quantity of the
+same gas passes at the same temperature from the volume U′ to the volume
+V′, if the ratio of U′ to V′ is found to be the same as the ratio of U
+to V, the quantities of heat absorbed or disengaged in the two cases
+will be equal._
+
+This theorem might also be expressed as follows:
+
+_When a gas varies in volume without change of temperature, the
+quantities of heat absorbed or liberated by this gas are in arithmetical
+progression, if the increments or the decrements of volume are found to
+be in geometrical progression._
+
+When a litre of air maintained at a temperature of ten degrees is
+compressed, and when it is reduced to one half a litre, a certain
+quantity of heat is set free. This quantity will be found always the
+same if the volume is further reduced from a half litre to a quarter
+litre, from a quarter litre to an eighth, and so on.
+
+If, instead of compressing the air, we carry it successively to two
+litres, four litres, eight litres, etc., it will be necessary to supply
+to it always equal quantities of heat in order to maintain a constant
+temperature.
+
+This readily accounts for the high temperature attained by air when
+rapidly compressed. We know that this temperature inflames tinder and
+even makes air luminous. If, for a moment, we suppose the specific heat
+of air to be constant, in spite of the changes of volume and
+temperature, the temperature will increase in arithmetical progression
+for reduction of volume in geometrical progression.
+
+Starting from this datum, and admitting that one degree of elevation in
+the temperature corresponds to a compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆, we shall readily
+come to the conclusion that air reduced to ¹⁄₁₄ of its primitive volume
+should rise in temperature about 300 degrees, which is sufficient to
+inflame tinder.[22]
+
+The elevation of temperature ought, evidently, to be still more
+considerable if the capacity of the air for heat becomes less as its
+volume diminishes. Now this is probable, and it also seems to follow
+from the experiments of MM. Delaroche and Bérard on the specific heat of
+air taken at different densities. (See the Mémoire in the _Annales de
+Chimie_, t. lxxxv. pp. 72, 224.)
+
+The two theorems explained on pp. 72 and 81 suffice for the comparison
+of the quantities of heat absorbed or set free in the changes of volume
+of elastic fluids, whatever may be the density and the chemical nature
+of these fluids, provided always that they be taken and maintained at a
+certain invariable temperature. But these theories furnish no means of
+comparing the quantities of heat liberated or absorbed by elastic fluids
+which change in volume at different temperatures. Thus we are ignorant
+what relation exists between the heat relinquished by a litre of air
+reduced one half, the temperature being kept at zero, and the heat
+relinquished by the same litre of air reduced one half, the temperature
+being kept at 100°. The knowledge of this relation is closely connected
+with that of the specific heat of gases at various temperatures, and to
+some other data that Physics as yet does not supply.
+
+The second of our theorems offers us a means of determining according to
+what law the specific heat of gases varies with their density.
+
+Let us suppose that the operations described on p. 70, instead of being
+performed with two bodies, _A_, _B_, of temperatures differing
+indefinitely small, were carried on with two bodies whose temperatures
+differ by a finite quantity—one degree, for example. In a complete
+circle of operations the body _A_ furnishes to the elastic fluid a
+certain quantity of heat, which may be divided into two portions: (1)
+That which is necessary to maintain the temperature of the fluid
+constant during dilatation; (2) that which is necessary to restore the
+temperature of the fluid from that of the body _B_ to that of the body
+_A_, when, after having brought back this fluid to its primitive volume,
+we place it again in contact with the body _A_. Let us call the first of
+these quantities _a_ and the second _b_. The total caloric furnished by
+the body A will be expressed by _a_ + _b_.
+
+The caloric transmitted by the fluid to the body _B_ may also be divided
+into two parts: one, _b′_, due to the cooling of the gas by the body
+_B_; the other, _a′_, which the gas abandons as a result of its
+reduction of volume. The sum of these two quantities is _a′_ + _b′_; it
+should be equal to _a_ + _b_, for, after a complete cycle of operations,
+the gas is brought back exactly to its primitive state. It has been
+obliged to give up all the caloric which has first been furnished to it.
+We have then
+
+ _a_ + _b_ = _a′_ + _b′_;
+
+or rather,
+
+ _a_ − _a′_ = _b′_ − _b_.
+
+Now, according to the theorem given on page 81, the quantities _a_ and
+_a′_ are independent of the density of the gas, provided always that the
+ponderable quantity remains the same and that the variations of volume
+be proportional to the original volume. The difference _a_ − _a′_ should
+fulfil the same conditions, and consequently also the difference _b′_ −
+_b_, which is equal to it. But _b′_ is the caloric necessary to raise
+the gas enclosed in _abcd_ (Fig. 2) one degree; _b′_ is the caloric
+surrendered by the gas when, enclosed in _abef_, it is cooled one
+degree. These quantities may serve as a measure for specific heats. We
+are then led to the establishment of the following proposition:
+
+_The change in the specific heat of a gas caused by change of volume
+depends entirely on the ratio between the original volume and the
+altered volume._ That is, the difference of the specific heats does not
+depend on the absolute magnitude of the volumes, but only on their
+ratio.
+
+This proposition might also be differently expressed, thus:
+
+_When a gas increases in volume in geometrical progression, its specific
+heat increases in arithmetical progression._
+
+Thus, _a_ being the specific heat of air taken at a given density, and
+_a_ + _h_ the specific heat for a density one half less, it will be, for
+a density equal to one quarter, _a_ + 2_h_; for a density equal to one
+eighth, _a_ + 3_h_; and so on.
+
+The specific heats are here taken with reference to weight. They are
+supposed to be taken at an invariable volume, but, as we shall see, they
+would follow the same law if they were taken under constant pressure.
+
+To what cause is the difference between specific heats at constant
+volume and at constant pressure really due? To the caloric required to
+produce in the second case increase of volume. Now, according to the law
+of Mariotte, increase of volume of a gas should be, for a given change
+of temperature, a determined fraction of the original volume, a fraction
+independent of pressure. According to the theorem expressed on page 76,
+if the ratio between the primitive volume and the altered volume is
+given, that determines the heat necessary to produce increase of volume.
+It depends solely on this ratio and on the weight of the gas. We must
+then conclude that:
+
+_The difference between specific heat at constant pressure and specific
+heat at constant volume is always the same, whatever may be the density
+of the gas, provided the weight remains the same._
+
+These specific heats both increase accordingly as the density of the gas
+diminishes, but their difference does not vary.[23]
+
+Since the difference between the two capacities for heat is constant, if
+one increases in arithmetical progression the other should follow a
+similar progression: thus one law is applicable to specific heats at
+constant pressure.
+
+We have tacitly assumed the increase of specific heat with that of
+volume. This increase is indicated by the experiments of MM. Delaroche
+and Bérard: in fact these physicists have found 0.967 for the specific
+heat of air under the pressure of 1 metre of mercury (see Mémoire
+already cited), taking for the unit the specific heat of the same weight
+of air under the pressure of 0^m.760.
+
+According to the law that specific heats follow with relation to
+pressures, it is only necessary to have observed them in two particular
+cases to deduce them in all possible cases: it is thus that, making use
+of the experimental result of MM. Delaroche and Bérard which has just
+been given, we have prepared the following table of the specific heat of
+air under different pressures:
+
+ SPECIFIC HEAT OF AIR.
+ ────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────
+ Pressure in Atmospheres.│Specific Heat, that of Air under Atmospheric
+ │ Pressure being 1.
+ ────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────
+ ¹⁄₁₀₂₄ │ 1.840
+ ¹⁄₅₁₂ │ 1.756
+ ¹⁄₂₅₆ │ 1.672
+ ¹⁄₁₂₈ │ 1.588
+ ¹⁄₆₄ │ 1.504
+ ¹⁄₃₂ │ 1.420
+ ¹⁄₁₆ │ 1.336
+ ⅛ │ 1.252
+ ¼ │ 1.165
+ ½ │ 1.084
+ 1 │ 1.000
+ 2 │ 0.916
+ 4 │ 0.832
+ 8 │ 0.748
+ 16 │ 0.664
+ 32 │ 0.580
+ 64 │ 0.496
+ 128 │ 0.412
+ 256 │ 0.328
+ 512 │ 0.244
+ 1024 │ 0.160
+ ────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────
+
+The first column is, as we see, a geometrical progression, and the
+second an arithmetical progression.
+
+We have carried out the table to the extremes of compression and
+rarefaction. It may be believed that air would be liquefied before
+acquiring a density 1024 times its normal density, that is, before
+becoming more dense than water. The specific heat would become zero and
+even negative on extending the table beyond the last term. We think,
+furthermore, that the figures of the second column here decrease too
+rapidly. The experiments which serve as a basis for our calculation have
+been made within too contracted limits for us to expect great exactness
+in the figures which we have obtained, especially in the outside
+numbers.
+
+Since we know, on the one hand, the law according to which heat is
+disengaged in the compression of gases, and on the other, the law
+according to which specific heat varies with volume, it will be easy for
+us to calculate the increase of temperature of a gas that has been
+compressed without being allowed to lose heat. In fact, the compression
+may be considered as composed of two successive operations: (1)
+compression at a constant temperature; (2) restoration of the caloric
+emitted. The temperature will rise through the second operation in
+inverse ratio with the specific heat acquired by the gas after the
+reduction of volume,—specific heat that we are able to calculate by
+means of the law demonstrated above. The heat set free by compression,
+according to the theorem of page 81, ought to be represented by an
+expression of the form
+
+ _s_ = _A_ + _B_ log _v_,
+
+_s_ being this heat, _v_ the volume of the gas after compression, _A_
+and _B_ arbitrary constants dependent on the primitive volume of the
+gas, on its pressure, and on the units chosen.
+
+The specific heat varying with the volume according to the law just
+demonstrated, should be represented by an expression of the form
+
+ _z_ = _A′_ + _B′_ log _v_,
+
+_A′_ and _B′_ being the different arbitrary constants of _A_ and _B_.
+
+The increase of temperature acquired by the gas, as the effect of
+compression, is proportional to the ratio (_s_)/(_z_) or to the relation
+(_A_ + _B_ log _v_)/(_A′_ + _B′_ log _v_). It can be represented by this
+ratio itself; thus, calling it _t_, we shall have
+
+ _t_ = (_A_ + _B_ log _v_)/(_A′_ + _B′_ log _v_).
+
+If the original volume of the gas is 1, and the original temperature
+zero, we shall have at the same time _t_ = 0, log _v_ = 0, whence _A_ =
+0; _t_ will then express not only the increase of temperature, but the
+temperature itself above the thermometric zero.
+
+We need not consider the formula that we have just given as applicable
+to very great changes in the volume of gases. We have regarded the
+elevation of temperature as being in inverse ratio to the specific heat;
+which tacitly supposes the specific heat to be constant at all
+temperatures. Great changes of volume lead to great changes of
+temperature in the gas, and nothing proves the constancy of specific
+heat at different temperatures, especially at temperatures widely
+separated. This constancy is only an hypothesis admitted for gases by
+analogy, to a certain extent verified for solid bodies and liquids
+throughout a part of the thermometric scale, but of which the
+experiments of MM. Dulong and Petit have shown the inaccuracy when it is
+desirable to extend it to temperatures far above 100°.[24]
+
+According to a law of MM. Clement and Desormes, a law established by
+direct experiment, the vapor of water, under whatever pressure it may be
+formed, contains always, at equal weights, the same quantity of heat;
+which leads to the assertion that steam, compressed or expanded
+mechanically without loss of heat, will always be found in a saturated
+state if it was so produced in the first place. The vapor of water so
+made may then be regarded as a permanent gas, and should observe all the
+laws of one. Consequently the formula
+
+ _t_ = (_A_ + _B_ log _v_)/(_A′_ + _B′_ log _v_)
+
+should be applicable to it, and be found to accord with the table of
+tensions derived from the direct experiments of M. Dalton.
+
+We may be assured, in fact, that our formula, with a convenient
+determination of arbitrary constants, represents very closely the
+results of experiment. The slight irregularities which we find therein
+do not exceed what we might reasonably attribute to errors of
+observation.[25]
+
+We will return, however, to our principal subject, from which we have
+wandered too far—the motive power of heat.
+
+We have shown that the quantity of motive power developed by the
+transfer of caloric from one body to another depends essentially upon
+the temperature of the two bodies, but we have not shown the relation
+between these temperatures and the quantities of motive power produced.
+It would at first seem natural enough to suppose that for equal
+differences of temperature the quantities of motive power produced are
+equal; that is, for example, the passage of a given quantity of caloric
+from a body, _A_, maintained at 100°, to a body, _B_, maintained at 50°,
+should give rise to a quantity of motive power equal to that which would
+be developed by the transfer of the same caloric from a body, _B_, at
+50°, to a body, _C_, at zero. Such a law would doubtless be very
+remarkable, but we do not see sufficient reason for admitting it _à
+priori_. We will investigate its reality by exact reasoning.
+
+Let us imagine that the operations described on p. 70 be conducted
+successively on two quantities of atmospheric air equal in weight and
+volume, but taken at different temperatures. Let us suppose, further,
+the differences of temperature between the bodies _A_ and _B_ equal, so
+these bodies would have for example, in one of these cases, the
+temperatures 100° and 100° − _h_ (_h_ being indefinitely small), and in
+the other 1° and 1° − _h_. The quantity of motive power produced is, in
+each case, the difference between that which the gas supplies by its
+dilatation and that which must be expended to restore its primitive
+volume. Now this difference is the same in both cases, as any one can
+prove by simple reasoning, which it seems unnecessary to give here in
+detail; hence the motive power produced is the same.
+
+Let us now compare the quantities of heat employed in the two cases. In
+the first, the quantity of heat employed is that which the body _A_
+furnishes to the air to maintain it at the temperature of 100° during
+its expansion. In the second, it is the quantity of heat which this same
+body should furnish to it, to keep its temperature at one degree during
+an exactly similar change of volume. If these two quantities of heat
+were equal, there would evidently result the law that we have already
+assumed. But nothing proves that it is so, and we shall find that these
+quantities are not equal.
+
+The air that we shall first consider as occupying the space _abcd_ (Fig.
+2), and having 1 degree of temperature, can be made to occupy the space
+_abef_, and to acquire the temperature of 100 degrees by two different
+means:
+
+(1) We may heat it without changing its volume, then expand it, keeping
+its temperature constant.
+
+(2) We may begin by expanding it, maintaining the temperature constant,
+then heat it, when it has acquired its greater volume.
+
+Let _a_ and _b_ be the quantities of heat employed successively in the
+first of the two operations, and let _b′_ and _a′_ be the quantities of
+heat employed successively in the second. As the final result of these
+two operations is the same, the quantities of heat employed in both
+should be equal. We have then
+
+ _a_ + _b_ = _a′_ + _b′_,
+
+whence
+
+ _a′_ − _a_ = _b_ − _b′_.
+
+_a′_ is the quantity of heat required to cause the gas to rise from 1°
+to 100° when it occupies the space _abef_.
+
+_a_ is the quantity of heat required to cause the gas to rise from 1° to
+100° when it occupies the space _abcd_.
+
+The density of the air is less in the first than in the second case, and
+according to the experiments of MM. Delaroche and Bérard, already cited
+on page 87, its capacity for heat should be a little greater.
+
+The quantity _a′_ being found to be greater than the quantity _a_, _b_
+should be greater than _b′_. Consequently, generalizing the proposition,
+we should say:
+
+_The quantity of heat due to the change of volume of a gas is greater as
+the temperature is higher._
+
+Thus, for example, more caloric is necessary to maintain at 100° the
+temperature of a certain quantity of air the volume of which is doubled,
+than to maintain at 1° the temperature of this same air during a
+dilatation exactly equal.
+
+These unequal quantities of heat would produce, however, as we have
+seen, equal quantities of motive power for equal fall of caloric taken
+at different heights on the thermometric scale; whence we draw the
+following conclusion:
+
+_The fall of caloric produces more motive power at inferior than at
+superior temperatures._
+
+Thus a given quantity of heat will develop more motive power in passing
+from a body kept at 1 degree to another maintained at zero, than if
+these two bodies were at the temperature of 101° and 100°.
+
+The difference, however, should be very slight. It would be nothing if
+the capacity of the air for heat remained constant, in spite of changes
+of density. According to the experiments of MM. Delaroche and Bérard,
+this capacity varies little—so little even, that the differences noticed
+might strictly have been attributed to errors of observation or to some
+circumstances of which we have failed to take account.
+
+We are not prepared to determine precisely, with no more experimental
+data than we now possess, the law according to which the motive power of
+heat varies at different points on the thermometric scale. This law is
+intimately connected with that of the variations of the specific heat of
+gases at different temperatures—a law which experiment has not yet made
+known to us with sufficient exactness.[26]
+
+We will endeavor now to estimate exactly the motive power of heat, and
+in order to verify our fundamental proposition, in order to determine
+whether the agent used to realize the motive power is really unimportant
+relatively to the quantity of this power, we will select several of them
+successively: atmospheric air, vapor of water, vapor of alcohol.
+
+Let us suppose that we take first atmospheric air. The operation will
+proceed according to the method indicated on page 70. We will make the
+following hypotheses: The air is taken under atmospheric pressure. The
+temperature of the body _A_ is ¹⁄₁₀₀₀ of a degree above zero, that of
+the body _B_ is zero. The difference is, as we see, very slight—a
+necessary condition here.
+
+The increase of volume given to the air in our operation will be ¹⁄₁₁₆ +
+¹⁄₂₆₇ of the primitive volume; this is a very slight increase,
+absolutely speaking, but great relatively to the difference of
+temperature between the bodies _A_ and _B_.
+
+The motive power developed by the whole of the two operations described
+(page 70) will be very nearly proportional to the increase of volume and
+to the difference between the two pressures exercised by the air, when
+it is found at the temperatures 0°.001 and zero.
+
+This difference is, according to the law of M. Gay-Lussac, ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of
+the elastic force of the gas, or very nearly ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of the atmospheric
+pressure.
+
+The atmospheric pressure balances at 10.40 metres head of water;
+¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of this pressure equals ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ × 10^m.40 of head of water.
+
+As to the increase of volume, it is, by supposition, ¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ of
+the original volume, that is, of the volume occupied by one kilogram of
+air at zero, a volume equal to 0^{mc}.77, allowing for the specific
+weight of the air. So then the product,
+
+ (¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇) × 0.77 × ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ × 10.40,
+
+will express the motive power developed. This power is estimated here in
+cubic metres of water raised one metre.
+
+If we carry out the indicated multiplications, we find the value of the
+product to be 0.000000372.
+
+Let us endeavor now to estimate the quantity of heat employed to give
+this result; that is, the quantity of heat passed from the body _A_ to
+the body _B_.
+
+The body _A_ furnishes:
+
+(1) The heat required to carry the temperature of one kilogram of air
+from zero to 0°.001;
+
+(2) The quantity necessary to maintain at this temperature the
+temperature of the air when it experiences a dilatation of
+
+ ¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇.
+
+The first of these quantities of heat being very small in comparison
+with the second, we may disregard it. The second is, according to the
+reasoning on page 74, equal to that which would be necessary to increase
+one degree the temperature of one kilogram of air subjected to
+atmospheric pressure.
+
+According to the experiments of MM. Delaroche and Bérard on the specific
+heat of gases, that of air is, for equal weights, 0.267 that of water.
+If, then, we take for the unit of heat the quantity necessary to raise 1
+kilogram of water 1 degree, that which will be required to raise 1
+kilogram of air 1 degree would have for its value 0.267. Thus the
+quantity of heat furnished by the body _A_ is
+
+ 0.267 units.
+
+This is the heat capable of producing 0.000000372 units of motive power
+by its fall from 0°.001 to zero.
+
+For a fall a thousand times greater, for a fall of one degree, the
+motive power will be very nearly a thousand times the former, or
+
+ 0.000372.
+
+If, now, instead of 0.267 units of heat we employ 1000 units, the motive
+power produced will be expressed by the proportion
+
+ (0.267)/(0.000372) = (1000)/(x), whence x = (372)/(267) = 1.395.
+
+Thus 1000 units of heat passing from a body maintained at the
+temperature of 1 degree to another body maintained at zero would
+produce, in acting upon the air,
+
+ 1.395 units of motive power.
+
+We will now compare this result with that furnished by the action of
+heat on the vapor of water.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 4.
+]
+
+Let us suppose one kilogram of liquid water enclosed in the cylindrical
+vessel _abcd_ (Fig. 4), between the bottom _ab_ and the piston _cd_. Let
+us suppose, also, the two bodies _A_, _B_ maintained each at a constant
+temperature, that of _A_ being a very little above that of _B_. Let us
+imagine now the following operations:
+
+(1) Contact of the water with the body _A_, movement of the piston from
+the position _cd_ to the position _ef_, formation of steam at the
+temperature of the body _A_ to fill the vacuum produced by the extension
+of volume. We will suppose the space _abef_ large enough to contain all
+the water in a state of vapor.
+
+(2) Removal of the body _A_, contact of the vapor with the body _B_,
+precipitation of a part of this vapor, diminution of its elastic force,
+return of the piston from _ef_ to _ab_, liquefaction of the rest of the
+vapor through the effect of the pressure combined with the contact of
+the body _B_.
+
+(3) Removal of the body _B_, fresh contact of the water with the body
+_A_, return of the water to the temperature of this body, renewal of the
+former period, and so on.
+
+The quantity of motive power developed in a complete cycle of operations
+is measured by the product of the volume of the vapor multiplied by the
+difference between the tensions that it possesses at the temperature of
+the body _A_ and at that of the body _B_. As to the heat employed, that
+is to say, transported from the body _A_ to the body _B_, it is
+evidently that which was necessary to turn the water into vapor,
+disregarding always the small quantity required to restore the
+temperature of the liquid water from that of _B_ to that of _A_.
+
+Suppose the temperature of the body _A_ 100 degrees, and that of the
+body _B_ 99 degrees: the difference of the tensions will be, according
+to the table of M. Dalton, 26 millimetres of mercury or 0^m.36 head of
+water.
+
+The volume of the vapor is 1700 times that of the water. If we operate
+on one kilogram, that will be 1700 litres, or 1^{mc}.700.
+
+Thus the value of the motive power developed is the product
+
+ 1.700 × 0.36 = 0.611 units,
+
+of the kind of which we have previously made use.
+
+The quantity of heat employed is the quantity required to turn into
+vapor water already heated to 100°. This quantity is found by
+experiment. We have found it equal to 550°, or, to speak more exactly,
+to 550 of our units of heat.
+
+Thus 0.611 units of motive power result from the employment of 550 units
+of heat. The quantity of motive power resulting from 1000 units of heat
+will be given by the proportion
+
+ ⁵⁵⁰⁄₀.611 = 1000/_x_, whence _x_ = ⁶¹¹⁄₅₅₀ = 1.112.
+
+Thus 1000 units of heat transported from one body kept at 100 degrees to
+another kept at 99 degrees will produce, acting upon vapor of water,
+1.112 units of motive power.
+
+The number 1.112 differs by about ¼ from the number 1.395 previously
+found for the value of the motive power developed by 1000 units of heat
+acting upon the air; but it should be observed that in this case the
+temperatures of the bodies _A_ and _B_ were 1 degree and zero, while
+here they are 100 degrees and 99 degrees. The difference is much the
+same; but it is not found at the same height in the thermometric scale.
+To make an exact comparison, it would have been necessary to estimate
+the motive power developed by the steam formed at 1 degree and condensed
+at zero. It would also have been necessary to know the quantity of heat
+contained in the steam formed at one degree.
+
+The law of MM. Clement and Desormes referred to on page 92 gives us this
+datum. The constituent heat of vapor of water being always the same at
+any temperature at which vaporization takes place, if 550 degrees of
+heat are required to vaporize water already brought up to 100 degrees,
+550 + 100 or 650 will be required to vaporize the same weight of water
+taken at zero.
+
+Making use of this datum and reasoning exactly as we did for water at
+100 degrees, we find, as is easily seen,
+
+ 1.290
+
+for the motive power developed by 1000 units of heat acting upon the
+vapor of water between one degree and zero. This number approximates
+more closely than the first to
+
+ 1.395.
+
+It differs from it only ¹⁄₁₃, an error which does not exceed probable
+limits, considering the great number of data of different sorts of which
+we have been obliged to make use in order to arrive at this
+approximation. Thus is our fundamental law verified in a special
+case.[27]
+
+We will examine another case in which vapor of alcohol is acted upon by
+heat. The reasoning is precisely the same as for the vapor of water. The
+data alone are changed. Pure alcohol boils under ordinary pressure at
+78°.7 Centigrade. One kilogram absorbs, according to MM. Delaroche and
+Bérard, 207 units of heat in undergoing transformation into vapor at
+this same temperature, 78°.7.
+
+The tension of the vapor of alcohol at one degree below the
+boiling-point is found to be diminished ¹⁄₂₅. It is ¹⁄₂₅ less than the
+atmospheric pressure; at least, this is the result of the experiment of
+M. Bétancour reported in the second part of _l’Architecture hydraulique_
+of M. Prony, pp. 180, 195.[28]
+
+If we use these data, we find that, in acting upon one kilogram of
+alcohol at the temperatures of 78°.7 and 77°.7, the motive power
+developed will be 0.251 units.
+
+This results from the employment of 207 units of heat. For 1000 units
+the proportion must be
+
+ (207)/(0.254) = (1000)/(_x_), whence _x_ = 1.230.
+
+This number is a little more than the 1.112 resulting from the use of
+the vapor of water at the temperatures 100° and 99°; but if we suppose
+the vapor of water used at the temperatures 78° and 77°, we find,
+according to the law of MM. Clement and Desorme, 1.212 for the motive
+power due to 1000 units of heat. This latter number approaches, as we
+see, very nearly to 1.230. There is a difference of only ¹⁄₅₀.
+
+We should have liked to be able to make other approximations of this
+sort—to be able to calculate, for example, the motive power developed by
+the action of heat on solids and liquids, by the congelation of water,
+and so on; but Physics as yet refuses us the necessary data.[29]
+
+The fundamental law that we propose to confirm seems to us to require,
+however, in order to be placed beyond doubt, new verifications. It is
+based upon the theory of heat as it is understood to-day, and it should
+be said that this foundation does not appear to be of unquestionable
+solidity. New experiments alone can decide the question. Meanwhile we
+can apply the theoretical ideas expressed above, regarding them as
+exact, to the examination of the different methods proposed up to date,
+for the realization of the motive power of heat.
+
+It has sometimes been proposed to develop motive power by the action of
+heat on solid bodies. The mode of procedure which naturally first occurs
+to the mind is to fasten immovably a solid body—a metallic bar, for
+example—by one of its extremities; to attach the other extremity to a
+movable part of the machine; then, by successive heating and cooling, to
+cause the length of the bar to vary, and so to produce motion. Let us
+try to decide whether this method of developing motive power can be
+advantageous. We have shown that the condition of the most effective
+employment of heat in the production of motion is, that all changes of
+temperature occurring in the bodies should be due to changes of volume.
+The nearer we come to fulfilling this condition the more fully will the
+heat be utilized. Now, working in the manner just described, we are very
+far from fulfilling this condition: change of temperature is not due
+here to change of volume; all the changes are due to contact of bodies
+differently heated—to the contact of the metallic bar, either with the
+body charged with furnishing heat to it, or with the body charged with
+carrying it off.
+
+The only means of fulfilling the prescribed condition would be to act
+upon the solid body exactly as we did on the air in the operations
+described on page 92. But for this we must be able to produce, by a
+single change of volume of the solid body, considerable changes of
+temperature, that is, if we should want to utilize considerable falls of
+caloric. Now this appears impracticable. In short, many considerations
+lead to the conclusion that the changes produced in the temperature of
+solid or liquid bodies through the effect of compression and rarefaction
+would be but slight.
+
+(1) We often observe in machines (particularly in steam-engines) solid
+pieces which endure considerable strain in one way or another, and
+although these efforts may be sometimes as great as the nature of the
+substances employed permits, the variations of temperature are scarcely
+perceptible.
+
+(2) In the action of striking medals, in that of the rolling-mill, of
+the draw-plate, the metals undergo the greatest compression to which we
+can submit them, employing the hardest and strongest tools. Nevertheless
+the elevation of temperature is not great. If it were, the pieces of
+steel used in these operations would soon lose their temper.
+
+(3) We know that it would be necessary to exert on solids and liquids a
+very great strain in order to produce in them a reduction of volume
+comparable to that which they experience in cooling (cooling from 100°
+to zero, for example). Now the cooling requires a greater abstraction of
+caloric than would simple reduction of volume. If this reduction were
+produced by mechanical means, the heat set free would not then be able
+to make the temperature of the body vary as many degrees as the cooling
+makes it vary. It would, however, necessitate the employment of a force
+undoubtedly very considerable.
+
+Since solid bodies are susceptible of little change of temperature
+through changes of volume, and since the condition of the most effective
+employment of heat for the development of motive power is precisely that
+all change of temperature should be due to a change of volume, solid
+bodies appear but ill fitted to realize this power.
+
+The same remarks apply to liquids. The same reasons may be given for
+rejecting them.[30]
+
+We are not speaking now of practical difficulties. They will be
+numberless. The motion produced by the dilatation and compression of
+solid or liquid bodies would only be very slight. In order to give them
+sufficient amplitude we should be forced to make use of complicated
+mechanisms. It would be necessary to employ materials of the greatest
+strength to transmit enormous pressure; finally, the successive
+operations would be executed very slowly compared to those of the
+ordinary steam-engine, so that apparatus of large dimensions and heavy
+cost would produce but very ordinary results.
+
+The elastic fluids, gases or vapors, are the means really adapted to the
+development of the motive power of heat. They combine all the conditions
+necessary to fulfil this office. They are easy to compress; they can be
+almost infinitely expanded; variations of volume occasion in them great
+changes of temperature; and, lastly, they are very mobile, easy to heat
+and to cool, easy to transport from one place to another, which enables
+them to produce rapidly the desired effects. We can easily conceive a
+multitude of machines fitted to develop the motive power of heat through
+the use of elastic fluids; but in whatever way we look at it, we should
+not lose sight of the following principles:
+
+(1) The temperature of the fluid should be made as high as possible, in
+order to obtain a great fall of caloric, and consequently a large
+production of motive power.
+
+(2) For the same reason the cooling should be carried as far as
+possible.
+
+(3) It should be so arranged that the passage of the elastic fluid from
+the highest to the lowest temperature should be due to increase of
+volume; that is, it should be so arranged that the cooling of the gas
+should occur spontaneously as the effect of rarefaction. The limits of
+the temperature to which it is possible to bring the fluid primarily,
+are simply the limits of the temperature obtainable by combustion; they
+are very high.
+
+The limits of cooling are found in the temperature of the coldest body
+of which we can easily and freely make use; this body is usually the
+water of the locality.
+
+As to the third condition, it involves difficulties in the realization
+of the motive power of heat when the attempt is made to take advantage
+of great differences of temperature, to utilize great falls of heat. In
+short, it is necessary then that the gas, by reason of its rarefaction,
+should pass from a very high temperature to a very low one, which
+requires a great change of volume and of density, which requires also
+that the gas be first taken under a very heavy pressure, or that it
+acquire by its dilatation an enormous volume—conditions both difficult
+to fulfil. The first necessitates the employment of very strong vessels
+to contain the gas at a very high temperature and under very heavy
+pressure. The second necessitates the use of vessels of large
+dimensions. These are, in a word, the principal obstacles which prevent
+the utilization in steam-engines of a great part of the motive power of
+the heat. We are obliged to limit ourselves to the use of a slight fall
+of caloric, while the combustion of the coal furnishes the means of
+procuring a very great one.
+
+It is seldom that in steam-engines the elastic fluid is produced under a
+higher pressure than six atmospheres—a pressure corresponding to about
+160° Centigrade, and it is seldom that condensation takes place at a
+temperature much under 40°. The fall of caloric from 160° to 40° is
+120°, while by combustion we can procure a fall of 1000° to 2000°.
+
+In order to comprehend this more clearly, let us recall what we have
+termed the fall of caloric. This is the passage of the heat from one
+body, _A_, having an elevated temperature, to another, _B_, where it is
+lower. We say that the fall of the caloric is 100° or 1000° when the
+difference of temperature between the bodies _A_ and _B_ is 100° or
+1000°.
+
+In a steam-engine which works under a pressure of six atmospheres the
+temperature of the boiler is 160°. This is the body _A_. It is kept, by
+contact with the furnace, at the constant temperature of 160°, and
+continually furnishes the heat necessary for the formation of steam. The
+condenser is the body _B_. By means of a current of cold water it is
+kept at a nearly constant temperature of 40°. It absorbs continually the
+caloric brought from the body _A_ by the steam. The difference of
+temperature between these two bodies is 160° − 40°, or 120°. Hence we
+say that the fall of caloric is here 120°.
+
+Coal being capable of producing, by its combustion, a temperature higher
+than 1000°, and the cold water, which is generally used in our climate,
+being at about 10°, we can easily procure a fall of caloric of 1000°,
+and of this only 120° are utilized by steam-engines. Even these 120° are
+not wholly utilized. There is always considerable loss due to useless
+re-establishments of equilibrium in the caloric.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Fig. 5.
+]
+
+It is easy to see the advantages possessed by high-pressure machines
+over those of lower pressure. _This superiority lies essentially in the
+power of utilizing a greater fall of caloric._ The steam produced under
+a higher pressure is found also at a higher temperature, and as,
+further, the temperature of condensation remains always about the same,
+it is evident that the fall of caloric is more considerable. But to
+obtain from high-pressure engines really advantageous results, it is
+necessary that the fall of caloric should be most profitably utilized.
+It is not enough that the steam be produced at a high temperature: it is
+also necessary that by the expansion of its volume its temperature
+should become sufficiently low. A good steam-engine, therefore, should
+not only employ steam under heavy pressure, _but under successive and
+very variable pressures, differing greatly from one another, and
+progressively decreasing_.[31]
+
+In order to understand in some sort _à posteriori_ the advantages of
+high-pressure engines, let us suppose steam to be formed under
+atmospheric pressure and introduced into the cylindrical vessel _abcd_
+(Fig. 5), under the piston _cd_, which at first touches the bottom _ab_.
+The steam, after having moved the piston from _ab_ to _cd_, will
+continue finally to produce its results in a manner with which we will
+not concern ourselves.
+
+Let us suppose that the piston having moved to _cd_ is forced downward
+to _ef_, without the steam being allowed to escape, or any portion of
+its caloric to be lost. It will be driven back into the space _abef_,
+and will increase at the same time in density, elastic force, and
+temperature. If the steam, instead of being produced under atmospheric
+pressure, had been produced just when it was being forced back into
+_abef_, and so that after its introduction into the cylinder it had made
+the piston move from _ab_ to _ef_, and had moved it simply by its
+extension of volume, from _ef_ to _cd_, the motive power produced would
+have been more considerable than in the first case. In fact, the
+movement of the piston, while equal in extent, would have taken place
+under the action of a greater pressure, though variable, and though
+progressively decreasing.
+
+The steam, however, would have required for its formation exactly the
+same quantity of caloric, only the caloric would have been employed at a
+higher temperature.
+
+It is considerations of this nature which have led to the making of
+double-cylinder engines—engines invented by Mr. Hornblower, improved by
+Mr. Woolf, and which, as regards economy of the combustible, are
+considered the best. They consist of a small cylinder, which at each
+pulsation is filled more or less (often entirely) with steam, and of a
+second cylinder having usually a capacity quadruple that of the first,
+and which receives no steam except that which has already operated in
+the first cylinder. Thus the steam when it ceases to act has at least
+quadrupled in volume. From the second cylinder it is carried directly
+into the condenser, but it is conceivable that it might be carried into
+a third cylinder quadruple the second, and in which its volume would
+have become sixteen times the original volume. The principal obstacle to
+the use of a third cylinder of this sort is the capacity which it would
+be necessary to give it, and the large dimensions which the openings for
+the passage of the steam must have. We will say no more on this subject,
+as we do not propose here to enter into the details of construction of
+steam-engines. These details call for a work devoted specially to them,
+and which does not yet exist, at least in France.[32]
+
+If the expansion of the steam is mainly limited by the dimensions of the
+vessels in which the dilatation must take place, the degree of
+condensation at which it is possible to use it at first is limited only
+by the resistance of the vessels in which it is produced, that is, of
+the boilers.
+
+In this respect we have by no means attained the best possible results.
+The arrangement of the boilers generally in use is entirely faulty,
+although the tension of the steam rarely exceeds from four to six
+atmospheres. They often burst and cause severe accidents. It will
+undoubtedly be possible to avoid such accidents, and meantime to raise
+the steam to much greater pressures than is usually done.
+
+Besides the high-pressure double-cylinder engines of which we have
+spoken, there are also high-pressure engines of one cylinder. The
+greater part of these latter have been constructed by two ingenious
+English engineers, Messrs. Trevithick and Vivian. They employ the steam
+under a very high pressure, sometimes eight to ten atmospheres, but they
+have no condenser. The steam, after it has been introduced into the
+cylinder, undergoes therein a certain increase of volume, but preserves
+always a pressure higher than atmospheric. When it has fulfilled its
+office it is thrown out into the atmosphere. It is evident that this
+mode of working is fully equivalent, in respect to the motive power
+produced, to condensing the steam at 100°, and that a portion of the
+useful effect is lost. But the engines working thus dispense with
+condenser and air-pump. They are less costly than the others, less
+complicated, occupy less space, and can be used in places where there is
+not sufficient water for condensation. In such places they are of
+inestimable advantage, since no others could take their place. These
+engines are principally employed in England to move coal-wagons on
+railroads laid either in the interior of mines or outside of them.
+
+We have, further, only a few remarks to make upon the use of permanent
+gases and other vapors than that of water in the development of the
+motive power of heat.
+
+Various attempts have been made to produce motive power by the action of
+heat on atmospheric air. This gas presents, as compared with vapor of
+water, both advantages and disadvantages, which we will proceed to
+examine.
+
+(1) It presents, as compared with vapor of water, a notable advantage in
+that, having for equal volume a much less capacity for heat, it would
+cool more rapidly by an equal increase of volume. (This fact is proved
+by what has already been stated.) Now we have seen how important it is
+to produce by change of volume the greatest possible changes of
+temperature.
+
+(2) Vapors of water can be formed only through the intervention of a
+boiler, while atmospheric air could be heated directly by combustion
+carried on within its own mass. Considerable loss could thus be
+prevented, not only in the quantity of heat, but also in its
+temperature. This advantage belongs exclusively to atmospheric air.
+Other gases do not possess it. They would be even more difficult to heat
+than vapor of water.
+
+(3) In order to give to air great increase of volume, and by that
+expansion to produce a great change of temperature, it must first be
+taken under a sufficiently high pressure; then it must be compressed
+with a pump or by some other means before heating it. This operation
+would require a special apparatus, an apparatus not found in
+steam-engines. In the latter, water is in a liquid state when injected
+into the boiler, and to introduce it requires but a small pump.
+
+(4) The condensing of the vapor by contact with the refrigerant body is
+much more prompt and much easier than is the cooling of air. There
+might, of course, be the expedient of throwing the latter out into the
+atmosphere, and there would be also the advantage of avoiding the use of
+a refrigerant, which is not always available, but it would be requisite
+that the increase of the volume of the air should not reduce its
+pressure below that of the atmosphere.
+
+(5) One of the gravest inconveniences of steam is that it cannot be used
+at high temperatures without necessitating the use of vessels of
+extraordinary strength. It is not so with air for which there exists no
+necessary relation between the elastic force and the temperature. Air,
+then, would seem more suitable than steam to realize the motive power of
+falls of caloric from high temperatures. Perhaps in low temperatures
+steam may be more convenient. We might conceive even the possibility of
+making the same heat act successively upon air and vapor of water. It
+would be only necessary that the air should have, after its use, an
+elevated temperature, and instead of throwing it out immediately into
+the atmosphere, to make it envelop a steam-boiler, as if it issued
+directly from a furnace.
+
+The use of atmospheric air for the development of the motive power of
+heat presents in practice very great, but perhaps not insurmountable,
+difficulties. If we should succeed in overcoming them, it would
+doubtless offer a notable advantage over vapor of water.[33]
+
+As to the other permanent gases, they should be absolutely rejected.
+They have all the inconveniences of atmospheric air, with none of its
+advantages. The same can be said of other vapors than that of water, as
+compared with the latter.
+
+If we could find an abundant liquid body which would vaporize at a
+higher temperature than water, of which the vapor would have, for the
+same volume, a less specific heat, which would not attack the metals
+employed in the construction of machines, it would undoubtedly merit the
+preference. But nature provides no such body.
+
+The use of the vapor of alcohol has been proposed. Machines have even
+been constructed for the purpose of using it, by avoiding the mixture of
+its vapor with the water of condensation, that is, by applying the cold
+body externally instead of introducing it into the machine. It has been
+thought that a remarkable advantage might be secured by using the vapor
+of alcohol in that it possesses a stronger tension than the vapor of
+water at the same temperature. We can see in this only a fresh obstacle
+to be overcome. The principal defect of the vapor of water is its
+excessive tension at an elevated temperature; now this defect exists
+still more strongly in the vapor of alcohol. As to the relative
+advantage in a greater production of motive power,—an advantage
+attributed to it,—we know by the principles above demonstrated that it
+is imaginary.
+
+It is thus upon the use of atmospheric air and vapor of water that
+subsequent attempts to perfect heat-engines should be based. It is to
+utilize by means of these agents the greatest possible falls of caloric
+that all efforts should be directed.
+
+Finally, we will show how far we are from having realized, by any means
+at present known, all the motive power of combustibles.
+
+One kilogram of carbon burnt in the calorimeter furnishes a quantity of
+heat capable of raising one degree Centigrade about 7000 kilograms of
+water, that is, it furnishes 7000 units of heat according to the
+definition of these units given on page 100.
+
+The greatest fall of caloric attainable is measured by the difference
+between the temperature produced by combustion and that of the
+refrigerant bodies. It is difficult to perceive any other limits to the
+temperature of combustion than those in which the combination between
+oxygen and the combustible may take place. Let us assume, however, that
+1000° may be this limit, and we shall certainly be below the truth. As
+to the temperature of the refrigerant, let us suppose it 0°. We
+estimated approximately (page 104) the quantity of motive power that
+1000 units of heat develop between 100° and 99°. We found it to be 1.112
+units of power, each equal to 1 metre of water raised to a height of 1
+metre.
+
+If the motive power were proportional to the fall of caloric, if it were
+the same for each thermometric degree, nothing would be easier than to
+estimate it from 1000° to 0°. Its value would be
+
+ 1.112 × 1000 = 1112.
+
+But as this law is only approximate, and as possibly it deviates much
+from the truth at high temperatures, we can only make a very rough
+estimate. We will suppose the number 1112 reduced one half, that is, to
+560.
+
+Since a kilogram of carbon produces 7000 units of heat, and since the
+number 560 is relatively 1000 units, it must be multiplied by 7, which
+gives
+
+ 7 × 560 = 3920.
+
+This is the motive power of 1 kilogram of carbon.
+
+In order to compare this theoretical result with that of experiment, let
+us ascertain how much motive power a kilogram of carbon actually
+develops in the best-known steam-engines.
+
+The engines which, up to this time, have shown the best results are the
+large double-cylinder engines used in the drainage of the tin and copper
+mines of Cornwall. The best results that have been obtained with them
+are as follows:
+
+65 millions of lbs. of water have been raised one English foot by the
+bushel of coal burned (the bushel weighing 88 lbs.). This is equivalent
+to raising, by a kilogram of coal, 195 cubic metres of water to a height
+of 1 metre, producing thereby 195 units of motive power per kilogram of
+coal burned.
+
+195 units are only the twentieth of 3920, the theoretical maximum;
+consequently ¹⁄₂₀ only of the motive power of the combustible has been
+utilized.
+
+We have, nevertheless, selected our example from among the best
+steam-engines known.
+
+Most engines are greatly inferior to these. The old engine of Chaillot,
+for example, raised twenty cubic metres of water thirty-three metres,
+for thirty kilograms of coal consumed, which amounts to twenty-two units
+of motive power per kilogram,—a result nine times less than that given
+above, and one hundred and eighty times less than the theoretical
+maximum.
+
+We should not expect ever to utilize in practice all the motive power of
+combustibles. The attempts made to attain this result would be far more
+hurtful than useful if they caused other important considerations to be
+neglected. The economy of the combustible is only one of the conditions
+to be fulfilled in heat-engines. In many cases it is only secondary. It
+should often give precedence to safety, to strength, to the durability
+of the engine, to the small space which it must occupy, to small cost of
+installation, etc. To know how to appreciate in each case, at their true
+value, the considerations of convenience and economy which may present
+themselves; to know how to discern the more important of those which are
+only accessories; to balance them properly against each other, in order
+to attain the best results by the simplest means: such should be the
+leading characteristics of the man called to direct, to co-ordinate
+among themselves the labors of his comrades, to make them co-operate
+towards one useful end, of whatsoever sort it may be.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ (_To face p. 127._)
+]
+
+
+
+
+ IV.[34]
+ CARNOT’S THEORY OF THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT.[35]
+WITH NUMERICAL RESULTS DEDUCED FROM REGNAULT’S EXPERIMENTS ON STEAM.[36]
+
+ BY SIR WILLIAM THOMSON [LORD KELVIN].
+
+
+1. The presence of heat may be recognized in every natural object; and
+there is scarcely an operation in nature which is not more or less
+affected by its all-pervading influence. An evolution and subsequent
+absorption of heat generally give rise to a variety of effects; among
+which may be enumerated, chemical combinations or decompositions; the
+fusion of solid substances; the vaporization of solids or liquids;
+alterations in the dimensions of bodies, or in the statical pressure by
+which their dimensions may be modified; mechanical resistance overcome;
+electrical currents generated. In many of the actual phenomena of nature
+several or all of these effects are produced together; and their
+complication will, if we attempt to trace the agency of heat in
+producing any individual effect, give rise to much perplexity. It will,
+therefore, be desirable, in laying the foundation of a physical theory
+of any of the effects of heat, to discover or to imagine phenomena free
+from all such complication, and depending on a definite thermal agency;
+in which the relation between the cause and effect, traced through the
+medium of certain simple operations, may be clearly appreciated. Thus it
+is that Carnot, in accordance with the strictest principles of
+philosophy, enters upon the investigation of the theory of the motive
+power of heat.
+
+2. The sole effect to be contemplated in investigating the motive power
+of heat is _resistance overcome_, or, as it is frequently called, “_work
+performed_,” or “_mechanical effect_.” The questions to be resolved by a
+complete theory of the subject are the following:
+
+(1) What is the precise nature of the thermal agency by means of which
+_mechanical effect_ is to be produced, without effects of any other
+kind?
+
+(2) How may the amount of this thermal agency necessary for performing a
+given quantity of work be estimated?
+
+3. In the following paper I shall commence by giving a short abstract of
+the reasoning by which Carnot is led to an answer to the first of these
+questions; I shall then explain the investigation by which, in
+accordance with his theory, the experimental elements necessary for
+answering the second question are indicated; and, in conclusion, I shall
+state the _data_ supplied by Regnault’s recent observations on steam,
+and apply them to obtain, as approximately as the present state of
+experimental science enables us to do, a complete solution of the
+question.
+
+I. On the nature of Thermal agency, considered as a motive power.
+
+4. There are [at present known] two, and only two, distinct ways in
+which mechanical effect can be obtained from heat. One of these is by
+means of the alterations of volume, which bodies may experience through
+the action of heat; the other is through the medium of electric agency.
+Seebeck’s discovery of thermo-electric currents enables us at present to
+conceive of an electro-magnetic engine supplied from a thermal origin,
+being used as a motive power; but this discovery was not made until
+1821, and the subject of thermo-electricity can only have been generally
+known in a few isolated facts, with reference to the electrical effects
+of heat upon certain crystals, at the time when Carnot wrote. He makes
+no allusion to it, but confines himself to the method for rendering
+thermal agency available as a source of mechanical effect, by means of
+the expansions and contractions of bodies.
+
+5. A body expanding or contracting under the action of force may, in
+general, either produce mechanical effect by overcoming resistance, or
+receive mechanical effect by yielding to the action of force. The amount
+of mechanical effect thus developed will depend not only on the
+calorific agency concerned, but also on the alteration in the physical
+condition of the body. Hence, after allowing the volume and temperature
+of the body to change, we must restore it to its original temperature
+and volume; and then we may estimate the aggregate amount of mechanical
+effect developed as due solely to the thermal origin.
+
+6. Now the ordinarily-received, and almost universally-acknowledged,
+principles with reference to “quantities of caloric” and “latent heat”
+lead us to conceive that, at the end of a cycle of operations, when a
+body is left in precisely its primitive physical condition, if it has
+absorbed any heat during one part of the operations, it must have given
+out again exactly the same amount during the remainder of the cycle. The
+truth of this principle is considered as axiomatic by Carnot, who admits
+it as the foundation of his theory; and expresses himself in the
+following terms regarding it, in a note on one of the passages of his
+treatise:[37]
+
+“In our demonstrations we tacitly assume that after a body has
+experienced a certain number of transformations, if it be brought
+identically to its primitive physical state as to density, temperature,
+and molecular constitution, it must contain the same quantity of heat as
+that which it initially possessed; or, in other words, we suppose that
+the quantities of heat lost by the body under one set of operations are
+precisely compensated by those which are absorbed in the others. This
+fact has never been doubted; it has at first been admitted without
+reflection, and afterwards verified, in many cases, by calorimetrical
+experiments. To deny it would be to overturn the whole theory of heat,
+in which it is the fundamental principle. It must be admitted, however,
+that the chief foundations on which the theory of heat rests, would
+require a most attentive examination. Several experimental facts appear
+nearly inexplicable in the actual state of this theory.”
+
+7. Since the time when Carnot thus expressed himself, the necessity of a
+most careful examination of the entire experimental basis of the theory
+of heat has become more and more urgent. Especially all those
+assumptions depending on the idea that heat is a _substance_, invariable
+in quantity; not convertible into any other element, and incapable of
+being _generated_ by any physical agency; in fact the acknowledged
+principles of latent heat,—would require to be tested by a most
+searching investigation before they ought to be admitted, as they
+usually have been, by almost every one who has been engaged on the
+subject, whether in combining the results of experimental research, or
+in general theoretical investigations.
+
+8. The extremely important discoveries recently made by Mr. Joule of
+Manchester, that heat is evolved in every part of a closed electric
+conductor, moving in the neighborhood of a magnet,[38] and that heat is
+_generated_ by the friction of fluids in motion, seem to overturn the
+opinion commonly held that heat cannot be _generated_, but only produced
+from a source, where it has previously existed either in a sensible or
+in a latent condition.
+
+In the present state of science, however, no operation is known by which
+heat can be absorbed into a body without either elevating its
+temperature or becoming latent, and producing some alteration in its
+physical condition; and the fundamental axiom adopted by Carnot may be
+considered as still the most probable basis for an investigation of the
+motive power of heat; although this, and with it every other branch of
+the theory of heat, may ultimately require to be reconstructed upon
+another foundation, when our experimental data are more complete. On
+this understanding, and to avoid a repetition of doubts, I shall refer
+to Carnot’s fundamental principle, in all that follows, as if its truth
+were thoroughly established.
+
+9. We are now led to the conclusion that the origin of motive power,
+developed by the alternate expansions and contractions of a body, must
+be found in the agency of heat entering the body and leaving it; since
+there cannot, at the end of a complete cycle, when the body is restored
+to its primitive physical condition, have been any absolute absorption
+of heat, and consequently no conversion of heat, or caloric, into
+mechanical effect; and it remains for us to trace the precise nature of
+the circumstances under which heat must enter the body, and afterwards
+leave it, so that mechanical effect may be produced. As an example, we
+may consider that machine for obtaining motive power from heat with
+which we are most familiar—the steam-engine.
+
+10. Here, we observe, that heat enters the machine from the furnace,
+through the sides of the boiler, and that heat is continually abstracted
+by the water employed for keeping the condenser cool. According to
+Carnot’s fundamental principle, the quantity of heat thus discharged,
+during a complete revolution (or double stroke) of the engine, must be
+precisely equal to that which enters the water of the boiler;[39]
+provided the total mass of water and steam be invariable, and be
+restored to its primitive physical condition (which will be the case
+rigorously, if the condenser be kept cool by the external application of
+cold water instead of by injection, as is more usual in practice), and
+if the condensed water be restored to the boiler at the end of each
+complete revolution. Thus we perceive that a certain quantity of heat is
+_let down_ from a hot body, the metal of the boiler, to another body at
+a lower temperature, the metal of the condenser; and that there results
+from this transference of heat a certain development of mechanical
+effect.
+
+11. If we examine any other case in which mechanical effect is obtained
+from a thermal origin, by means of the alternate expansions and
+contractions of any substance whatever, instead of the water of a
+steam-engine, we find that a similar transference of heat is effected,
+and we may therefore answer the first question proposed, in the
+following manner:
+
+_The thermal agency by which mechanical effect may be obtained is the
+transference of heat from one body to another at a lower temperature._
+
+11. On the measurement of Thermal Agency, considered with reference to
+its equivalent of mechanical effect.
+
+12. A _perfect_ thermodynamic engine of any kind is a machine by means
+of which the greatest possible amount of mechanical effect can be
+obtained from a given thermal agency; and, therefore, if in any manner
+we can construct or imagine a perfect engine which may be applied for
+the transference of a given quantity of heat from a body at any given
+temperature to another body at a lower given temperature, and if we can
+evaluate the mechanical effect thus obtained, we shall be able to answer
+the question at present under consideration, and so to complete the
+theory of the motive power of heat. But whatever kind of engine we may
+consider with this view, it will be necessary for us to prove that it is
+a perfect engine; since the transference of the heat from one body to
+the other may be wholly, or partially, effected by conduction through a
+solid,[40] without the development of mechanical effect; and,
+consequently, engines may be constructed in which the whole or any
+portion of the thermal agency is wasted. Hence it is of primary
+importance to discover the criterion of a perfect engine. This has been
+done by Carnot, who proves the following proposition:
+
+13. _A perfect thermodynamic engine is such that, whatever amount of
+mechanical effect it can derive from a certain thermal agency, if an
+equal amount be spent in working it backwards, an equal reverse thermal
+effect will be produced._[41]
+
+14. This proposition will be made clearer by the applications of it
+which are given later (§ 29), in the cases of the air-engine and the
+steam-engine, than it could be by any general explanation; and it will
+also appear, from the nature of the operations described in those cases,
+and the principles of Carnot’s reasoning, that a perfect engine may be
+constructed with any substance of an indestructible texture as the
+alternately expanding and contracting medium. Thus we might conceive
+thermodynamic engines founded upon the expansions and contractions of a
+perfectly elastic solid, or of a liquid; or upon the alterations of
+volume experienced by substances in passing from the liquid to the solid
+state,[42] each of which being perfect, would produce the same amount of
+mechanical effect from a given thermal agency; but there are two cases
+which Carnot has selected as most worthy of minute attention, because of
+their peculiar appropriateness for illustrating the general principles
+of his theory, no less than on account of their very great practical
+importance: the steam-engine, in which the substance employed as the
+transferring medium is water, alternately in the liquid state and in the
+state of vapor; and the air-engine, in which the transference is
+effected by means of the alternate expansions and contractions of a
+medium always in the gaseous state. The details of an actually
+practicable engine of either kind are not contemplated by Carnot in his
+general theoretical reasonings, but he confines himself to the ideal
+construction, in the simplest possible way in each case, of an engine in
+which the economy is perfect. He thus determines the degree of
+perfectibility which cannot be surpassed; and by describing a
+conceivable method of attaining to this perfection by an air-engine or a
+steam-engine, he points out the proper objects to be kept in view in the
+practical construction and working of such machines. I now proceed to
+give an outline of these investigations.
+
+
+ CARNOT’S THEORY OF THE STEAM-ENGINE.
+
+15. Let _CDF_{2}E_{2}_ be a cylinder, of which the curved surface is
+perfectly impermeable to heat, with a piston also impermeable to heat,
+fitted in it; while the fixed bottom _CD_, itself with no capacity for
+heat, is possessed of perfect conducting power. Let _K_ be an
+impermeable stand, such that when the cylinder is placed upon it the
+contents below the piston can neither gain nor lose heat. Let _A_ and
+_B_ be two bodies permanently retained at constant temperatures, _S°_
+and _T°_, respectively, of which the former is higher than the latter.
+Let the cylinder, placed on the impermeable stand, _K_, be partially
+filled with water, at the temperature _S_, of the body _A_, and (there
+being no air below it) let the piston be placed in a position _EF_, near
+the surface of the water. The pressure of the vapor above the water will
+tend to push up the piston, and must be resisted by a force applied to
+the piston,[43] till the commencement of the operations, which are
+conducted in the following manner:
+
+[Illustration]
+
+(1) The cylinder being placed on the body _A_, so that the water and
+vapor may be retained at the temperature _S_, _let the piston rise any
+convenient height EE_{1}, to a position E_{1}F_{1}, performing work by
+the pressure of the vapor below it during its ascent_.
+
+ [During this operation a certain quantity, _H_, of heat, the amount of
+ latent heat in the fresh vapor which is formed, is abstracted from the
+ body _A_.]
+
+(2) The cylinder being removed, and placed on the impermeable stand _K,
+let the piston rise gradually, till, when it reaches a position
+E_{2}F_{2}, the temperature of the water and vapor is T, the same as
+that of the body B_.
+
+ [During this operation the fresh vapor continually formed requires
+ heat to become latent; and, therefore, as the contents of the cylinder
+ are protected from any accession of heat, their temperature sinks.]
+
+(3) The cylinder being removed from _K_, and placed on _B, let the
+piston be pushed down, till, when it reaches the position E_{3}F_{3},
+the quantity of heat evolved and abstracted by B amounts to that which,
+during the first operation, was taken from A_.
+
+[Note of Nov. 5, 1881. The specification of this operation, with a view
+to the return to the primitive condition, intended as the conclusion to
+the four operations, is the only item in which Carnot’s temporary and
+provisional assumption of the materiality of heat has effect. To exclude
+this hypothesis, Prof. James Thomson has suggested the following
+corrected specification for the third operation: _Let the piston be
+pushed down, till it reaches a position E_{3}F_{3}, determined so as to
+fulfil the condition, that at the end of the fourth operation the
+primitive temperature S shall be reached_:[44]]
+
+ [During this operation the temperature of the contents of the cylinder
+ is retained constantly at _T°_, and all the latent heat of the vapor
+ which is condensed into water at the same temperature is given out to
+ _B_.]
+
+(4) The cylinder being removed from _B_, and placed on the impermeable
+stand, _let the piston be pushed down from E_{3}F_{3} to its original
+position EF_.
+
+ [During this operation, the impermeable stand preventing any loss of
+ heat, the temperature of the water and air must rise continually, till
+ (since the quantity of heat evolved during the third operation was
+ precisely equal to that which was previously absorbed) at the
+ conclusion it reaches its primitive value, _S_, in virtue of Carnot’s
+ fundamental axiom.]
+
+ [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. With Prof. James Thomson’s correction of
+ operation (3), the words in virtue of “Carnot’s Fundamental Axiom”
+ must be replaced by “the condition fulfilled by operation (3),” in the
+ description of the results of operation (4).]
+
+16. At the conclusion of this cycle of operations[45] the total thermal
+agency has been the _letting down_ of _H_ units of heat from the body
+_A_, at the temperature _S_, to _B_, at the lower temperature _T_; and
+the aggregate of the mechanical effect has been a certain amount of
+_work produced_, since during the ascent of the piston in the first and
+second operations, the temperature of the water and vapor, and therefore
+the pressure of the vapor on the piston, was on the whole higher than
+during the descent, in the third and fourth operations. It remains for
+us actually to evaluate this aggregate amount of work performed; and for
+this purpose the following graphical method of representing the
+mechanical effect developed in the several operations, taken from Mons.
+Clapeyron’s paper, is extremely convenient.
+
+17. Let _OX_ and _OY_ be two lines at right angles to one another. Along
+_OX_ measure off distances _ON_{1}_, _N_{1}N_{2}_, _N_{2}N_{3}_,
+_N_{3}O_, respectively proportional to the spaces described by the
+piston during the four successive operations described above; and, with
+reference to these four operations respectively, let the following
+constructions be made:
+
+(1) Along _OY_ measure a length _OA_, to represent the pressure of the
+saturated vapor at the temperature _S_; and draw _AA_{1}_ parallel to
+_OX_, and let it meet an ordinate through _N_{1}_, in _A_{1}_.
+
+(2) Draw a curve _A_{1}PA_ such that, if _ON_ represent, at any instant
+during the second operation, the distance of the piston from its
+primitive position, _NP_ shall represent the pressure of the vapor at
+the same instant.
+
+(3) Through _A__{2} draw _A_{2}A_{3}_ parallel to _OX_, and let it meet
+an ordinate through _N_{3}_ in _A_{3}_.
+
+(4) Draw the curve _A_{3}A_ such that the abscissa and ordinate of any
+point in it may represent respectively the distances of the piston from
+its primitive position, and the pressure of the vapor, at each instant
+during the fourth operation. The last point of this curve must,
+according to Carnot’s fundamental principle, coincide with _A_, since
+the piston is, at the end of the cycle of operations, again in its
+primitive position, and the pressure of the vapor is the same as it was
+at the beginning.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+18. Let us now suppose that the lengths, _ON_{1}_, _N_{1}N_{2}_,
+_N_{2}N_{3}_, and _N_{3}O_, _represent numerically_ the volumes of the
+spaces moved through by the piston during the successive operations.
+It follows that the mechanical effect obtained during the first
+operation will be _numerically represented_ by the area
+_AA_{1}N_{1}O_; that is, the number of superficial units in this area
+will be equal to the number of “foot-pounds” of work performed by the
+ascending piston during the first operation. The work performed by the
+piston during the second operation will be similarly represented by
+the area _A_{1}A_{2}N_{2}N_{1}_. Again, during the third operation a
+certain amount of work is spent on the piston, which will be
+represented by the area _A_{2}A_{3}N_{3}N_{2}_; and lastly, during the
+fourth operation, work is spent in pushing the piston to an amount
+represented by the area _A_{3}AON_{3}_.
+
+19. Hence the mechanical effect (represented by the area
+_OAA_{1}A_{2}N_{2}_) which was obtained during the first and second
+operations, exceeds the work (represented by _N_{2}A_{2}A_{3}AO_) spent
+during the third and fourth, by an amount represented by the area of the
+quadrilateral figure _AA_{1}A_{2}A_{3}_; and, consequently, it only
+remains for us to evaluate this area, that we may determine the total
+mechanical effect gained in a complete cycle of operations. Now, from
+experimental data, at present nearly complete, as will be explained
+below, we may determine the length of the line _AA_{1}_ for the given
+temperature _S_, and a given absorption _H_, of heat, during the first
+operation; and the length of _A_{2}A_{3}_ for the given lower
+temperature _T_, and the evolution of the same quantity of heat during
+the fourth operation: and the curves _A_{1}PA_{2}_, _A_{3}P′A_ may be
+drawn as graphical representations of actual observations. The figure
+being thus constructed, its area may be measured, and we are, therefore,
+in possession of a graphical method of determining the amount of
+mechanical effect to be obtained from any given thermal agency. As,
+however, it is merely the area of the figure which it is required to
+determine, it will not be necessary to be able to describe each of the
+curves _A_{1}PA_{2}_, _A_{3}P′A_, but it will be sufficient to know the
+difference of the abscissas corresponding to any equal ordinates in the
+two; and the following analytical method of completing the problem is
+the most convenient for leading to the actual numerical results.
+
+20. Draw any line _PP′_ parallel to _OX_, meeting the curvilinear sides
+of the quadrilateral in _P_ and _P′_. Let ξ denote the length of this
+line, and _p_ its distance from _OX_. The area of the figure, according
+to the integral calculus, will be denoted by the expression
+
+ ∫_{_p_{3}_} ^{_p_{1}_} ξ_dp_,
+
+where _p_{1}_ and _p_{3}_ (the limits of integration indicated according
+to Fourier’s notation) denote the lines _OA_ and _N_{3}A_{3}_, which
+represent respectively the pressures during the first and third
+operations. Now, by referring to the construction described above, we
+see that ξ is the difference of the volumes below the piston at
+corresponding instants of the second and fourth operations, or instants
+at which the saturated steam and the water in the cylinder have the same
+pressure _p_, and consequently the same temperature, which we may denote
+by _t_. Again, throughout the second operation the entire contents of
+the cylinder possess a greater amount of heat by _H_ units than during
+the fourth; and, therefore, at any instant of the second operation there
+is as much more steam as contains _H_ units of latent heat than at the
+corresponding instant of the fourth operation. Hence if _k_ denote the
+latent heat in a unit of saturated steam at the temperature _t_, the
+volume of the steam at the two corresponding instants must differ by
+(_H_)/(_k_). Now, if σ denote the ratio of the density of the steam to
+that of the water, the volume (_H_)/(_k_) of steam will be formed from
+the volume σ (_H_)/(_k_) of water; and consequently we have, for the
+difference of volumes of the entire contents at the corresponding
+instants,
+
+ ξ = (1 - σ)(_H_)/(_k_).
+
+Hence the expression for the area of the quadrilateral figure becomes
+
+ ∫^{_p_{1}_}_{_p_{3}_}(1 - σ)(_H_)/(_k_)_dp_.
+
+Now, σ, _k_, and _p_, being quantities which depend upon the
+temperature, may be considered as functions of _t_; and it will be
+convenient to modify the integral so as to make _t_ the independent
+variable. The limits will be from _t_ = _T_ to _t_ = _S_, and, if we
+denote by _M_ the value of the integral, we have the expression
+
+ _M_ = _H_ ∫_{_T_}^{_S_}(1 - σ)((_dp_/_dt_)/_k_)_dt_. (1)
+
+for the total amount of mechanical effect gained by the operations
+described above.
+
+21. If the interval of temperatures be extremely small,—so small that (1
+− σ)(_dp_)/(_dt_/_k_) will not sensibly vary for values of _t_ between
+_T_ and _S_,—the preceding expression becomes simply
+
+ _Μ_ = (1 - σ)(_dp_)/(_dt_)/(_k_). _Η_(_S_ - _Τ_). (2)
+
+This might, of course, have been obtained at once by supposing the
+breadth of the quadrilateral figure _AA_{1}A_{2}A_ to be extremely small
+compared with its length, and then taking for its area, as an
+approximate value, the product of the breadth into the line _AA_{1}_, or
+the line _A_{3}A_{2}_, or any line of intermediate magnitude.
+
+The expression (2) is rigorously correct for any interval _S_ − _T_, if
+the mean value of (1 − σ)((_dp_/_dt_)/_k_) for that interval be employed
+as the coefficient of _H_(_S_ − _T_).
+
+
+ CARNOT’S THEORY OF THE AIR-ENGINE.
+
+22. In the ideal air-engine imagined by Carnot four operations performed
+upon a mass of air or gas enclosed in a closed vessel of variable volume
+constitute a complete cycle, at the end of which the medium is left in
+its primitive physical condition; the construction being the same as
+that which was described above for the steam-engine, a body _A_,
+permanently retained at the temperature _S_, and _B_ at the temperature
+_T_; an impermeable stand _K_; and a cylinder and piston, which in this
+case contains a mass of air at the temperature _S_, instead of water in
+the liquid state, at the beginning and end of a cycle of operations. The
+four successive operations are conducted in the following manner:
+
+(1) The cylinder is laid on the body _A_, so that the air in it is kept
+at the temperature _S_; and the piston is allowed to rise, performing
+work.
+
+(2) The cylinder is placed on the impermeable stand _K_, so that its
+contents can neither gain nor lose heat, and the piston is allowed to
+rise farther, still performing work, till the temperature of the air
+sinks to _T_.
+
+(3) The cylinder is placed on _B_, so that the air is retained at the
+temperature _T_, and the piston is pushed down till the air gives out to
+the body _B_ as much heat as it had taken in from _A_, during the first
+operation.
+
+ [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. To eliminate the assumption of the materiality
+ of heat, make Professor James Thomson’s correction here also; as above
+ in § 15; or take Maxwell’s rearrangement of the cycle described in the
+ foot-note to § 15, p. 144.]
+
+(4) The cylinder is placed on _K_, so that no more heat can be taken in
+or given out, and the piston is pushed down to its primitive position.
+
+23. _At the end of the fourth operation the temperature must have
+reached its primitive value S, in virtue of_ CARNOT’S _axiom_.
+
+24. Here, again, as in the former case, we observe that work is
+performed by the piston during the first two operations; and during the
+third and fourth work is spent upon it, but to a less amount, since the
+pressure is on the whole less during the third and fourth operations
+than during the first and second, on account of the temperature being
+lower. Thus, at the end of a complete cycle of operations, mechanical
+effect has been obtained; and the thermal agency from which it is drawn
+is the taking of a certain quantity of heat from _A_, and _letting it
+down_, through the medium of the engine, to the body _B_ at a lower
+temperature.
+
+25. To estimate the actual amount of effect thus obtained, it will be
+convenient to consider the alterations of volume of the mass of air in
+the several operations as extremely small. We may afterwards pass by the
+integral calculus, or, practically, by summation to determine the
+mechanical effect whatever be the amplitudes of the different motions of
+the piston.
+
+26. Let _dq_ be the quantity of heat absorbed during the first
+operation, which is evolved again during the third; and let _dv_ be the
+corresponding augmentation of volume which takes place while the
+temperature remains constant, as it does during the first operation.[46]
+The diminution of volume in the third operation must be also equal to
+_dv_, or only differ from it by an infinitely small quantity of the
+second order. During the second operation we may suppose the volume to
+be increased by an infinitely small quantity φ; which will occasion a
+diminution of pressure and a diminution of temperature, denoted
+respectively by ω and τ. During the fourth operation there will be a
+diminution of volume and an increase of pressure and temperature, which
+can only differ, by infinitely small quantities of the second order,
+from the changes in the other direction, which took place in the second
+operation, and they also may, therefore, be denoted by φ, ω, and τ,
+respectively. The alteration of pressure during the first and third
+operations may at once be determined by means of Mariotte’s law, since
+in them the temperature remains constant. Thus, if, at the commencement
+of the cycle, the volume and pressure be _v_ and _p_, they will have
+become _v_ + _dv_ and _pv_/(_v_ + _dv_) at the end of the first
+operation. Hence the diminution of pressure during the first operation
+is _p_ − _pv_/(_v_ + _dv_) or _pdv_/(_v_ + _dv_) and therefore, if we
+neglect infinitely small quantities of the second order, we have
+_pdv_/_v_ for the diminution of pressure during the first operation;
+which to the same degree of approximation, will be equal to the increase
+of pressure during the third. If _t_ + τ and _t_ be taken to denote the
+superior and inferior limits of temperature, we shall thus have for the
+volume, the temperature, and the pressure at the commencements of the
+four successive operations, and at the end of the cycle, the following
+values respectively:
+
+ (1) _v_, _t_ + τ, _p_;
+ (2) _v_ + _dv_, _t_ + τ, _p_(1 − (_dv_)/(_v_));
+ (3) _v_ + _dv_ + φ, _t_, _p_(1 − (_dv_)/(_v_)) − ω;
+ (4) _v_ + φ, _t_, _p_ − ω;
+ (5) _v_, _t_ + τ, _p_.
+
+Taking the mean of the pressures at the beginning and end of each
+operation, we find
+
+ (1) _p_(1 − ½(_dv_)/(_v_)),
+
+ (2) _p_(1 − (_dv_)/(_v_)) − ½ω,
+
+ (3) _p_(1 − ½(_dv_)/(_v_))) − ω,
+
+ (4) _p_ − ½ω,
+
+which, as we are neglecting infinitely small quantities of the second
+order, will be the expressions for the mean pressures during the four
+successive operations. Now, the mechanical effect gained or spent,
+during any of the operations, will be found by multiplying the mean
+pressure by the increase or diminution of volume which takes place; and
+we thus find
+
+ (1) _p_(1 − ½(_dv_)/(_v_))_dv_,
+
+ (2) {_p_(1 − (_dv_)/(_v_)) − ½ω}φ,
+
+ (3) {_p_(1 − ½(_dv_)/(_v_)) − ω}_dv_,
+
+ (4) (_p_ − ½ω)φ.
+
+for the amounts gained during the first and second, and spent during the
+third and fourth operations; and hence, by addition and subtraction, we
+find
+
+ ω_dv_ − _p_φ(_dv_)/(_v_), or (_v_ω − _p_φ)(_dv_)/(_v_),
+
+for the aggregate amount of mechanical effect gained during the cycle of
+operations. It only remains for us to express this result in terms of
+_dq_ and τ, on which the given thermal agency depends. For this purpose
+we remark that φ and ω are alterations of volume and pressure which take
+place along with a change of temperature τ, and hence, by the laws of
+compressibility and expansion, we may establish a relation[47] between
+them in the following manner:
+
+Let _p_{0}_ be the pressure of the mass of air when reduced to the
+temperature zero, and confined in a volume _v_{0}_; then, whatever be
+_v_{0}_, the product _p_{0}v_{0}_ will, by the law of compressibility,
+remain constant; and, if the temperature be elevated from 0 to _t_ + τ,
+and the gas be allowed to expand freely without any change of pressure,
+its volume will be increased in the ratio of 1 to 1 + _E_(_t_ + τ),
+where _E_ is very nearly equal to .00366 (the Centigrade scale of the
+air-thermometer being referred to), whatever be the gas employed,
+according to the researches of Regnault and of Magnus on the expansion
+of gases by heat. If, now, the volume be altered arbitrarily with the
+temperature continually at _t_ + τ, the product of the pressure and
+volume will remain constant; and therefore we have
+
+ _pv_ = _p_{0}v_{0}_{1 + _E_(_t_ + τ)}.
+
+Similarly,
+
+ (_p_ − ω)(_v_ + φ) = _p_{0}v_{0}_{1 + _Et_}.
+
+Hence, by subtraction, we have
+
+ _v_ω − _p_φ + ωφ = _p_{0}v_{0}E_τ,
+
+or, neglecting the product ωφ,
+
+ _v_ω − _p_φ = _p_{0}v_{0}E_τ.
+
+Hence the preceding expression for mechanical effect, gained in the
+cycle of operations, becomes
+
+ _p_{0}v_{0}_. _E_τ . _dv_/_v_.
+
+Or, as we may otherwise express it,
+
+ (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_). _dq_. τ.
+
+Hence, if we denote by _M_ the mechanical effect due to _H_ units of
+heat descending through the same interval τ, which might be obtained by
+repeating the cycle of operations described above, (_H_)/(_dq_) times,
+we have
+
+ _M_ = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_). _H_τ. (3)
+
+27. If the _amplitudes_ of the operations had been finite, so as to give
+rise to an absorption of _H_ units of heat during the first operation,
+and a lowering of temperature from _S_ to _T_ during the second, the
+amount of work obtained would have been found to be expressed by means
+of a double definite integral thus:[48]
+
+ _M_ = ∫_{0}^{_H_} _dq_ ∫_{_T_}^{_S_} _dt_. (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_), ⎫
+ or ⎬. (4)
+ _M_ = _Ep_{0}v_{0}_ ∫_{0}^{_H_} ∫_{_T_}^{_S_} (1)/(_v_) (_dv_)/(_dq_). _dtdq_; ⎭
+
+this second form being sometimes more convenient.
+
+28. The preceding investigations, being founded on the approximate laws
+of compressibility and expansion (known as the law of Mariotte and
+Boyle, and the law of Dalton and Gay-Lussac), would require some slight
+modifications to adapt them to cases in which the gaseous medium
+employed is such as to present sensible deviations from those laws.
+Regnault’s very accurate experiments show that the deviations are
+insensible, or very nearly so, for the ordinary gases at ordinary
+pressures; although they may be considerable for a medium, such as
+sulphurous acid, or carbonic acid under high pressure, which approaches
+the physical condition of a vapor at saturation; and therefore, in
+general, and especially in practical applications to real air-engines,
+it will be unnecessary to make any modification in the expressions. In
+cases where it may be necessary, there is no difficulty in making the
+modifications, when the requisite data are supplied by experiment.
+
+29.[49] Either the steam-engine or the air-engine, according to the
+arrangements described above, gives all the mechanical effect that can
+possibly be obtained from the thermal agency employed. For it is clear
+that in either case the operations may be performed in the reverse
+order, with every thermal and mechanical effect reversed. Thus, in the
+steam-engine, we may commence by placing the cylinder on the impermeable
+stand, allow the piston to rise, performing work, to the position
+_E_{3}F_{3}_; we may then place it on the body _B_, and allow it to
+rise, performing work, till it reaches _E_{2}F_{2}_ after that the
+cylinder may be placed again on the impermeable stand, and the piston
+may be pushed down to _E_{1}F_{1}_; and, lastly, the cylinder being
+removed to the body _A_, the piston may be pushed down to its primitive
+position. In this inverse cycle of operations a certain amount of work
+has been spent, precisely equal, as we readily see, to the amount of
+mechanical effect gained in the direct cycle described above; and heat
+has been abstracted from _B_, and deposited in the body _A_, at a higher
+temperature, to an amount precisely equal to that which in the direct
+style was _let down_ from _A_ to _B_. Hence it is impossible to have an
+engine which will derive more mechanical effect from the same thermal
+agency than is obtained by the arrangement described above; since, if
+there could be such an engine, it might be employed to perform, as a
+part of its whole work, the inverse cycle of operations, upon an engine
+of the kind we have considered, and thus to continually restore the heat
+from _B_ to _A_, which has descended from _A_ to _B_ for working itself;
+so that we should have a complex engine, giving a residual amount of
+mechanical effect without any thermal agency, or alteration of
+materials, which is an impossibility in nature. The same reasoning is
+applicable to the air-engine; and we conclude, generally, that any two
+engines, constructed on the principles laid down above, whether
+steam-engines with different liquids, an air-engine and a steam-engine,
+or two air-engines with different gases, must derive the same amount of
+mechanical effect from the same thermal agency.
+
+30. Hence, by comparing the amounts of mechanical effect obtained by the
+steam-engine and the air-engine from the letting down of the _H_ units
+of heat from _A_ at the temperature (_t_ + τ) to _B_ at _t_, according
+to the expressions (2) and (3), we have
+
+ _M_ = (1 − σ)(_dp_)/(_kdt_). _H_τ = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_). _H_τ. (5)
+
+If we denote the coefficient of _Η_τ in these equal expressions by μ,
+which maybe called “Carnot’s coefficient,” we have
+
+ μ = (1 − σ)(_dp_)/(_kdt_) = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_), (6)
+
+and we deduce the following very remarkable conclusions:
+
+(1) For the saturated vapors of all different liquids, at the same
+temperature, the value of (1 − σ)(_dp_/_kdt_) must be the same.
+
+(2) For any different gaseous masses, at the same temperature, the value
+of _Ep_{0}v_{0}_/(_vdq_/_dv_) must be the same.
+
+(3) The values of these expressions for saturated vapors and for gases,
+at the same temperature, must be the same.
+
+31. No conclusion can be drawn _a priori_ regarding the values of this
+coefficient μ for different temperatures, which can only be determined,
+or compared, by experiment. The results of a great variety of
+experiments, in different branches of physical science (Pneumatics and
+Acoustics), cited by Carnot and by Clapeyron, indicate that the values
+of μ for low temperatures exceed the values for higher temperatures; a
+result amply verified by the continuous series of experiments performed
+by Regnault on the saturated vapor of water for all temperatures from 0°
+to 230°, which, as we shall see later, give values for μ gradually
+diminishing from the inferior limit to the superior limit of
+temperature. When, by observation, μ has been determined as a function
+of the temperature, the amount of mechanical effect, _M_, deducible from
+_H_ units of heat descending from a body at the temperature _S_ to a
+body at the temperature _T_, may be calculated from the expression
+
+ _M_ = _H_ ∫_{_S_}^{_T_} μ_dt_, (7)
+
+which is, in fact, what either of the equations (1) for the
+steam-engine, or (4) for the air-engine, becomes, when the notation μ,
+for Carnot’s multiplier, is introduced.
+
+The values of this integral may be practically obtained, in the most
+convenient manner, by first determining, from observation, the mean
+values of μ for the successive degrees of the thermometric scale, and
+then adding the values for all the degrees within the limits of the
+extreme temperatures _S_ and _T_.[50]
+
+32. The complete theoretical investigation of the motive power of heat
+is thus reduced to the experimental determination of the coefficient μ;
+and may be considered as perfect, when, by any series of experimental
+researches whatever, we can find a value of μ for every temperature
+within practical limits. The special character of the experimental
+researches, whether with reference to gases or with reference to vapors,
+necessary and sufficient for this object, is defined and restricted in
+the most precise manner, by the expressions (6) for μ, given above.
+
+33. The object of Regnault’s great work, referred to in the title of
+this paper, is the experimental determination of the various physical
+elements of the steam-engine; and when it is complete, it will furnish
+all the _data_ necessary for the calculation of μ. The valuable
+researches already published in a first part of that work make known the
+latent heat of a given weight, and the pressure, of saturated steam for
+all temperatures between 0° and 230° Cent. of the air-thermometer.
+Besides these data, however, the density of saturated vapor must be
+known, in order that _k_, the latent heat of a unit of volume, may be
+calculated from Regnault’s determination of the latent heat of a given
+weight.[51] Between the limits of 0° and 100°, it is probable, from
+various experiments which have been made, that the density of vapor
+follows very closely the simple laws which are so accurately verified by
+the ordinary gases;[52] and thus it may be calculated from Regnault’s
+table giving the pressure at any temperature within those limits.
+Nothing as yet is known with accuracy as to the density of saturated
+steam between 100 and 230°, and we must be contented at present to
+estimate it by calculation from Regnault’s table of pressures; although,
+when accurate experimental researches on the subject shall have been
+made, considerable deviations from the laws of Boyle and Dalton, on
+which this calculation is founded, may be discovered.
+
+34. Such are the experimental data on which the mean values of μ for the
+successive degrees of the air-thermometer, from 0 to 230°, at present
+laid before the Royal Society, is founded. The unit of length adopted is
+the English foot; the unit of weight, the pound; the unit of work, a
+“foot-pound;” and the unit of heat that quantity which, when added to a
+pound of water at 0°, will produce an elevation of 1° in temperature.
+The mean value of μ for any degree is found to a sufficient degree of
+approximation by taking, in place of σ, _dp_/_dt_ and _k_; in the
+expression
+
+ (1 − σ). (_dp_)/(_kdt_);
+
+the mean values of those elements; or, what is equivalent to the
+corresponding accuracy of approximation, by taking, in place of σ and
+_k_ respectively, the mean of the values of those elements for the
+limits of temperature, and in place of _dp_/_dt_, the difference of the
+values of _p_, at the same limits.
+
+35. In Regnault’s work (at the end of the eighth memoir), a table of the
+pressures of saturated steam for the successive temperatures 0°, 1°,
+2°, ... 230°, expressed in millimetres of mercury, is given. On account
+of the units adopted in this paper, these pressures must be estimated in
+pounds on the square foot, which we may do by multiplying each number of
+millimetres by 2.7896, the weight in pounds of a sheet of mercury, one
+millimetre thick, and a square foot in area.
+
+36. The value of _k_, the latent heat of a cubic foot, for any
+temperature _t_, is found from λ, the latent heat of a pound of
+saturated steam, by the equation
+
+ _k_ = (_p_)/(760). (1 + .00366 × 100)/(1 + .00366 × _t_). × .036869[53] . λ,
+
+where _p_ denotes the pressure in millimetres, and λ the latent heat of
+a pound of saturated steam; the values of λ being calculated by the
+empirical formula[54]
+
+ λ = (606.5 + 0.305_t_) − (_t_ + .00002_t_^2 + 0.0000003_t_^3),
+
+given by Regnault as representing, between the extreme limits of his
+observations, the latent heat of a unit weight of saturated steam.
+
+
+ EXPLANATION OF TABLE I.
+
+37. The mean values of μ for the first, for the eleventh, for the
+twenty-first, and so on, up to the 231st[55] degree of the
+air-thermometer, have been calculated in the manner explained in the
+preceding paragraphs. These, and interpolated results, which must agree
+with what would have been obtained, by direct calculation from
+Regnault’s data, to three significant places of figures (and even for
+the temperatures between 0° and 100°, the experimental data do not
+justify us in relying on any of the results to a greater degree of
+accuracy), are exhibited in Table I.
+
+_To find the amount of mechanical effect due to a unit of heat,
+descending from a body at a temperature S to a body at T, if these
+numbers be integers, we have merely to add the values of μ in Table I.
+corresponding to the successive numbers._
+
+ _T_ + 1, _T_ + 2, ... _S_ − 2, _S_ − 1.
+
+
+ EXPLANATION OF TABLE II.
+
+38. The calculation of the mechanical effect, in any case, which might
+always be effected in the manner described in § 37 (with the proper
+modification for fractions of degrees, when necessary), is much
+simplified by the use of Table II., where the first number of Table I.,
+the sum of the first and second, the sum of the first three, the sum of
+the first four, and so on, are successively exhibited. The sums thus
+tabulated are the values of the integrals
+
+ ∫_{0}^1 μ_dt_, ∫_{0}^2 μ_dt_, ∫_{0}^3 μ_dt_, ... ∫_{0}^{231} μ_dt_;
+
+and, if we denote ∫_{0}^t μ_dt_ by the letter _M_, Table II. may be
+regarded as a table of the value of _M_.
+
+_To find the amount of mechanical effect due to a unit of heat
+descending from a body at a temperature S to a body at T, if these
+numbers be integers, we have merely to subtract the value of M, for the
+number T, from the value for the number S, given in Table II._
+
+ TABLE I.[56]
+ MEAN VALUES OF Μ FOR THE SUCCESSIVE DEGREES OF THE AIR-THERMOMETER FROM
+ 0° TO 230°.
+ ───────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────
+ ° │ μ
+ ───────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────
+ 1│ 4.960
+ 2│ 4.946
+ 3│ 4.932
+ 4│ 4.918
+ 5│ 4.905
+ 6│ 4.892
+ 7│ 4.878
+ 8│ 4.865
+ 9│ 4.852
+ 10│ 4.839
+ 11│ 4.826
+ 12│ 4.812
+ 13│ 4.799
+ 14│ 4.786
+ 15│ 4.773
+ 16│ 4.760
+ 17│ 4.747
+ 18│ 4.735
+ 19│ 4.722
+ 20│ 4.709
+ 21│ 4.697
+ 22│ 4.684
+ 23│ 4.672
+ 24│ 4.659
+ 25│ 4.646
+ 26│ 4.634
+ 27│ 4.621
+ 28│ 4.609
+ 29│ 4.596
+ 30│ 4.584
+ 31│ 4.572
+ 32│ 4.559
+ 33│ 4.547
+ 34│ 4.535
+ 35│ 4.522
+ 36│ 4.510
+ 37│ 4.498
+ 38│ 4.486
+ 39│ 4.474
+ 40│ 4.462
+ 41│ 4.450
+ 42│ 4.438
+ 43│ 4.426
+ 44│ 4.414
+ 45│ 4.402
+ 46│ 4.390
+ 47│ 4.378
+ 48│ 4.366
+ 49│ 4.355
+ 50│ 4.343
+ 51│ 4.331
+ 52│ 4.319
+ 53│ 4.308
+ 54│ 4.296
+ 55│ 4.285
+ 56│ 4.273
+ 57│ 4.262
+ 58│ 4.250
+ 59│ 4.239
+ 60│ 4.227
+ 61│ 4.216
+ 62│ 4.205
+ 63│ 4.194
+ 64│ 4.183
+ 65│ 4.172
+ 66│ 4.161
+ 67│ 4.150
+ 68│ 4.140
+ 69│ 4.129
+ 70│ 4.119
+ 71│ 4.109
+ 72│ 4.098
+ 73│ 4.088
+ 74│ 4.078
+ 75│ 4.067
+ 76│ 4.057
+ 77│ 4.047
+ 78│ 4.037
+ 79│ 4.028
+ 80│ 4.018
+ 81│ 4.009
+ 82│ 3.999
+ 83│ 3.990
+ 84│ 3.980
+ 85│ 3.971
+ 86│ 3.961
+ 87│ 3.952
+ 88│ 3.943
+ 89│ 3.934
+ 90│ 3.925
+ 91│ 3.916
+ 92│ 3.907
+ 93│ 3.898
+ 94│ 3.889
+ 95│ 3.880
+ 96│ 3.871
+ 97│ 3.863
+ 98│ 3.854
+ 99│ 3.845
+ 100│ 3.837
+ 101│ 3.829
+ 102│ 3.820
+ 103│ 3.812
+ 104│ 3.804
+ 105│ 3.796
+ 106│ 3.788
+ 107│ 3.780
+ 108│ 3.772
+ 109│ 3.764
+ 110│ 3.757
+ 111│ 3.749
+ 112│ 3.741
+ 113│ 3.734
+ 114│ 3.726
+ 115│ 3.719
+ 116│ 3.712
+ 117│ 3.704
+ 118│ 3.697
+ 119│ 3.689
+ 120│ 3.682
+ 121│ 3.675
+ 122│ 3.668
+ 123│ 3.661
+ 124│ 3.654
+ 125│ 3.647
+ 126│ 3.640
+ 127│ 3.633
+ 128│ 3.627
+ 129│ 3.620
+ 130│ 3.614
+ 131│ 3.607
+ 132│ 3.601
+ 133│ 3.594
+ 134│ 3.586
+ 135│ 3.579
+ 136│ 3.573
+ 137│ 3.567
+ 138│ 3.561
+ 139│ 3.555
+ 140│ 3.549
+ 141│ 3.543
+ 142│ 3.537
+ 143│ 3.531
+ 144│ 3.525
+ 145│ 3.519
+ 146│ 3.513
+ 147│ 3.507
+ 148│ 3.501
+ 149│ 3.495
+ 150│ 3.490
+ 151│ 3.484
+ 152│ 3.479
+ 153│ 3.473
+ 154│ 3.468
+ 155│ 3.462
+ 156│ 3.457
+ 157│ 3.451
+ 158│ 3.446
+ 159│ 3.440
+ 160│ 3.435
+ 161│ 3.430
+ 162│ 3.424
+ 163│ 3.419
+ 164│ 3.414
+ 165│ 3.409
+ 166│ 3.404
+ 167│ 3.399
+ 168│ 3.394
+ 169│ 3.389
+ 170│ 3.384
+ 171│ 3.380
+ 172│ 3.375
+ 173│ 3.370
+ 174│ 3.365
+ 175│ 3.361
+ 176│ 3.356
+ 177│ 3.351
+ 178│ 3.346
+ 179│ 3.342
+ 180│ 3.337
+ 181│ 3.332
+ 182│ 3.328
+ 183│ 3.323
+ 184│ 3.318
+ 185│ 3.314
+ 186│ 3.309
+ 187│ 3.304
+ 188│ 3.300
+ 189│ 3.295
+ 190│ 3.291
+ 191│ 3.287
+ 192│ 3.282
+ 193│ 3.278
+ 194│ 3.274
+ 195│ 3.269
+ 196│ 3.265
+ 197│ 3.261
+ 198│ 3.257
+ 199│ 3.253
+ 200│ 3.249
+ 201│ 3.245
+ 202│ 3.241
+ 203│ 3.237
+ 204│ 3.233
+ 205│ 3.229
+ 206│ 3.225
+ 207│ 3.221
+ 208│ 3.217
+ 209│ 3.213
+ 210│ 3.210
+ 211│ 3.206
+ 212│ 3.202
+ 213│ 3.198
+ 214│ 3.195
+ 215│ 3.191
+ 216│ 3.188
+ 217│ 3.184
+ 218│ 3.180
+ 219│ 3.177
+ 220│ 3.173
+ 221│ 3.169
+ 222│ 3.165
+ 223│ 3.162
+ 224│ 3.158
+ 225│ 3.155
+ 226│ 3.151
+ 227│ 3.148
+ 228│ 3.144
+ 229│ 3.141
+ 230│ 3.137
+ 231│ 3.134
+ ───────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────
+
+ TABLE II.
+ MECHANICAL EFFECT IN FOOT-POUNDS DUE TO A THERMIC UNIT CENTIGRADE,
+ PASSING FROM A BODY, AT ANY TEMPERATURE LESS THAN 230° TO A BODY AT 0°.
+ ───────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────
+ Superior Limit of Temperature. │ Mechanical Effect.
+ ───────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────
+ ° │ Ft.-Pounds.
+ │
+ 1│ 4.960
+ 2│ 9.906
+ 3│ 14.838
+ 4│ 19.756
+ 5│ 24.661
+ 6│ 29.553
+ 7│ 34.431
+ 8│ 39.296
+ 9│ 44.148
+ 10│ 48.987
+ 11│ 53.813
+ 12│ 58.625
+ 13│ 63.424
+ 14│ 68.210
+ 15│ 72.983
+ 16│ 77.743
+ 17│ 82.490
+ 18│ 87.225
+ 19│ 91.947
+ 20│ 96.656
+ 21│ 101.353
+ 22│ 106.037
+ 23│ 110.709
+ 24│ 115.368
+ 25│ 120.014
+ 26│ 124.648
+ 27│ 129.269
+ 28│ 133.878
+ 29│ 138.474
+ 30│ 143.058
+ 31│ 147.630
+ 32│ 152.189
+ 33│ 156.736
+ 34│ 161.271
+ 35│ 165.793
+ 36│ 170.303
+ 37│ 174.801
+ 38│ 179.287
+ 39│ 183.761
+ 40│ 188.223
+ 41│ 192.673
+ 42│ 197.111
+ 43│ 201.537
+ 44│ 205.951
+ 45│ 210.353
+ 46│ 214.743
+ 47│ 219.121
+ 48│ 223.487
+ 49│ 227.842
+ 50│ 232.185
+ 51│ 236.516
+ 52│ 240.835
+ 53│ 245.143
+ 54│ 249.439
+ 55│ 253.724
+ 56│ 257.997
+ 57│ 262.259
+ 58│ 266.509
+ 59│ 270.748
+ 60│ 274.975
+ 61│ 279.191
+ 62│ 283.396
+ 63│ 287.590
+ 64│ 291.773
+ 65│ 295.945
+ 66│ 300.106
+ 67│ 304.256
+ 68│ 308.396
+ 69│ 312.525
+ 70│ 316.644
+ 71│ 320.752
+ 72│ 324.851
+ 73│ 328.939
+ 74│ 333.017
+ 75│ 337.084
+ 76│ 341.141
+ 77│ 345.188
+ 78│ 349.225
+ 79│ 353.253
+ 80│ 357.271
+ 81│ 361.280
+ 82│ 365.279
+ 83│ 369.269
+ 84│ 373.249
+ 85│ 377.220
+ 86│ 381.181
+ 87│ 385.133
+ 88│ 389.076
+ 89│ 393.010
+ 90│ 396.935
+ 91│ 400.851
+ 92│ 404.758
+ 93│ 408.656
+ 94│ 412.545
+ 95│ 416.425
+ 96│ 420.296
+ 97│ 424.159
+ 98│ 428.013
+ 99│ 431.858
+ 100│ 435.695
+ 101│ 439.524
+ 102│ 443.344
+ 103│ 447.156
+ 104│ 450.960
+ 105│ 454.756
+ 106│ 458.544
+ 107│ 462.324
+ 108│ 466.096
+ 109│ 469.860
+ 110│ 473.617
+ 111│ 477.366
+ 112│ 481.107
+ 113│ 484.841
+ 114│ 488.567
+ 115│ 492.286
+ 116│ 495.998
+ 117│ 499.702
+ 118│ 503.399
+ 119│ 507.088
+ 120│ 510.770
+ 121│ 514.445
+ 122│ 518.113
+ 123│ 521.174
+ 124│ 525.428
+ 125│ 529.075
+ 126│ 532.715
+ 127│ 536.348
+ 128│ 539.975
+ 129│ 543.595
+ 130│ 547.209
+ 131│ 550.816
+ 132│ 554.417
+ 133│ 558.051
+ 134│ 561.597
+ 135│ 565.176
+ 136│ 568.749
+ 137│ 572.316
+ 138│ 575.877
+ 139│ 579.432
+ 140│ 582.981
+ 141│ 586.524
+ 142│ 590.061
+ 143│ 593.592
+ 144│ 597.117
+ 145│ 600.636
+ 146│ 604.099
+ 147│ 607.656
+ 148│ 611.157
+ 149│ 614.652
+ 150│ 618.142
+ 151│ 621.626
+ 152│ 625.105
+ 153│ 628.578
+ 154│ 632.046
+ 155│ 635.508
+ 156│ 638.965
+ 157│ 642.416
+ 158│ 645.862
+ 159│ 649.302
+ 160│ 652.737
+ 161│ 656.167
+ 162│ 659.591
+ 163│ 663.010
+ 164│ 666.424
+ 165│ 669.833
+ 166│ 673.237
+ 167│ 676.636
+ 168│ 680.030
+ 169│ 683.419
+ 170│ 686.803
+ 171│ 690.183
+ 172│ 693.558
+ 173│ 696.928
+ 174│ 700.293
+ 175│ 703.654
+ 176│ 707.010
+ 177│ 710.361
+ 178│ 713.707
+ 179│ 717.049
+ 180│ 720.386
+ 181│ 723.718
+ 182│ 727.046
+ 183│ 730.369
+ 184│ 733.687
+ 185│ 737.001
+ 186│ 740.310
+ 187│ 743.614
+ 188│ 746.914
+ 189│ 750.209
+ 190│ 753.500
+ 191│ 756.787
+ 192│ 760.069
+ 193│ 763.347
+ 194│ 766.621
+ 195│ 769.890
+ 196│ 773.155
+ 197│ 776.416
+ 198│ 779.673
+ 199│ 782.926
+ 200│ 786.175
+ 201│ 789.420
+ 202│ 792.661
+ 203│ 795.898
+ 204│ 799.131
+ 205│ 802.360
+ 206│ 805.585
+ 207│ 808.806
+ 208│ 812.023
+ 209│ 815.236
+ 210│ 818.446
+ 211│ 821.652
+ 212│ 824.854
+ 213│ 828.052
+ 214│ 831.247
+ 215│ 834.438
+ 216│ 837.626
+ 217│ 840.810
+ 218│ 843.990
+ 219│ 847.167
+ 220│ 850.340
+ 221│ 853.509
+ 222│ 856.674
+ 223│ 859.836
+ 224│ 862.994
+ 225│ 866.149
+ 226│ 869.300
+ 227│ 872.448
+ 228│ 875.592
+ 229│ 878.733
+ 230│ 881.870
+ 231│ 885.004
+ ───────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────
+
+
+ _Note on the curves described in Clapeyron’s graphical method of
+ exhibiting Carnot’s Theory of the Steam-Engine._
+
+39. At any instant when the temperature of the water and vapor is _t_,
+during the fourth operation (see above, § 16, and suppose, for the sake
+of simplicity, that at the beginning of the first and at the end of the
+fourth operation the piston is absolutely in contact with the surface of
+the water), the latent heat of the vapor must be precisely equal to the
+amount of heat that would be necessary to raise the temperature of the
+whole mass, if in the liquid state, from _t_ to _S_.[57] Hence, if _v′_
+denote the volume of the vapor, _c_ the mean capacity for heat of a
+pound of water between the temperatures _S_ and _t_, and _W_ the weight
+of the entire mass, in pounds, we have
+
+ _kv′_ = _c_(_S_ − _t_)_W_.
+
+Again, the circumstances during the second operation are such that the
+mass of liquid and vapor possesses _H_ units of heat more than during
+the fourth; and consequently, at the instant of the second operation,
+when the temperature is _t_, the volume _v_ of the vapor will exceed
+_v′_ by an amount of which the latent heat is _H_, so that we have
+
+ _v_ = _v′_ + (_H_)/(_k_).
+
+40. Now, at any instant, the volume between the piston and its primitive
+position is less than the actual volume of vapor by the volume of the
+water evaporated. Hence, if _x_ and _x′_ denote the abscissæ of the
+curve at the instants of the second and fourth operations respectively,
+when the temperature is _t_, we have
+
+ _x_ = _v_ − σ_v_, _x′_ = _v′_ − σ_v′_,
+
+and, therefore, by the preceding equations,
+
+ _x_ = (1 − σ)/(_k_){_H_ + _c_(_S_ − _t_)_W_}, (_a_)
+ _x′_ = (1 − σ)/(_k_)_c_(_S_ − _t_)_W_. (_b_)
+ These equations, along with _y_ = _y′_ = _p_, (_c_)
+
+enable us to calculate, from the data supplied by Regnault, the abscissa
+and ordinate for each of the curves described above (§ 17) corresponding
+to any assumed temperature _t_. After the explanations of §§ 33, 34, 35,
+36, it is only necessary to add that _c_ is a quantity of which the
+value is very nearly unity, and would be exactly so were the capacity of
+water for heat the same at every temperature as it is between 0° and 1°;
+and that the value of _c_(_S_ − _t_), for any assigned values of _S_ and
+_t_, is found, by subtracting the number corresponding to _t_ from the
+number corresponding to _s_, in the column headed “_Nombre des unités de
+chaleur abandonnées par un kilogramme d’eau en descendant de T° à 0°_,”
+of the last table (at the end of the tenth memoir) of Regnault’s work.
+By giving _S_ the value 230°, and by substituting successively 220, 210,
+200, etc., for _t_, values for _x_, _y_, _x′_, _y′_, have been found,
+which are exhibited in the table opposite.
+
+ ─────────────┬─────────────────┬────────────────────────┬─────────────
+ Temperatures.│ Volumes to be │ Volumes from the │Pressures of
+ │described by the │ primitive position of │ saturated
+ │ piston, to │ the piston to those │ steam, in
+ │ complete the │occupied at instants of │pounds on the
+ │fourth operation.│ the second operation. │square foot.
+ _t_ │ _x′_ │ _x_ │_y_ = _y′_ =
+ │ │ │ _p_
+ ─────────────┼─────────────────┼────────────────────────┼─────────────
+ 0°│ 1269. _W_ │_x′_ + 5.409._H_ │ 12.832
+ 10│ 639.6. _W_ │_x′_ + 2.847._H_ │ 25.567
+ 20│ 337.3. _W_ │_x′_ + 1.571._H_ │ 48.514
+ 30│ 185.5. _W_ │_x′_ + .9062._H_ │ 88.007
+ 40│ 105.9. _W_ │_x′_ + .5442._H_ │ 153.167
+ 50│ 62.62. _W_ │_x′_ + .3392._H_ │ 256.595
+ 60│ 38.19. _W_ │_x′_ + .2188._H_ │ 415.070
+ 70│ 21.94. _W_ │_x′_ + .1456._H_ │ 650.240
+ 80│ 15.38. _W_ │_x′_ + .09962._H_ │ 989.318
+ 90│ 10.09. _W_ │_x′_ + .06994._H_ │ 1465.80
+ 100│ 6.744. _W_ │_x′_ + .05026._H_ │ 2120.11
+ 110│ 4.578. _W_ │_x′_ + .03688._H_ │ 2999.87
+ 120│ 3.141. _W_ │_x′_ + .02758._H_ │ 4160.10
+ 130│ 2.176. _W_ │_x′_ + .02098._H_ │ 5663.70
+ 140│ 1.519. _W_ │_x′_ + .01625._H_ │ 7581.15
+ 150│ 1.058. _W_ │_x′_ + .01271._H_ │ 9990.26
+ 160│ 0.7369. _W_ │_x′_ + .01010._H_ │ 12976.2
+ 170│ 0.5085. _W_ │_x′_ + .008116._H_ │ 16630.7
+ 180│ 0.3454. _W_ │_x′_ + .006592._H_ │ 21051.5
+ 190│ 0.2267. _W_ │_x′_ + .005406._H_ │ 26341.5
+ 200│ 0.1409. _W_ │_x′_ + .004472._H_ │ 32607.7
+ 210│ 0.0784. _W_ │_x′_ + .003729._H_ │ 39960.7
+ 220│ 0.3310. _W_ │_x′_ + .003130._H_ │ 48512.4
+ 230│ 0 │_x′_ + .002643._H_ │ 58376.6
+ ─────────────┴─────────────────┴────────────────────────┴─────────────
+
+
+ _Appendix._
+
+ (Read April 30, 1849.)
+
+41. In p. 30 some conclusions drawn by Carnot from his general reasoning
+were noticed; according to which it appears, that if the value of μ for
+any temperature is known, certain information may be derived with
+reference to the saturated vapor of any liquid whatever, and, with
+reference to any gaseous mass, without the necessity of experimenting
+upon the specific medium considered. Nothing in the whole range of
+Natural Philosophy is more remarkable than the establishment of general
+laws by such a process of reasoning. We have seen, however, that doubt
+may exist with reference to the truth of the axiom on which the entire
+theory is founded, and it therefore becomes more than a matter of mere
+curiosity to put the inferences deduced from it to the test of
+experience. The importance of doing so was clearly appreciated by
+Carnot; and, with such data as he had from the researches of various
+experimenters, he tried his conclusions. Some very remarkable
+propositions which he derives from his theory coincide with Dulong and
+Petit’s subsequently discovered experimental laws with reference to the
+heat developed by the compression of a gas; and the experimental
+verification is therefore in this case (so far as its accuracy could be
+depended upon) decisive. In other respects, the data from experiment
+were insufficient, although, so far as they were available as tests,
+they were confirmatory of the theory.
+
+42. The recent researches of Regnault add immensely to the experimental
+data available for this object, by giving us the means of determining
+with considerable accuracy the values of μ within a very wide range of
+temperature, and so affording a trustworthy standard for the comparison
+of isolated results at different temperatures, derived from observations
+in various branches of physical science.
+
+In the first section of this Appendix the theory is tested, and shown to
+be confirmed by the comparison of the values of μ found above, with
+those obtained by Carnot and Clapeyron from the observations of various
+experimenters on air, and the vapors of different liquids. In the second
+and third sections some striking confirmations of the theory arising
+from observations by Dulong, on the specific heat of gases, and from Mr.
+Joule’s experiments on the heat developed by the compression of air, are
+pointed out; and in conclusion, the actual methods of obtaining
+mechanical effect from heat are briefly examined with reference to their
+economy.
+
+
+I. _On the values of μ derived by Carnot and Clapeyron from observations
+ on Air, and on the Vapors of various liquids._
+
+43. In Carnot’s work, pp. 80–82, the mean value of μ between 0° and 1°
+is derived from the experiments of Delaroche and Bérard on the specific
+heat of gases, by a process approximately equivalent to the calculation
+of the value of (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(_vdq_/_dv_) for the temperature ½°.
+There are also, in the same work, determinations of the values of μ from
+observations on the vapors of alcohol and water; but a table given in M.
+Clapeyron’s paper, of the values of μ derived from the data supplied by
+various experiments with reference to the vapors of ether, alcohol,
+water, and oil of turpentine, at the respective boiling-points of these
+liquids, affords us the means of comparison through a more extensive
+range of temperature. In the cases of alcohol and water, these results
+ought of course to agree with those of Carnot. There are, however,
+slight discrepancies which must be owing to the uncertainty of the
+experimental data.[58] In the opposite table, Carnot’s results with
+reference to air, and Clapeyron’s results with reference to the four
+different liquids, are exhibited, and compared with the values of μ
+which have been given above (Table I.) for the same temperatures, as
+derived from Regnault’s observations on the vapor of water.
+
+ ────────────┬──────────────┬──────────────┬──────────────┬─────────────
+ │ │ │ Values of μ │
+ │ │ │ deduced from │
+ Names of the│ │ │ Regnault’s │
+ Media. │Temperatures. │ Values of μ. │Observations. │Differences.
+ ────────────┼──────────────┼──────────────┼──────────────┼─────────────
+ │ ° │ (Carnot) │ │
+ Air │ 0.5│ 4.377│ 4.960│ .383
+ Sulphuric │ (Boil. pt.)│ (Clapeyron)│ │
+ Ether │ 35.5│ 4.478│ 4.510│ .032
+ Alcohol │ 78.8│ 3.963│ 4.030│ .071
+ Water │ 100│ 3.658│ 3.837│ .179
+ Essence of │ │ │ │
+ Turpentine│ 156.8│ 3.530│ 3.449│ −.081
+ ────────────┴──────────────┴──────────────┴──────────────┴─────────────
+
+44. It may be observed that the discrepancies between the results
+founded on the experimental data supplied by the different observers
+with reference to water at the boiling-point, are greater than those
+which are presented between the results deduced from any of the other
+liquids, and water at the other temperatures; and we may therefore feel
+perfectly confident that the verification is complete to the extent of
+accuracy of the observations.[59] The considerable discrepancy presented
+by Carnot’s result deduced from experiments on air, is not to be
+wondered at when we consider the very uncertain nature of his data.
+
+45. The fact of the gradual decrease of μ through a very extensive range
+of temperature, being indicated both by Regnault’s continuous series of
+experiments and by the very varied experiment on different media, and in
+different branches of Physical Science, must be considered as a striking
+verification of the theory.
+
+
+ II. _On the Heat developed by the Compression of Air._
+
+46. Let a mass of air, occupying initially a given volume _V_, under a
+pressure _P_, at a temperature _t_, be compressed to a less volume _V′_,
+and allowed to part with heat until it sinks to its primitive
+temperature _t_. The quantity of heat which is evolved may be
+determined, according to Carnot’s theory, when the particular value of
+μ, corresponding to the temperature _t_, is known. For, by § 30,
+equation (6), we have
+
+ _v_(_dq_)/(_dv_) = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(μ),
+
+where _dq_ is the quantity of heat absorbed, when the volume is allowed
+to increase from _v_ to _v_ + _dv_; or the quantity evolved by the
+reverse operation. Hence we deduce
+
+ _dq_ = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(μ) (_dv_)/(_v_). (8)
+
+Now, (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(μ) is constant, since the temperature remains
+unchanged; and therefore we may at once integrate the second number. By
+taking it between the limits _V′_ and _V_, we thus find
+
+ _Q_ = (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(μ) log (_V_)/(_V′_)[60], (9)
+
+where _Q_ denotes the required amount of heat evolved by the compression
+from _V_ to _P′_. This expression may be modified by employing the
+equations _PV_ = _P′V′_ = _p_{0}v_{0}_(1 + _Et_); and we thus obtain
+
+ _Q_ = (_EPV_)/(μ(1 + _Et_)) log (_V_)/(_V′_) = (_EP′V′_)/(μ(1 + _Et_)) log (_V_)/(_V′_). (10)
+
+From this result we draw the following conclusion:
+
+47. _Equal volumes of all elastic fluids, taken at the same temperature
+and pressure, when compressed to smaller equal volumes, disengage equal
+quantities of heat._
+
+This extremely remarkable theorem of Carnot’s was independently laid
+down as a probable experimental law by Dulong, in his “_Recherches sur
+la Chaleur Spécifique des Fluides Élastiques_,” and it therefore affords
+a most powerful confirmation of the theory.[61]
+
+48. In some very remarkable researches made by Mr. Joule upon the heat
+developed by the compression of air, the quantity of heat produced in
+different experiments has been ascertained with reference to the amount
+of work spent in the operation. To compare the results which he has
+obtained with the indications of theory, let us determine the amount of
+work necessary actually to produce the compression considered above.
+
+49. In the first place, to compress the gas from the volume _v_ + _dv_
+to _v_, the work required is _pdv_, or, since
+
+ _pv_ = _p_{0}v_{0}_(1 + _Et_),
+ _p_{0}v_{0}_(1 + _Et_)(_dv_)/(_v_).
+
+Hence, if we denote by _W_ the total amount of work necessary to produce
+the compression from _V_ to _V′_, we obtain, by integration,
+
+ _W_ = _p_{0}v_{0}_(1 + _Et_) log (_V_)/(_V′_).
+
+Comparing this with the expression above, we find
+
+ (_W_)/(_Q_) = (μ(1 + _Et_))/(_E_). (11)
+
+50. Hence we infer that—
+
+(1) The amount of work necessary to produce a unit of heat by the
+compression of a gas is the same for all gases at the same temperature;
+
+(2) And that the quantity of heat evolved in all circumstances, when the
+temperature of the gas is given, is proportional to the amount of work
+spent in the compression.
+
+51. The expression for the amount of work necessary to produce a unit of
+heat is
+
+ μ(1 + _Et_)/(_E_),
+
+and therefore Regnault’s experiments on steam are available to enable us
+to calculate its value for any temperature. By finding the values of μ
+at 0°, 10°, 20°, etc., from Table I., and by substituting successively
+the values 0, 10, 20, etc., for _t_, the following results have been
+obtained:
+
+ TABLE OF THE VALUES OF (μ(1 + _Et_))/(_E_).
+ ───────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────
+ Work requisite to produce a unit of│ Temperature of the Gas.
+ Heat by the compression of a Gas. │
+ ───────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────
+ Ft.-pounds. │ °
+ 1357.1 │ 0
+ 1368.7 │ 10
+ 1379.0 │ 20
+ 1388.0 │ 30
+ 1395.7 │ 40
+ 1401.8 │ 50
+ 1406.7 │ 60
+ 1412.0 │ 70
+ 1417.6 │ 80
+ 1424.0 │ 90
+ 1430.6 │ 100
+ 1438.2 │ 110
+ 1446.4 │ 120
+ 1455.8 │ 130
+ 1465.3 │ 140
+ 1475.8 │ 150
+ 1489.2 │ 160
+ 1499.0 │ 170
+ 1511.3 │ 180
+ 1523.5 │ 190
+ 1536.5 │ 200
+ 1550.2 │ 210
+ 1564.0 │ 220
+ 1577.8 │ 230
+ ───────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────
+
+Mr. Joule’s experiments were all conducted at temperatures from 50° to
+about 60° Fahr., or from 10° to 16° Cent.; and consequently, although
+some irregular differences in the results, attributable to errors of
+observation inseparable from experiments of such a very difficult
+nature, are presented, no regular dependence on the temperature is
+observable. From three separate series of experiments, Mr. Joule deduces
+the following numbers for the work, in foot-pounds, necessary to produce
+a thermic unit Fahrenheit by the compression of a gas.
+
+ 820, 814, 760.
+
+Multiplying these by 1.8, to get the corresponding number for a thermic
+unit Centigrade, we
+
+ 1476, 1465, and 1368.
+
+The largest of these numbers is most nearly conformable with Mr. Joule’s
+views of the relation between such experimental “equivalents,” and
+others which he obtained in his electro-magnetic researches; but the
+smallest agrees almost perfectly with the indications of Carnot’s
+theory; from which, as exhibited in the preceding table, we should
+expect, from the temperature in Mr. Joule’s experiments, to find a
+number between 1369 and 1379 as the result.[62]
+
+
+
+
+ III. _On the Specific Heats of Gases._
+
+
+52. The following proposition is proved by Carnot as a deduction from
+his general theorem regarding the specific heats of gases.
+
+_The excess of specific heat[63] under a constant pressure above the
+specific heat at a constant volume, is the same for all gases at the
+same temperature and pressure._
+
+53. To prove this proposition, and to determine an expression for the
+“excess” mentioned in its enunciation, let us suppose a unit of volume
+of a gas to be elevated in temperature by a small amount, τ. The
+quantity of heat required to do this will be _A_τ, if _A_ denote the
+specific heat at a constant volume. Let us next allow the gas to expand
+without going down in temperature, until its pressure becomes reduced to
+its primitive value. The expansion which will take place will be
+(_E_τ)/(1 + _Et_), if the temperature be denoted by _t_; and hence, by
+(8), the quantity of heat that must be supplied, to prevent any lowering
+of temperature, will be
+
+ (_Ep_{0}v_{0}_)/(μ) . (_E_τ)/(1 + _Et_), or (_E^2p_)/(μ(1 + _Et_)^2)τ.
+
+Hence the total quantity added is equal to
+
+ _Α_τ + (_E^2p_)/(μ(1 + _Et_)^2)τ.
+
+But, since _B_ denotes the specific heat under constant pressure, the
+quantity of heat requisite to bring the gas into this state, from its
+primitive condition, is equal to _Β_τ, and hence we have
+
+ _B_ = _A_ + (_E^2p_)/(μ(1 + _Et_)^2). (12)
+
+
+ IV. _Comparison of the Relative Advantages of the Air-engine and
+ Steam-engine._
+
+54. In the use of water-wheels for motive power, the economy of the
+engine depends not only upon the excellence of its adaptation for
+actually transmitting any given quantity of water through it, and
+producing the equivalent of work, but upon turning to account the entire
+available fall; so, as we are taught by Carnot, the object of a
+thermodynamic engine is to economize in the best possible way the
+transference of all the heat evolved, from bodies at the temperature of
+the source, to bodies at the lowest temperature at which the heat can be
+discharged. With reference, then, to any engine of the kind, there will
+be two points to be considered:
+
+(1) The extent of the _fall_ utilized.
+
+(2) The economy of the engine, with the fall which it actually uses.
+
+55. In the first respect, the air-engine, as Carnot himself points out,
+has a vast advantage over the steam-engine; since the temperature of the
+hot part of the machine may be made very much higher in the air-engine
+than would be possible in the steam-engine, on account of the very high
+pressure produced in the boiler, by elevating the temperature of the
+water which it contains to any considerable extent above the atmospheric
+boiling-point. On this account a “perfect air-engine” would be a much
+more valuable instrument than a “perfect steam-engine.”[64]
+
+Neither steam-engines nor air-engines, however, are nearly perfect; and
+we do not know in which of the two kinds of machine the nearest approach
+to perfection may be actually attained. The beautiful engine invented by
+Mr. Stirling of Galston may be considered as an excellent beginning for
+the air-engine;[65] and it is only necessary to compare this with
+Newcomen’s steam-engine, and consider what Watt has effected, to give
+rise to the most sanguine anticipations of improvement.
+
+
+ V. _On the Economy of Actual Steam-engines._
+
+56. The steam-engine being universally employed at present as the means
+for deriving motive power from heat, it is extremely interesting to
+examine, according to Carnot’s theory, the economy actually attained in
+its use. In the first place we remark, that out of the entire “fall”
+from the temperature of the coals to that of the atmosphere it is only
+part—that from the temperature of the boiler to the temperature of the
+condenser—that is made available; while the very great fall from the
+temperature of the burning coals to that of the boiler, and the
+comparatively small fall from the temperature of the condenser to that
+of the atmosphere, are entirely lost as far as regards the mechanical
+effect which it is desired to obtain. We infer from this, that the
+temperature of the boiler ought to be kept as high as, according to the
+strength, is consistent with safety, while that of the condenser ought
+to be kept as nearly down at the atmospheric temperature as possible. To
+take the entire benefit of the actual fall, Carnot showed that the
+“principle of expansion” must be pushed to the utmost.[66]
+
+57. To obtain some notion of the economy which has actually been
+obtained, we may take the alleged performances of the best Cornish
+engines, and some other interesting practical cases, as examples.[67]
+
+(1) The engine of _the Fowey Consols mine_ was reported, in 1845, to
+have given 125,089,000 foot-pounds of effect, for the consumption of one
+bushel or 94 lbs. of coals. Now the average amount evaporated from
+Cornish boilers, by one pound of coal, is 8½ lbs. of steam; and hence
+for each pound of steam evaporated 156,556 foot-pounds of work are
+produced.
+
+The pressure of the saturated steam in the boiler may be taken as 3½
+atmospheres;[68] and, consequently, the temperature of the water will be
+140°. Now (Regnault, end of Mémoire X.) the latent heat of a pound of
+saturated steam at 140° is 508, and since, to compensate for each pound
+of steam removed from the boiler in the working of the engine, a pound
+of water, at the temperature of the condenser, which may be estimated at
+30°, is introduced from the hot-well; it follows that 618 units of heat
+are introduced to the boiler for each pound of water evaporated. But the
+work produced, for each pound of water evaporated, was found above to be
+156,556 foot-pounds. Hence ¹⁵⁶⁵⁵⁶⁄₆₁₈, or 253 foot-pounds, is the amount
+of work produced for each unit of heat transmitted through the Fowey
+Consols engine. Now in Table II. we find 583.0 as the theoretical effect
+due to a unit descending from 140° to 0°, and 143 as the effect due to a
+unit descending from 30° to 0°. The difference of these numbers, or
+440,[69] is the number of foot-pounds of work that a _perfect_ engine
+with its boiler at 140° and its condenser at 30° would produce for each
+unit of heat transmitted. Hence the Fowey Consols engine, during the
+experiments reported on, performed ²⁵³⁄₄₄₀ of its theoretical duty, or
+57½ per cent.
+
+(2) The best duty on record, as performed by an engine at work (not for
+merely experimental purposes), is that of Taylor’s engine, at the United
+Mines, which in 1840 worked regularly for several months at the rate of
+98,000,000 foot-pounds for each bushel of coals burned. This is ⁹⁸⁄₁₂₅,
+or .784 of the experimental duty reported in the case of the Fowey
+Consols engine. Hence the best useful work on record is at the rate of
+198.3 foot-pounds for each unit of heat transmitted, and is
+(198.3)/(440) or 45 per cent of the theoretical duty, on the supposition
+that the boiler is at 140° and the condenser at 30°.
+
+(3) French engineers contract (in Lille, in 1847, for example) to make
+engines for mill-power which will produce 30,000 metre-pounds or 98,427
+foot-pounds of work for each pound of steam used. If we divide this by
+618, we find 159 foot-pounds for the work produced by each unit of heat.
+This is 36.1 per cent of 440, the theoretical duty.[70]
+
+(4) English engineers have contracted to make engines and boilers which
+will require only 3⅓ lbs. of the best coal per horse-power per hour.
+Hence in such engines each pound of coal ought to produce 565,700
+foot-pounds of work, and if 7 lbs. of water be evaporated by each pound
+of coal, there would result 83,814 foot-pounds of work for each pound of
+water evaporated. If the pressure in the boiler be 3½ atmospheres
+(temperature 140°) the amount of work for each unit of heat will be
+found, by dividing this by 618, to be 130.7 foot-pounds, which is
+(130.7)/(440) or 29.7 per cent of the theoretical duty.[71]
+
+(5) The actual average of work performed by good Cornish engines and
+boilers is 55,000,000 foot-pounds for each bushel of coal, or less than
+half the experimental performance of the Fowey Consols engine, more than
+half the actual duty performed by the United Mines engine in 1840; in
+fact, about 25 per cent of the theoretical duty.
+
+(6) The average performances of a number of Lancashire engines and
+boilers have been recently found to be such as to require 12 lbs. of
+Lancashire coal per horse-power per hour (i.e., for performing 60 ×
+33,000 foot-pounds), and of a number of Glasgow engines such as to
+require 15 lbs. (of a somewhat inferior coal) for the same effect. There
+are, however, more than twenty large engines in Glasgow at present[72]
+which work with a consumption of only 6½ lbs. of dross, equivalent to 5
+lbs. of the best Scotch or 4 lbs. of the best Welsh coal, per
+horse-power per hour. The economy may be estimated from these data, as
+in the other cases, on the assumption which, with reference to these, is
+the most probable we can make, that the evaporation produced by a pound
+of best coal is 7 lbs. of steam.
+
+58. The following tables afford a synoptic view of the performances and
+theoretical duties in the various cases discussed above.
+
+In Table A the numbers in the second column are found by dividing the
+numbers in the first by 8½ in cases (1), (2), and (5), and by 7 in cases
+(4), (6), and (7), the estimated numbers of pounds of steam actually
+produced in the different boilers by the burning of 1 lb. of coal.
+
+The numbers in the third column are found from those in the second, by
+dividing by 618 in Table A, and 614 in Table B, which are respectively
+the quantities of heat required to convert a pound of water taken from
+the hot-well at 30°, into saturated steam, in the boiler, at 140° or at
+121°.
+
+With reference to the cases (3), (4), (6), (7), the hypothesis of Table
+B is probably in general nearer the truth than that of Table A. In (4),
+(6), and (7), especially upon hypothesis B, there is much uncertainty as
+to the amount of evaporation that will be actually produced by 1 lb. of
+fuel. The assumption on which the numbers in the second column in Table
+B are calculated, is, that each pound of coal will send the same number
+of units of heat into the boiler, whether hypothesis A or hypothesis B
+be followed. Hence, except in the case of the French contract, in which
+the _evaporation_, not the fuel, is specified, the numbers in the third
+column are the same as those in the third column of Table A.
+
+ TABLE A.
+ VARIOUS ENGINES IN WHICH THE TEMPERATURE OF THE BOILER IS 140° C. AND
+ THAT OF THE CONDENSER 30° C.
+ _Theoretical Duty for each Unit of Heat transmitted, 440[73]
+ foot-pounds._
+ ─────────────────┬─────────────┬──────────────┬─────────────┬──────────
+ CASES. │Work produced│Work produced │Work produced│Percentage
+ │for each lb. │ for each lb. │for each unit│ of
+ │ of coal │ of water │ of heat │theoretical
+ │ consumed. │ evaporated. │transmitted. │ duty.
+ ─────────────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┼─────────────┼──────────
+ │ Ft.-lbs. │ Ft.-lbs. │ Ft.-lbs. │
+ (1) Fowey Consols│ │ │ │
+ experiment,│ 1,330,734│ 156,556│ 253│ 57.5
+ reported in│ │ │ │
+ 1845 │ │ │ │
+ (2) Taylor’s │ │ │ │
+ engine at │ │ │ │
+ the United │ 1,042,553│ 122,653│ 198.4│ 45.1
+ Mines, │ │ │ │
+ working in │ │ │ │
+ 1840 │ │ │ │
+ (3) French │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ │ 98,427│ 159│ 36.1
+ according │ │ │ │
+ to contract│ │ │ │
+ (4) English │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ 565,700│ 80,814│ 130.8│ 29.7
+ according │ │ │ │
+ to contract│ │ │ │
+ (5) Average │ │ │ │
+ actual │ │ │ │
+ performance│ 585,106│ 68,836│ 111.3│ 25.3
+ of Cornish │ │ │ │
+ engines │ │ │ │
+ (6) Common │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ │ │ │
+ consuming │ │ │ │
+ 12 lbs. of │ 165,000│ 23,571│ 38.1│ 8.6
+ best coal │ │ │ │
+ per │ │ │ │
+ horse-power│ │ │ │
+ per hour │ │ │ │
+ (7) Improved │ │ │ │
+ engines │ │ │ │
+ with │ │ │ │
+ expansion │ │ │ │
+ cylinders, │ │ │ │
+ consuming │ │ │ │
+ an │ 495,000│ 70,710│ 114.4│ 26
+ equivalent │ │ │ │
+ to 4 lbs. │ │ │ │
+ of best │ │ │ │
+ coal per │ │ │ │
+ horse-power│ │ │ │
+ per hour │ │ │ │
+ ─────────────────┴─────────────┴──────────────┴─────────────┴──────────
+
+ TABLE B.
+ VARIOUS ENGINES IN WHICH THE TEMPERATURE OF THE BOILER IS 121° C.[74]
+ AND THAT OF THE CONDENSER 30° C.
+ _Theoretical Duty for each Unit of Heat transmitted, 371 foot-pounds._
+ ─────────────────┬─────────────┬──────────────┬─────────────┬──────────
+ CASES. │Work produced│Work produced │Work produced│Percentage
+ │for each lb. │ for each lb. │for each unit│ of
+ │ of coal │ of water │ of heat │theoretical
+ │ consumed. │ evaporated. │transmitted. │ duty.
+ ─────────────────┼─────────────┼──────────────┼─────────────┼──────────
+ │ Ft.-lbs. │ Ft.-lbs. │ Ft.-lbs. │
+ (3) French │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ │ 98,427│ 160.3│ 43.2
+ according │ │ │ │
+ to contract│ │ │ │
+ (4) English │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ 565,700│⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×80,814│ 130.8│ 35
+ according │ │ │ │
+ to contract│ │ │ │
+ (6) Common │ │ │ │
+ engines, │ │ │ │
+ consuming │ │ │ │
+ 12 lbs. of │ 165,000│⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×23,571│ 38.1│ 10.3
+ coal per │ │ │ │
+ horse-power│ │ │ │
+ per hour │ │ │ │
+ (7) Improved │ │ │ │
+ engines │ │ │ │
+ with │ │ │ │
+ expansion │ │ │ │
+ cylinders, │ │ │ │
+ consuming │ │ │ │
+ an │ 495,000│⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×70,710│ 114.4│ 30.7
+ equivalent │ │ │ │
+ to 4 lbs. │ │ │ │
+ best coal │ │ │ │
+ per │ │ │ │
+ horse-power│ │ │ │
+ per hour │ │ │ │
+ ─────────────────┴─────────────┴──────────────┴─────────────┴──────────
+
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX A.
+ EXTRACTS FROM UNPUBLISHED WRITINGS OF CARNOT.
+
+
+ I. NOTES.
+
+Let us first open at the memoranda relating to his daily occupations:
+
+
+“Plan in the morning the work of the day, and reflect in the evening on
+what has been done.”
+
+“Carry when walking a book, and a note-book to preserve the ideas, and a
+piece of bread in order to prolong the walk if need be.”
+
+“Vary the mental and bodily exercises with dancing, horsemanship,
+swimming, fencing with sword and with sabre, shooting with gun and
+pistol, skating, the sling, stilts, tennis, bowls; hop on one foot,
+cross the arms, jump high and far, turn on one foot propped against the
+wall, exercise in shirt in the evening to get up a perspiration before
+going to bed; turning, joinery, gardening, reading while walking,
+declamation, singing, violin, versification, musical composition; eight
+hours of sleep; a walk on awakening, before and after eating; great
+sobriety; eat slowly, little, and often; avoid idleness and useless
+meditation.”
+
+
+Then come more general precepts:
+
+
+“Adopt good habits when I change my method of life.”
+
+“Never turn to the past unless to enlighten the future. Regrets are
+useless.”
+
+“Form resolutions in advance in order not to reflect during action. Then
+obey thyself blindly.”
+
+“The promptitude of resolutions most frequently accords with their
+justice.”
+
+“Yield frequently to the first inspiration. Too much meditation on the
+same subject ends by suggesting the worst part, or at least causes loss
+of precious time.”
+
+“Suffer slight disagreeables without seeming to perceive them, but
+repulse decisively any one who evidently intends to injure or humiliate
+you.”
+
+“One should never feign a character that he has not, or affect a
+character that he cannot sustain.”
+
+“Self-possession without self-sufficiency. Courage without effrontery.”
+
+“Make intimate acquaintances only with much circumspection; perfect
+confidence in those who have been thoroughly tested. Nothing to do with
+others.”
+
+“Question thyself to learn what will please others.”
+
+“No useless discourse. All conversation which does not serve to
+enlighten ourselves or others, to interest the heart or amuse the mind,
+is hurtful.”
+
+“Speak little of what you know, and not at all of what you do not know.”
+
+“Why not say more frequently, ‘I do not know’?”
+
+“Speak to every one of that which he knows best. This will put him at
+his ease, and be profitable to you.”
+
+“Abstain from all pleasantry which could wound.”
+
+“Employ only expressions of the most perfect propriety.”
+
+“Listen attentively to your interlocutor, and so prepare him to listen
+in the same way to your reply, and predispose him in favor of your
+arguments.”
+
+“Show neither passion nor weariness in discussion.
+
+“Never direct an argument against any one. If you know some particulars
+against your adversary, you have a right to make him aware of it to keep
+him under control, but proceed with discretion, and do not wound him
+before others.”
+
+“When discussion degenerates into dispute, be silent; this is not to
+declare yourself beaten.”
+
+“How much modesty adds to merit! A man of talent who conceals his
+knowledge is like a branch bending under a weight of fruit.”
+
+“Why try to be witty? I would rather be thought stupid and modest than
+witty and pretentious.”
+
+“Men desire nothing so much as to make themselves envied.”
+
+“Egotism is the most common and most hated of all vices. Properly
+speaking, it is the only one which should be hated.”
+
+“The pleasures of self-love are the only ones that can really be turned
+into ridicule.”
+
+“I do not know why these two expressions, good sense and common sense,
+are confounded. There is nothing less common than good sense.”
+
+“The strain of suffering causes the mind to decay.”
+
+
+We will quote one of those misanthropic sallies the rarity of which we
+are glad to remark:
+
+
+“It must be that all honest people are in the galleys; only knaves are
+to be met with elsewhere.”
+
+
+But serenity of mind returns immediately after the above:
+
+
+“I rejoice for all the misfortunes which might have happened to me, and
+which I have escaped.”
+
+“Life is a short enough passage. I am half the journey. I will complete
+the remainder as I can.”
+
+“Hope being the greatest of all blessings, it is necessary, in order to
+be happy, to sacrifice the present to the future.”
+
+“Let us not be exacting; perfection is so rare.”
+
+“Indulgence! Indulgence!”
+
+“The more nearly an object approaches perfection, the more we notice its
+slightest defects.”
+
+“To neglect the opportunity of an innocent pleasure is a loss to
+ourselves. It is to act like a spendthrift.”
+
+“_Recherché_ pleasures cause simple pleasures to lose all their
+attractions.”
+
+“It may sometimes be necessary to yield the right, but how is one to
+recover it when wanted?”
+
+“Love is almost the only passion that the good man may avow. It is the
+only one which accords with delicacy.”
+
+“Do nothing that all the world may not know.”
+
+“The truly wise man is he who loves virtue for its own sake.”
+
+“We say that man is an egotist, and nevertheless his sweetest pleasures
+come to him through others. He only tastes them on condition of sharing
+them.”
+
+“If one could continually satisfy his desires, he would never have time
+to desire. Happiness then is necessarily composed of alternatives. It
+could not exist at a constant level.”
+
+
+On the subject of nations and conquerors:
+
+
+“To each conqueror can be said, when he has ceased tormenting our poor
+globe, ‘Would you not have been able to tilt equally well against a
+little globe of pasteboard?’”
+
+“The laws of war, do they say? As if war were not the destruction of all
+laws.”
+
+“War has been represented as necessary to prevent the too rapid increase
+of the population, but war mows down the flower of the young men, while
+it spares the men disgraced by nature. Hence it tends to the
+degeneration of the species.”
+
+
+Then the writer turns his shafts against medicine:
+
+
+“In some respects medicine is directly opposed to the will of nature,
+which tends to perpetuate the strongest and best of the species, and to
+abandon the delicate to a thousand forms of destruction. This is what
+occurs among animals and savage men. Only the most robust attain the
+adult age, and these only reproduce the species. Medicine and the aids
+of the social state prolong the lives of feeble creatures whose
+posterity is usually equally feeble. Among the Spartans, barbarous
+regulations put an end to the existence of malformed infants, that the
+strength and beauty of the race might be preserved. Such regulations are
+antipathetic to our customs; nevertheless it might be desirable that we
+should devote ourselves to the preservation of the human race from the
+causes of weakness and degeneracy.”
+
+“The decadence of the Greeks and Romans without change of race proves
+the influence of institutions upon customs.”
+
+
+We will give here a fragment on political economy, to show the variety
+contained in the pages on which we draw:
+
+
+“According to the system of modern economists, it would be desirable
+that the government should interfere as little as possible in the
+commerce and industry of the country. Nevertheless we cannot deny that
+in certain circumstances this intervention is very useful.”
+
+“Taxes are regarded by economists as an evil, but as a necessary evil,
+since they provide for public expenses. Consequently, economists think
+that if the government possessed sufficient revenues, in domains for
+example, the suppression of all taxes would be a desirable measure.”
+
+“Taxes are a means of influencing production and commerce to give to
+them a direction which they would not naturally have taken. Such an
+influence may undoubtedly have disagreeable consequences if the taxes
+are imposed without discrimination or exclusively for a fiscal purpose,
+but it is entirely otherwise if wisdom and tact preside at their
+institution.”
+
+“A tax on the rent of a farm would be much better than a tax on the land
+itself. Proprietors then could only avoid taxes by themselves improving
+their property. As it is, they merely collect the rents, and usually
+employ their surplus in unproductive expenditure, while the proprietary
+farmers voluntarily devote theirs to the improvement of the land.”
+
+“A tax on the farms would then result in the proprietors themselves
+working the lands, and this would mean better cultivation, and
+improvements which would yield returns indeed, but at too remote a
+period for the tenant. It would tend to a division of landed property,
+men of small fortune uniting in the purchase with capitalists who seek
+only the rent or payment for the land.”
+
+“Great capitalists could not themselves cultivate vast extents of land,
+and not wanting to diminish their revenues by renting them, would be
+induced to sell portions suitable for cultivation by their new owners,
+and would then carry their money into new industrial and commercial
+enterprises.”
+
+“The competition of the sellers would cause a momentary fall in the
+price of the lands, and would enable small farmers to become
+land-owners. The number of vast estates often badly managed would then
+be diminished, and considerable fortunes, changing hands more easily,
+would naturally pass into those which would be most likely to increase
+their value.”
+
+“Proprietors, becoming cultivators to escape the taxes, would settle in
+the country, where their presence would disseminate intelligence and
+comfort; their revenues, before spent unprofitably, would then pay
+expenses and improvements on their property.”
+
+“The establishment of such a tax would certainly find many opponents
+among proprietors, landed non-cultivators who form in fact the
+influential _personnel_ in the state, for it is they who usually make
+the laws.”
+
+“Perhaps it would be necessary to weaken their opposition by not
+subjecting the actual proprietors to the new tax, which might take
+effect only with the next change either by sale or by inheritance. A
+restriction of the right of transfer would also facilitate the passage
+from one situation to the other. All changes in taxes should, as a
+general thing, be made gradually, in order to avoid sudden changes of
+fortune.”
+
+“We may consider the renting of a property for several years as a sale
+of the usufruct during the time of the lease. Now nine years’
+possession, for example, is equal to more than a third of the value of
+the property, supposing the annual product to be one twentieth of the
+capital. It would then be reasonable to apply to this sort of sale the
+laws which govern that of landed property, and consequently the mutation
+tax. The person who cannot or will not cultivate his soil, instead of
+alienating the property itself, binds himself to alienate the usufruct
+for a time, and the price is paid at stated intervals instead of all at
+once. There is farm rent.”
+
+“Now it is by a fiction that the purchaser pays the mutation tax. In
+fact, it is always the seller who pays it. The buyer compares the money
+that he spends with the advantage that he gains, and this comparison
+determines it. If he did not make money out of it he would not buy it.
+When the registration tax did not exist, the purchaser had to pay the
+same sum for the same purpose, and this sum went into the pocket of the
+seller.”
+
+“Proprietors of lands, then, after all, have to bear the mutation taxes.
+All increase of these taxes is a loss for them, and these taxes are
+heavier on the small proprietors than on the large, because their
+changes are more frequent. The tax on the farms, on the contrary, would
+bear more heavily on large estates.”
+
+“The tax on farms not affecting the owners of timber, would be made up
+by a tax on the felling, a very justifiable tax, for standing timber is
+landed property. Standing timber is often worth much more than the land
+on which it stands.”
+
+
+Finally, we will give some thoughts which reveal the religious
+sentiments of Sadi Carnot:
+
+
+“Men attribute to chance those events of the causes of which they are
+ignorant. If they succeed in divining these causes, chance disappears.
+To say that a thing has happened by chance, is to say that we have not
+been able to foresee it. I do not myself believe that any other
+acceptation can be given to this word. What to an ignorant man is
+chance, cannot be chance to one better instructed.”
+
+“If human reason is incapable of discovering the mysteries of Divinity,
+why has not Divinity made human reason more clear-sighted?”
+
+“God cannot punish man for not believing when he could so easily have
+enlightened and convinced him.”
+
+“If God is absolutely good, why should He punish the sinner for all
+eternity, since He does not lead him to good, or give him an example?”
+
+“According to the doctrine of the church, God resembles a sphinx
+proposing enigmas, and devouring those who cannot guess them.”
+
+“The church attributes to God all human passions—anger, desire for
+vengeance, curiosity, tyranny, partiality, idleness.”
+
+“If Christianity were pruned of all which is not Christ, this religion
+would be the simplest in the world.”
+
+“What motives have influenced the writers who have rejected all
+religious systems? Is it the conviction that the ideas which they oppose
+are all injurious to society? Have they not rather included in the same
+proscription religion and the abuse of it?”
+
+“The belief in an _all-powerful_ Being, who loves us and watches over
+us, gives to the mind great strength to endure misfortune.”
+
+“A religion suited to the soul and preached by men worthy of respect
+would exercise the most salutary influence upon society and customs.”
+
+
+ II. NOTES OF SADI CARNOT ON MATHEMATICS, PHYSICS, AND OTHER SUBJECTS.
+
+Up to the present time the changes caused in the temperature of bodies
+by motion have been very little studied. This class of phenomena merits,
+however, the attention of observers. When bodies are in motion,
+especially when that motion disappears, or when it produces motive
+power, remarkable changes take place in the distribution of heat, and
+perhaps in its quantity.
+
+We will collect a few facts which exhibit this phenomenon most clearly.
+
+1. _The Collision of Bodies._—We know that in the collision of bodies
+there is always expenditure of motive power. Perfectly elastic bodies
+only form an exception, and none such are found in nature.
+
+We also know that always in the collision of bodies there occurs a
+change of temperature, an elevation of temperature. We cannot, as did M.
+Berthollet, attribute the heat set free in this case to the reduction of
+the volume of the body; for when this reduction has reached its limit
+the liberation of heat would cease. Now this does not occur.
+
+It is sufficient that the body change form by percussion, without change
+of volume, to produce disengagement of heat.
+
+If, for example, we take a cube of lead and strike it successively on
+each of its faces, there will always be heat liberated, without sensible
+diminution in this disengagement, so long as the blows are continued
+with equal force. This does not occur when medals are struck. In this
+case the metal cannot change form after the first blows of the die, and
+the effect of the collision is not conveyed to the medal, but to the
+threads of the screw which are strained, and to its supports.
+
+It would seem, then, that heat set free should be attributed to the
+friction of the molecules of the metal, which change place relatively to
+each other, that is, the heat is set free just where the moving force is
+expended.
+
+A similar remark will apply in regard to the collision of two bodies of
+differing hardness—lead and iron for instance. The first of these metals
+becomes very hot, while the second does not vary sensibly in
+temperature. But the motive power is almost wholly exhausted in changing
+the form of the first of these metals. We may also cite, as a fact of
+the same nature, the heat produced by the extension of a metallic rod
+just before it breaks. Experiment has proved that, other things being
+equal, the greater the elongation before rupture, the more considerable
+is the elevation of temperature.
+
+
+(2) [The remainder is blank.]
+
+
+When a hypothesis no longer suffices to explain phenomena, it should be
+abandoned.
+
+This is the case with the hypothesis which regards caloric as matter, as
+a subtile fluid.
+
+The experimental facts tending to destroy this theory are as follows:
+
+(1) The development of heat by percussion or the friction of bodies
+(experiments of Rumford, friction of wheels on their spindles, on the
+axles, experiments to be made). Here the elevation of temperature takes
+place at the same time in the body rubbing and the body rubbed.
+Moreover, they do not change perceptibly in form or nature (to be
+proved). Thus heat is produced by motion. If it is matter, it must be
+admitted that the matter is created by motion.
+
+(2) When an air-pump is worked, and at the same time air is admitted
+into the receiver, the temperature remains constant in the receiver. It
+remains constant on the outside. Consequently, the air compressed by the
+pumps must rise in temperature above the air outside, and it is expelled
+at a higher temperature. The air enters then at a temperature of 10°,
+for instance, and leaves at another, 10° + 90° or 100°, for example.
+Thus heat has been created by motion.
+
+(3) If the air in a reservoir is compressed, and at the same time
+allowed to escape through a little opening, there is by the compression
+elevation of temperature, by the escape lowering of temperature
+(according to Gay-Lussac and Welter). The air then enters at one side at
+one temperature and escapes at the other side at a higher temperature,
+from which follows the same conclusion as in the preceding case.
+
+(Experiment to be made: To fit to a high-pressure boiler a cock and a
+tube leading to it and emptying into the atmosphere; to open the cock a
+little way, and present a thermometer to the outlet of the steam; to see
+if it remains at 100° or more; to see if steam is liquefied in the pipe;
+to see whether it comes out cloudy or transparent.)
+
+(4) The elevation of temperature which takes place at the time of the
+entrance of the air into the vacuum, an elevation that cannot be
+attributed to the compression of the air remaining (air which may be
+replaced by steam), can therefore be attributed only to the friction of
+the air against the walls of the opening, or against the interior of the
+receiver, or against itself.
+
+(5) M. Gay-Lussac showed (it is said) that if two receivers were put in
+communication with each other, the one a vacuum, the other full of air,
+the temperature would rise in one as much as it would fall in the other.
+If, then, both be compressed one half, the first would return to its
+previous temperature and the second to a much higher one. Mixing them,
+the whole mass would be heated.
+
+When the air enters a vacuum, its passage through one small opening and
+the motion imparted to it in the interior appear to produce elevation of
+temperature.
+
+
+We may be allowed to express here an hypothesis in regard to the nature
+of heat.
+
+At present, light is generally regarded as the result of a vibratory
+movement of the ethereal fluid. Light produces heat, or at least
+accompanies the radiating heat, and moves with the same velocity as
+heat. Radiating heat is then a vibratory movement. It would be
+ridiculous to suppose that it is an emission of matter while the light
+which accompanies it could be only a movement.
+
+Could a motion (that of radiating heat) produce matter (caloric)?
+
+No, undoubtedly; it can only produce a motion. Heat is then the result
+of a motion.
+
+Then it is plain that it could be produced by the consumption of motive
+power, and that it could produce this power.
+
+All the other phenomena—composition and decomposition of bodies, passage
+to the gaseous state, specific heat, equilibrium of heat, its more or
+less easy transmission, its constancy in experiments with the
+calorimeter—could be explained by this hypothesis. But it would be
+difficult to explain why, in the development of motive power by heat, a
+cold body is necessary; why, in consuming the heat of a warm body,
+motion cannot be produced.
+
+
+It appears very difficult to penetrate into the real essence of bodies.
+To avoid erroneous reasoning, it would be necessary to investigate
+carefully the source of our knowledge in regard to the nature of bodies,
+their form, their forces; to see what the primitive notions are, to see
+from what impressions they are derived; to see how one is raised
+successively to the different degrees of abstraction.
+
+
+Is heat the result of a vibratory motion of molecules? If this is so,
+quantity of heat is simply quantity of motive power. As long as motive
+power is employed to produce vibratory movements, the quantity of heat
+must be unchangeable; which seems to follow from experiments with the
+calorimeter; but when it passes into movements of sensible extent, the
+quantity of heat can no longer remain constant.
+
+
+Can examples be found of the production of motive power with actual
+consumption of heat? It seems that we may find production of heat with
+consumption of motive power (re-entrance of the air into a vacuum, for
+example).
+
+
+What is the cause of the production of heat in combinations of
+substances? What is radiant caloric?
+
+
+Liquefaction of bodies, solidification of liquids, crystallization—are
+they not forms of combinations of integrant molecules?
+
+
+Supposing heat due to a vibratory movement, how can the passage from the
+solid or the liquid to the gaseous state be explained?
+
+
+When motive power is produced by the passage of heat from the body _A_
+to the body _B_, is the quantity of this heat which arrives at _B_ (if
+it is not the same as that which has been taken from _A_, if a portion
+has really been consumed to produce motive power) the same whatever may
+be the substance employed to realize the motive power?
+
+Is there any way of using more heat in the production of motive power,
+and of causing less to reach the body _B_? Could we even utilize it
+entirely, allowing none to go to the body _B_? If this were possible,
+motive power could be created without consumption of combustible, and by
+mere destruction of the heat of bodies.
+
+
+Is it absolutely certain that steam after having operated an engine and
+produced motive power can raise the temperature of the water of
+condensation as if it had been conducted directly into it?
+
+
+Reasoning shows us that there cannot be loss of living force, or, which
+is the same thing, of motive power, if the bodies act upon each other
+without directly touching each other, without actual collision. Now
+everything leads us to believe that the molecules of bodies are always
+separated from each other by some space, that they are never actually in
+contact. If they touched each other, they would remain united, and
+consequently change form.
+
+
+If the molecules of bodies are never in close contact with each other
+whatever may be the forces which separate or attract them, there can
+never be either production or loss of motive power in nature. This power
+must be as unchangeable in quantity as matter. Then the direct
+re-establishment of equilibrium of the caloric, and its re-establishment
+with production of motive power, would be essentially different from
+each other.
+
+
+Heat is simply motive power, or rather motion which has changed form. It
+is a movement among the particles of bodies. Wherever there is
+destruction of motive power there is, at the same time, production of
+heat in quantity exactly proportional to the quantity of motive power
+destroyed. Reciprocally, wherever there is destruction of heat, there is
+production of motive power.
+
+We can then establish the general proposition that motive power is, in
+quantity, invariable in nature; that it is, correctly speaking, never
+either produced or destroyed. It is true that it changes form, that is,
+it produces sometimes one sort of motion, sometimes another, but it is
+never annihilated.
+
+
+According to some ideas that I have formed on the theory of heat, the
+production of a unit of motive power necessitates the destruction of
+2.70 units of heats.
+
+A machine which would produce 20 units of motive power per kilogram of
+coal ought to destroy (20 × 2.70)/(7000) of the heat developed by the
+combustion. (20 × 2.70)/(7000) = (8)/(1000) about; that is, less than
+(1)/(100).
+
+(Each unit of motive power, or dyname, representing the weight of one
+cubic metre of water raised to the height of one metre.)
+
+
+ _Experiments to be made on Heat and Motive Power._
+
+To repeat Rumford’s experiments in the drilling of a metal in water, but
+to measure the motive power consumed at the same time as the heat
+produced; same experiments on several metals and on wood.
+
+
+To strike a piece of lead in various ways, to measure the motive power
+consumed and the heat produced. Same experiments on other metals.
+
+
+To strongly agitate water in a small cask or in a double-acting pump
+having a piston pierced with a small opening.
+
+Experiment of the same sort on the agitation of mercury, alcohol, air
+and other gases. To measure the motive power consumed and heat produced.
+
+
+To admit air into a vacuum or into air more or less rarefied; _id._ for
+other gases or vapors. To examine the elevation of temperature by means
+of the manometer and the thermometer of Bréguet. Estimation of the error
+of the thermometer in the time required for the air to vary a certain
+number of degrees. These experiments would serve to measure the changes
+which take place in the temperature of the gas during its changes of
+volume. They would also furnish means of comparing these changes with
+the quantities of motive power produced or consumed.
+
+
+Expel the air from a large reservoir in which it is compressed, and
+check its velocity in a large pipe in which solid bodies have been
+placed; measure the temperature when it has become uniform. See if it is
+the same as in the reservoir. Same experiments with other gases and with
+vapor formed under different pressures.
+
+
+To repeat Dalton’s experiments and carry them on to pressures of thirty
+or forty atmospheres. To measure the constituent heat of the vapor
+within these limits.
+
+_Id._ on the vapor of alcohol, of ether, of essence of turpentine, of
+mercury, to prove whether the agent employed makes any difference in the
+production of motive power.
+
+_Id._ on water charged with a deliquescent salt, the calcium chloride,
+for instance.
+
+Is the law of tensions always the same? To measure the specific heat of
+vapor.
+
+
+ _Experiments to be made on the Tension of Vapors._
+
+A graduated capillary tube filled with water, mercury, or with oil and
+air. Plunge this tube into a bath of oil, of mercury, or of melted lead.
+To measure the temperature by an air-thermometer.
+
+Same experiments with alcohol, ether, sulphide of carbon, muriatic
+ether, essence of turpentine, sulphur, phosphorus.
+
+Experiments on the tension of steam with a boiler, and a thermometric
+tube full of air. A thermometer will be placed in a tube immersed in the
+boiler, open outwards and filled with oil or mercury.
+
+
+Experiments by means of a simple capillary tube filled with three
+successive parts—first of air, second of mercury, third of water or
+other liquid of which the tension can be measured (of alcohol, of ether,
+of essence of turpentine, of lavender, of sulphide of carbon, of
+muriatic ether, etc.). One end of the tube may be immersed in a bath of
+mercury or oil, the temperature of which is to be measured. The column
+of mercury can be made long enough to allow of the air being previously
+compressed or rarefied.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 6.
+]
+
+The tube will be bent into a spiral at one end, the straight part being
+graduated (thus permitting the tension of mercurial vapor to be
+measured).
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 7.
+]
+
+Experiments on the tension of vapors at low temperature, with a
+thermometric tube bent round, and filled partly with mercury, partly
+with water or alcohol. The mercury will operate by its weight. The upper
+part of the tube will be empty and sealed, or fully open to the
+atmosphere.
+
+The bulb will be immersed in water the temperature of which is to be
+measured. If the tube is sealed, the upper part must be cooled.
+
+The bulb might contain water, ether, or essence of turpentine.
+
+If the tube is sealed, the tension of mercurial vapor could be measured.
+
+
+Experiments on the constituent heat of vapors by means of a barometric
+tube having two enlarged bulbs. One of the bulbs may be immersed in cold
+water, and the elevation of temperature of this water will indicate the
+constituent heat of the vapor.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 8.
+]
+
+The other bulb may be warmed either by boiling liquid or by fire.
+
+Water, alcohol, steam, ether, mercury, acetic acid, sulphide of carbon.
+
+The operation may be repeated and add the results.
+
+
+ _Experiments to be made on Gases and Vapors._
+
+To measure the temperature acquired by the air introduced into a vacuum
+or space containing previously rarefied air.
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ FIG. 9.
+]
+
+If the vacuum is made under the glass receiver of an air-pump, and the
+cock admitting the outer air be suddenly opened, the introduction of
+this air will cause a Bréguet thermometer to rise to 50° or 60°. To
+examine the movement of this thermometer when the reintroduction takes
+place only by degrees, to compare it with the movement of the manometer.
+
+Construction of a manometer which may give the pressure almost
+instantaneously.
+
+Imagine a capillary tube bent into a spiral at one end, and having one
+extremity closed, the other open. This tube will be perfectly dry and a
+small index of mercury may be introduced into it. The diameter of the
+tube will be small enough for the air enclosed in it to take almost
+instantly the temperature of the glass. We shall try to ascertain the
+time necessary for the establishment of this equilibrium of temperature
+by placing the tube under the receiver of the air-pump, making a partial
+vacuum, and admitting the air. We shall see whether, some seconds after
+the introduction, the index perceptibly moves. The index must be of very
+light weight to avoid oscillation as much as possible.
+
+For the same reason, the capillary tube should be also as narrow as
+possible. If the straight part of the tube is equal to the bent part and
+the index be placed at the beginning of the bent part, for a pressure
+equal to atmospheric pressure, it would not be necessary to subject the
+instrument to a less pressure than ½ atmosphere. It is between these two
+limits that it would serve as a measure.
+
+It might end in an open enlargement to prevent the projection of the
+mercury outside the tube. Disposed in this way, it could be used as a
+general measure for pressures between _p_ and (½)_p_; _p_ being anything
+whatever. The apparatus will be fastened to a board bearing a graduated
+scale placed against the straight tube. The scale will be, for instance,
+numbered by fives or tens. A corresponding table denoting pressures
+would be required.
+
+Placing the instrument under the receiver and forming a partial vacuum,
+the index will rise into the enlargement. Then, admitting the air by
+degrees and very slowly, we may note the correspondence between the
+heights of the ordinary mercury manometer and the point which will be
+reached by the lower face of the index of the instrument. This will
+answer to form a comparative table of the pressures and the numbers of
+the scale. The pressures would be represented by their relations to the
+observed pressure at the moment of the passage of the index over zero,
+for any other fixed number of the scale.
+
+Thus, for example, suppose that we observed on the manometer 400 or _n_
+millimetres of mercury when the index is on _o_, then _n′_ when the
+index is on 1, _n″_ when on 2, and so on. This will give the ratios
+_n′_/_n_, _n″_/_n_, ... which must be inscribed in the table. Then _n_
+could be varied at pleasure, and the table could still be used.
+
+In fact, according to the law of Mariotte, volumes preserving the same
+ratios, pressures should also preserve the same ratios to each other.
+
+Let _p_ be the pressure when the index is on _o_, _v_ the volume of air
+at the same moment, _p′_ and _v′_ the same pressures and volume at the
+moment when the index is on 1. Whether the air be expelled or admitted
+the pressures would be instead of _p_ and _p′_, _q_ and _q′_. But there
+would follow
+
+ _p_ : _p′_ :: _v′_ : _v_ and _q_ : _q′_ :: _v′_ : _v_;
+ then _p_ : _p′_ :: _q_ : _q′_.
+
+We should moreover work at a uniform temperature and note the
+variations.
+
+If the straight part of the tube were perfectly calibrated, the volumes,
+and consequently the pressures, would form a geometrical progression,
+when the figures of the scale would be found to be in arithmetical
+progression, and a table of logarithms would enable one to be found from
+the other.
+
+In order to increase as required the mass of air enclosed in the tube
+the instrument must be placed on its side or flat, in the air-pump
+receivers. The mercury index would be placed in the lateral part of the
+enlargement of the tube, and the atmospheric air would enter. The
+instrument might also be heated in this position.
+
+Care must be taken to admit only very dry air, which could be obtained
+by placing under the receiver calcium chloride or any other substance
+which absorbs moisture greedily.
+
+Instead of bending the tube into a spiral, it might be bent in the
+middle in the form of a ᑌ, or it might be better to form three, four or
+more parallel branches. Making the tube very long, the index would have
+a larger range for the same changes of pressure, and the results
+produced could then be measured by a slight variation in density in the
+air of the receiver.
+
+
+_Comparison of the Rapidity with which the Air cools in the Receiver and
+ in the Tube._
+
+Let us suppose, what I believe to be very near the truth, that the heat
+absorbed is proportional to the surface of the bodies in contact. From
+this we can infer without difficulty, that the rapidity of the cooling
+of the air in two cylindrical tubes would be inversely as their
+diameters.
+
+If the receiver is considered as a tube of two decimetres in diameter,
+and the manometer as a tube of one millimetre diameter, the rapidity of
+the cooling of the air would be in the ratio, very nearly, of 1 to 200.
+
+
+ _Extent of the Movement of the Index._
+
+Suppose the tube turned up on itself five times and having a total
+length of 1 metre; a variation of density equal to ⅒ in the air will
+give a movement of 1 decimetre; a variation of heat of 1 degree supposed
+to be equivalent to a variation of density of ¹⁄₂₆₆ will give ¹⁄₂₆₆ of a
+metre, or about 3^{mm}.70, quite an appreciable quantity. As to the time
+required to move the mercury index, regard being had to its mass, if we
+suppose it 1 centimetre long, and the variation of pressure ¹⁄₁₀₀ of an
+atmosphere, it would require about ⅙ of a second to make it pass over
+one decimetre.
+
+ _Use of the Instrument in Measuring the Variations of the Tensions of
+ the Air under a Pneumatic Receiver._
+
+At each stroke of the piston which expands the air under the pneumatic
+receiver when a vacuum is to be created, a lowering of pressure is
+produced, and undoubtedly a change of temperature. It can be determined
+approximately, at least, by observing the position of the manometer at
+the instant after the dilatation has taken place, and again after a time
+long enough for the temperature to have returned to its original point,
+that of the surrounding bodies. Comparison of the elastic force in the
+two cases will lead to comparison of the temperatures.
+
+The temperature having returned to its original point, we will give a
+second stroke of the piston which will rarefy the air more than the
+former, and thus we will make two observations of the manometer, before
+and after the return to the former temperature. And so on.
+
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX B.
+ CARNOT’S FOOT-NOTES.
+
+
+NOTE A.—The objection may perhaps be raised here, that perpetual motion,
+demonstrated to be impossible by mechanical action alone, may possibly
+not be so if the power either of heat or electricity be exerted; but is
+it possible to conceive the phenomena of heat and electricity as due to
+anything else than some kind of motion of the body, and as such should
+they not be subjected to the general laws of mechanics? Do we not know
+besides, _à posteriori_, that all the attempts made to produce perpetual
+motion by any means whatever have been fruitless?—that we have never
+succeeded in producing a motion veritably perpetual, that is, a motion
+which will continue forever without alteration in the bodies set to work
+to accomplish it? The electromotor apparatus (the pile of Volta) has
+sometimes been regarded as capable of producing perpetual motion;
+attempts have been made to realize this idea by constructing dry piles
+said to be unchangeable; but however it has been done, the apparatus has
+always exhibited sensible deteriorations when its action has been
+sustained for a time with any energy.
+
+The general and philosophic acceptation of the words _perpetual motion_
+should include not only a motion susceptible of indefinitely continuing
+itself after a first impulse received, but the action of an apparatus,
+of any construction whatever, capable of creating motive power in
+unlimited quantity, capable of starting from rest all the bodies of
+nature if they should be found in that condition, of overcoming their
+inertia; capable, finally, of finding in itself the forces necessary to
+move the whole universe, to prolong, to accelerate incessantly, its
+motion. Such would be a veritable creation of motive power. If this were
+a possibility, it would be useless to seek in currents of air and water
+or in combustibles this motive power. We should have at our disposal an
+inexhaustible source upon which we could draw at will.
+
+NOTE B.—The experimental facts which best prove the change of
+temperature of gases by compression or dilatation are the following:
+
+(1) The fall of the thermometer placed under the receiver of a pneumatic
+machine in which a vacuum has been produced. This fall is very sensible
+on the Bréguet thermometer: it may exceed 40° or 50°. The mist which
+forms in this case seems to be due to the condensation of the watery
+vapor caused by the cooling of the air.
+
+(2) The inflammation of German tinder in the so-called pneumatic
+tinder-boxes; which are, as we know, little pump-chambers in which the
+air is rapidly compressed.
+
+(3) The fall of a thermometer placed in a space where the air has been
+first compressed and then allowed to escape by the opening of a cock.
+
+(4) The results of experiments on the velocity of sound. M. de Laplace
+has shown that, in order to secure results accurately by theory and
+computation, it is necessary to assume the heating of the air by sudden
+compression.
+
+The only fact which may be adduced in opposition to the above is an
+experiment of MM. Gay-Lussac and Welter, described in the _Annales de
+Chimie et de Physique_. A small opening having been made in a large
+reservoir of compressed air, and the ball of a thermometer having been
+introduced into the current of air which passes out through this
+opening, no sensible fall of the temperature denoted by the thermometer
+has been observed.
+
+Two explanations of this fact may be given: (1) The striking of the air
+against the walls of the opening by which it escapes may develop heat in
+observable quantity. (2) The air which has just touched the bowl of the
+thermometer possibly takes again by its collision with this bowl, or
+rather by the effect of the _détour_ which it is forced to make by its
+rencounter, a density equal to that which it had in the receiver,—much
+as the water of a current rises against a fixed obstacle, above its
+level.
+
+The change of temperature occasioned in the gas by the change of volume
+may be regarded as one of the most important facts of Physics, because
+of the numerous consequences which it entails, and at the same time as
+one of the most difficult to illustrate, and to measure by decisive
+experiments. It seems to present in some respects singular anomalies.
+
+Is it not to the cooling of the air by dilatation that the cold of the
+higher regions of the atmosphere must be attributed? The reasons given
+heretofore as an explanation of this cold are entirely insufficient; it
+has been said that the air of the elevated regions receiving little
+reflected heat from the earth, and radiating towards celestial space,
+would lose caloric, and that this is the cause of its cooling; but this
+explanation is refuted by the fact that, at an equal height, cold reigns
+with equal and even more intensity on the elevated plains than on the
+summit of the mountains, or in those portions of the atmosphere distant
+from the sun.
+
+NOTE C.—We see no reason for admitting, _à priori_, the constancy of the
+specific heat of bodies at different temperatures, that is, to admit
+that equal quantities of heat will produce equal increments of
+temperature, when this body changes neither its state nor its density;
+when, for example, it is an elastic fluid enclosed in a fixed space.
+Direct experiments on solid and liquid bodies have proved that between
+zero and 100°, equal increments in the quantities of heat would produce
+nearly equal increments of temperature. But the more recent experiments
+of MM. Dulong and Petit (see _Annales de Chimie et de Physique_,
+February, March, and April, 1818) have shown that this correspondence no
+longer continues at temperatures much above 100°, whether these
+temperatures be measured on the mercury thermometer or on the
+air-thermometer.
+
+Not only do the specific heats not remain the same at different
+temperatures, but, also, they do not preserve the same ratios among
+themselves, so that no thermometric scale could establish the constancy
+of all the specific heats. It would have been interesting to prove
+whether the same irregularities exist for gaseous substances, but such
+experiments presented almost insurmountable difficulties.
+
+The irregularities of specific heats of solid bodies might have been
+attributed, it would seem, to the latent heat employed to produce a
+beginning of fusion—a softening which occurs in most bodies long before
+complete fusion. We might support this opinion by the following
+statement: According to the experiments of MM. Dulong and Petit, the
+increase of specific heat with the temperature is more rapid in solids
+than in liquids, although the latter possess considerably more
+dilatability. The cause of irregularity just referred to, if it is real,
+would disappear entirely in gases.
+
+NOTE D.—In order to determine the arbitrary constants _A_, _B_, _A′_,
+_B′_, in accordance with the results in M. Dalton’s table, we must begin
+by computing the volume of the vapor as determined by its pressure and
+temperature,—a result which is easily accomplished by reference to the
+laws of Mariotte and Gay-Lussac, the weight of the vapor being fixed.
+
+The volume will be given by the equation
+
+ _v_ = _c_ (267 + _t_)/(_p_),
+
+in which _v_ is this volume, _t_ the temperature, _p_ the pressure, and
+_c_ a constant quantity depending on the weight of the vapor and on the
+units chosen. We give here the table of the volumes occupied by a gramme
+of vapor formed at different temperatures, and consequently under
+different pressures.
+
+ ───────────────────────┬───────────────────────┬───────────────────────
+ _t_ │ _p_ │ _v_
+ or degrees Centigrade. │or tension of the vapor│ or volume of a gramme
+ │ expressed in │ of vapor expressed in
+ │millimetres of mercury.│ litres.
+ ───────────────────────┼───────────────────────┼───────────────────────
+ ° │ mm. │ lit.
+ 0│ 5.060 │ 185.0
+ 20│ 17.32 │ 58.2
+ 40│ 53.00 │ 20.4
+ 60│ 144.6 │ 7.96
+ 80│ 352.1 │ 3.47
+ 100│ 760.0 │ 1.70
+ ───────────────────────┴───────────────────────┴───────────────────────
+
+The first two columns of this table are taken from the _Traité de
+Physique_ of M. Biot (vol. i., p. 272 and 531). The third is calculated
+by means of the above formula, and in accordance with the result of
+experiment, indicating that water vaporized under atmospheric pressure
+occupies a space 1700 times as great as in the liquid state.
+
+By using three numbers of the first column and three corresponding
+numbers of the third column, we can easily determine the constants of
+our equation
+
+ _t_ = (_A_ + _B_ log _v_)/(_A′_ + _B′_ log _v_).
+
+We will not enter into the details of the calculation necessary to
+determine these quantities. It is sufficient to say that the following
+values,
+
+ _A_ = 2268, _A′_ = 19.64,
+ _B_ = −1000, _B′_ = 3.30,
+
+satisfy fairly well the prescribed conditions, so that the equation
+
+ _t_ = (2268 − 1000 log _v_)/(19.64 + 3.30 log _v_)
+
+expresses very nearly the relation which exists between the volume of
+the vapor and its temperature. We may remark here that the quantity _B′_
+is positive and very small, which tends to confirm this proposition—that
+the specific heat of an elastic fluid increases with the volume, but
+follows a slow progression.
+
+NOTE E.—Were we to admit the constancy of the specific heat of a gas
+when its volume does not change, but when its temperature varies,
+analysis would show a relation between the motive power and the
+thermometric degree. We will show how this is, and this will also give
+us occasion to show how some of the propositions established above
+should be expressed in algebraic language.
+
+Let _r_ be the quantity of motive power produced by the expansion of a
+given quantity of air passing from the volume of one litre to the volume
+of _v_ litres under constant temperature. If _v_ increases by the
+infinitely small quantity _dv_, _r_ will increase by the quantity _dr_,
+which, according to the nature of motive power, will be equal to the
+increase _dv_ of volume multiplied by the expansive force which the
+elastic fluid then possesses; let _p_ be this expansive force. We should
+have the equation
+
+ _dr_ = _pdv_. (1)
+
+Let us suppose the constant temperature under which the dilatation takes
+place equal to _t_ degrees Centigrade. If we call _q_ the elastic force
+of the air occupying the volume 1 litre at the same temperature _t_, we
+shall have, according to the law of Mariotte,
+
+ (_v_)/(1) = (_q_)/(_p_), whence _p_ = (_q_)/(_v_).
+
+If now _P_ is the elastic force of this same air at the constant volume
+1, but at the temperature zero, we shall have, according to the rule of
+M. Gay-Lussac,
+
+ _q_ = _P_ + _P_ (_t_)/(267) = (_P_)/(267)(267 + _t_);
+
+whence
+
+ _q_ = _p_ = (_P_)/(267) (267 + _t_)/(_v_).
+
+If, to abridge, we call _N_ the quantity (_P_)/(267), the equation would
+become
+
+ _p_ = _N_ (_t_ + 267)/(_v_);
+
+whence we deduce, according to equation (1),
+
+ _dr_ = _N_ (_t_ + 267)/(_v_)_dv_.
+
+Regarding _t_ as constant, and taking the integral of the two numbers,
+we shall have
+
+ _r_ = _N_(_t_ + 267) log _v_ + _C_.
+
+If we suppose _r_ = 0 when _v_ = 1, we shall have _C_ = 0; whence
+
+ _r_ = _N_(_t_ + 267) log _v_. (2)
+
+This is the motive power produced by the expansion of the air which,
+under the temperature _t_, has passed from the volume 1 to the volume
+_v_. If instead of working at the temperature _t_ we work in precisely
+the same manner at the temperature _t_ + _dt_, the power developed will
+be
+
+ _r_ + δ_r_ = _N_(_t_ + _dt_ + 267) log _v_.
+
+Subtracting equation (2), we have
+
+ δ_r_ = _N_ log _vdt_. (3)
+
+Let _e_ be the quantity of heat employed to maintain the temperature of
+the gas constant during its dilatation. According to the reasoning of
+page 69, δ_r_ will be the power developed by the fall of the quantity
+_e_ of heat from the degree _t_ + _td_ to the degree _t_. If we call _u_
+the motive power developed by the fall of unity of heat from the degree
+_t_ to the degree zero, as, according to the general principle
+established page 68, this quantity _u_ ought to depend solely on _t_, it
+could be represented by the function _Ft_, whence _u_ = _Ft_.
+
+When _t_ is increased it becomes _t_ + _td_, _u_ becomes _u_ + _du_;
+whence
+
+ _u_ + _du_ = _F_(_t_ + _dt_).
+
+Subtracting the preceding equation, we have
+
+ _du_ = _F_(_t_ + _dt_) − _Ft_ = _F′tdt_.
+
+This is evidently the quantity of motive power produced by the fall of
+unity of heat from the temperature _t_ + _dt_ to the temperature _t_.
+
+If the quantity of heat instead of being a unit had been _e_, its motive
+power produced would have had for its value
+
+ _edu_ = _eF′tdt_. (4)
+
+But _edu_ is the same thing as δ_r_; both are the power developed by the
+fall of the quantity _e_ of heat from the temperature _t_ + _dt_ to the
+temperature _t_; consequently,
+
+ _edu_ = δ_r_,
+
+and from equations (3), (4),
+
+ _eF′tdt_ = _N_ log _vdt_;
+
+or, dividing by _F′tdt_,
+
+ _e_ = (_N_)/(_F′t_) log _v_ = _T_ log _v_.
+
+Calling _T_ the fraction (_N_)/(_F′t_) which is a function of _t_ only,
+the equation
+
+ _e_ = _T_ log _v_
+
+is the analytical expression of the law stated pp. 80, 81. It is common
+to all gases, since the laws of which we have made use are common to
+all.
+
+If we call _s_ the quantity of heat necessary to change the air that we
+have employed from the volume 1 and from the temperature zero to the
+volume _v_ and to the temperature _t_, the difference between _s_ and
+_e_ will be the quantity of heat required to bring the air at the volume
+1 from zero to _t_. This quantity depends on _t_ alone; we will call it
+_U_. It will be any function whatever of _t_. We shall have
+
+ _s_ = _e_ + _U_ = _T_ log _v_ + _U_.
+
+If we differentiate this equation with relation to _t_ alone, and if we
+represent it by _T′_ and _U′_, the differential coefficients of _T_ and
+_U_, we shall get
+
+ (_ds_)/(_dt_) = _T′_ log _v_ + _U′_; (5)
+
+_ds_/_dt_ is simply the specific heat of the gas under constant volume,
+and our equation (1) is the analytical expression of the law stated on
+page 86.
+
+If we suppose the specific heat constant at all temperatures (hypothesis
+discussed above, page 92), the quantity _ds_/_dt_ will be independent of
+_t_; and in order to satisfy equation (5) for two particular values of
+_v_, it will be necessary that _T′_ and _U′_ be independent of _t_; we
+shall then have _T′_ = _C_, a constant quantity. Multiplying _T′_ and
+_C_ by _dt_, and taking the integral of both, we find
+
+ _T_ = _Ct_ + _C_{1}_;
+
+but as _T_ = _N_/_F′t_, we have
+
+ _F′t_ = (_N_)/(_T_) = (_N_)/(_Ct_ + _C_{1}_).
+
+Multiplying both by _dt_ and integrating, we have
+
+ _Ft_ = (_N_)/(_C_) log (_Ct_ + _C_{1}_) + _C_{2}_;
+
+or changing arbitrary constants, and remarking further that _Ft_ is 0
+when _t_ = 0°,
+
+ _Ft_ = _A_ log (1 + (_t_)/(_B_)). (6)
+
+The nature of the function _Ft_ would be thus determined, and we would
+thus be able to estimate the motive power developed by any fall of heat.
+But this latter conclusion is founded on the hypothesis of the constancy
+of the specific heat of a gas which does not change in volume—an
+hypothesis which has not yet been sufficiently verified by experiment.
+Until there is fresh proof, our equation (6) can be admitted only
+throughout a limited portion of the thermometric scale.
+
+In equation (5), the first member represents, as we have remarked, the
+specific heat of the air occupying the volume _v_. Experiment having
+shown that this heat varies little in spite of the quite considerable
+changes of volume, it is necessary that the coefficient _T′_ of log _v_
+should be a very small quantity. If we consider it nothing, and, after
+having multiplied by _dt_ the equation
+
+ _T′_ = 0,
+
+we take the integral of it, we find
+
+ _T_ = _C_, constant quantity;
+
+but
+
+ _T_ = _N_/_F′t_,
+
+whence
+
+ _F′t_ = _N_/_T_ = _N_/_C_ = _A_;
+
+whence we deduce finally, by a second integration,
+
+ _Ft_ = _At_ + _B_.
+
+As _Ft_ = 0 when _t_ = 0, _B_ is 0; thus
+
+ _Ft_ = _At_;
+
+that is, the motive power produced would be found to be exactly
+proportional to the fall of the caloric. This is the analytical
+translation of what was stated on page 98.
+
+NOTE F.—M. Dalton believed that he had discovered that the vapors of
+different liquids at equal thermometric distances from the boiling-point
+possess equal tensions; but this law is not precisely exact; it is only
+approximate. It is the same with the law of the proportionality of the
+latent heat of vapors with their densities (see Extracts from a Mémoire
+of M. C. Despretz, _Annales de Chimie et de Physique_, t. xvi. p. 105,
+and t. xxiv. p. 323). Questions of this nature are closely connected
+with those of the motive power of heat. Quite recently MM. H. Davy and
+Faraday, after having conducted a series of elegant experiments on the
+liquefaction of gases by means of considerable pressure, have tried to
+observe the changes of tension of these liquefied gases on account of
+slight changes of temperature. They have in view the application of the
+new liquids to the production of motive power (see _Annales de Chimie et
+de Physique_, January, 1824, p. 80).
+
+According to the above-mentioned theory, we can foresee that the use of
+these liquids would present no advantages relatively to the economy of
+heat. The advantages would be found only in the lower temperature at
+which it would be possible to work, and in the sources whence, for this
+reason, it would become possible to obtain caloric.
+
+NOTE G.—This principle, the real foundation of the theory of
+steam-engines, was very clearly developed by M. Clement in a memoir
+presented to the Academy of Sciences several years ago. This Memoir has
+never been printed, and I owe the knowledge of it to the kindness of the
+author. Not only is the principle established therein, but it is applied
+to the different systems of steam-engines actually in use. The motive
+power of each of them is estimated therein by the aid of the law cited
+page 92, and compared with the results of experiment.
+
+The principle in question is so little known or so poorly appreciated,
+that recently Mr. Perkins, a celebrated mechanician of London,
+constructed a machine in which steam produced under the pressure of 35
+atmospheres—a pressure never before used—is subjected to very little
+expansion of volume, as any one with the least knowledge of this machine
+can understand. It consists of a single cylinder of very small
+dimensions, which at each stroke is entirely filled with steam, formed
+under the pressure of 35 atmospheres. The steam produces no effect by
+the expansion of its volume, for no space is provided in which the
+expansion can take place. It is condensed as soon as it leaves the small
+cylinder. It works therefore only under a pressure of 35 atmospheres,
+and not, as its useful employment would require, under progressively
+decreasing pressures. The machine of Mr. Perkins seems not to realize
+the hopes which it at first awakened. It has been asserted that the
+economy of coal in this engine was ⁹⁄₁₀ above the best engines of Watt,
+and that it possessed still other advantages (see _Annales de Chimie et
+de Physique_, April, 1823, p. 429). These assertions have not been
+verified. The engine of Mr. Perkins is nevertheless a valuable
+invention, in that it has proved the possibility of making use of steam
+under much higher pressure than previously, and because, being easily
+modified, it may lead to very useful results.
+
+Watt, to whom we owe almost all the great improvements in steam-engines,
+and who brought these engines to a state of perfection difficult even
+now to surpass, was also the first who employed steam under
+progressively decreasing pressures. In many cases he suppressed the
+introduction of the steam into the cylinder at a half, a third, or a
+quarter of the stroke. The piston completes its stroke, therefore, under
+a constantly diminishing pressure. The first engines working on this
+principle date from 1778. Watt conceived the idea of them in 1769, and
+took out a patent in 1782.
+
+We give here the Table appended to Watt’s patent. He supposed the steam
+introduced into the cylinder during the first quarter of the stroke of
+the piston; then, dividing this stroke into twenty parts, he calculated
+the mean pressure as follows:
+
+ Portions of the descent from the top of the Decreasing pressure of the
+ cylinder. steam, the entire pressure
+ being 1.
+ Steam arriving
+ 0.05 freely from the 1.000 Total pressure.
+ boiler.
+ 0.10 „ 1.000 „
+ 0.15 „ 1.000 „
+ 0.20 „ 1.000 „
+ Quarter 0.25 „ 1.000 „
+ The steam being cut
+ off and the
+ 0.30 descent taking 0.830
+ place only by
+ expansion.
+ 0.35 „ 0.714
+ 0.40 „ 0.625
+ 0.45 „ 0.555
+ Half 0.50 „ 0.500 Half original
+ pressure.
+ 0.55 „ 0.454
+ 0.60 „ 0.417
+ 0.65 „ 0.385
+ 0.70 „ 0.375
+ 0.75 „ 0.333 One third.
+ 0.80 „ 0.312
+ 0.85 „ 0.294
+ 0.90 „ 0.277
+ 0.95 „ 0.262
+ Bottom of cylinder 1.00 „ 0.025 Quarter.
+ Total, 11.583
+
+ Mean pressure (11.583)/(20) = 0.579.
+
+On which he remarked, that the mean pressure is more than half the
+original pressure; also that in employing a quantity of steam equal to a
+quarter, it would produce an effect more than half.
+
+Watt here supposed that steam follows in its expansion the law of
+Mariotte, which should not be considered exact, because, in the first
+place, the elastic fluid in dilating falls in temperature, and in the
+second place there is nothing to prove that a part of this fluid is not
+condensed by its expansion. Watt should also have taken into
+consideration the force necessary to expel the steam which remains after
+condensation, and which is found in quantity as much greater as the
+expansion of the volume has been carried further. Dr. Robinson has
+supplemented the work of Watt by a simple formula to calculate the
+effect of the expansion of steam, but this formula is found to have the
+same faults that we have just noticed. It has nevertheless been useful
+to constructors by furnishing them approximate data practically quite
+satisfactory. We have considered it useful to recall these facts because
+they are little known, especially in France. These engines have been
+built after the models of the inventors, but the ideas by which the
+inventors were originally influenced have been but little understood.
+Ignorance of these ideas has often led to grave errors. Engines
+originally well conceived have deteriorated in the hands of unskilful
+builders, who, wishing to introduce in them improvements of little
+value, have neglected the capital considerations which they did not know
+enough to appreciate.
+
+NOTE H.—The advantage in substituting two cylinders for one is evident.
+In a single cylinder the impulsion of the piston would be extremely
+variable from the beginning to the end of the stroke. It would be
+necessary for all the parts by which the motion is transmitted to be of
+sufficient strength to resist the first impulsion, and perfectly fitted
+to avoid the abrupt movements which would greatly injure and soon
+destroy them. It would be especially on the working beam, on the
+supports, on the crank, on the connecting-rod, and on the first
+gear-wheels that the unequal effort would be felt, and would produce the
+most injurious effects. It would be necessary that the steam-cylinder
+should be both sufficiently strong to sustain the highest pressure, and
+with a large enough capacity to contain the steam after its expansion of
+volume, while in using two successive cylinders it is only necessary to
+have the first sufficiently strong and of medium capacity,—which is not
+at all difficult,—and to have the second of ample dimensions, with
+moderate strength.
+
+Double-cylinder engines, although founded on correct principles, often
+fail to secure the advantages expected from them. This is due
+principally to the fact that the dimensions of the different parts of
+these engines are difficult to adjust, and that they are rarely found to
+be in correct proportion. Good models for the construction of
+double-cylinder engines are wanting, while excellent designs exist for
+the construction of engines on the plan of Watt. From this arises the
+diversity that we see in the results of the former, and the great
+uniformity that we have observed in the results of the latter.
+
+NOTE I.—Among the attempts made to develop the motive power of heat by
+means of atmospheric air, we should mention those of MM. Niepce, which
+were made in France several years ago, by means of an apparatus called
+by the inventors a pyréolophore. The apparatus was made thus: There was
+a cylinder furnished with a piston, into which the atmospheric air was
+introduced at ordinary density. A very combustible material, reduced to
+a condition of extreme tenuity, was thrown into it, remained a moment in
+suspension in the air, and then flame was applied. The inflammation
+produced very nearly the same effect as if the elastic fluid had been a
+mixture of air and combustible gas, of air and carburetted hydrogen gas,
+for example. There was a sort of explosion, and a sudden dilatation of
+the elastic fluid—a dilatation that was utilized by making it act upon
+the piston. The latter may have a motion of any amplitude whatever, and
+the motive power is thus realized. The air is next renewed, and the
+operation repeated.
+
+This machine, very ingenious and interesting, especially on account of
+the novelty of its principle, fails in an essential point. The material
+used as a combustible (it was the dust of Lycopodium, used to produce
+flame in our theatres) was so expensive, that all the advantage was lost
+through that cause; and unfortunately it was difficult to employ a
+combustible of moderate price, since a very finely powdered substance
+was required which would burn quickly, spread rapidly, and leave little
+or no ash.
+
+Instead of working as did MM. Niepce, it would seem to us preferable to
+compress the air by means of pumps, to make it traverse a perfectly
+closed furnace into which the combustible had been introduced in small
+portions by a mechanism easy of conception, to make it develop its
+action in a cylinder with a piston, or in any other variable space;
+finally, to throw it out again into the atmosphere, or even to make it
+pass under a steam-boiler in order to utilize the temperature remaining.
+
+The principal difficulties that we should meet in this mode of operation
+would be to enclose the furnace in a sufficiently strong envelope, to
+keep the combustion meanwhile in the requisite state, to maintain the
+different parts of the apparatus at a moderate temperature, and to
+prevent rapid abrasion of the cylinder and of the piston. These
+difficulties do not appear to be insurmountable.
+
+There have been made, it is said, recently in England, successful
+attempts to develop motive power through the action of heat on
+atmospheric air. We are entirely ignorant in what these attempts have
+consisted—if indeed they have really been made.
+
+NOTE J.—The result given here was furnished by an engine whose large
+cylinder was 45 inches in diameter and 7 feet stroke. It is used in one
+of the mines of Cornwall called Wheal Abraham. This result should be
+considered as somewhat exceptional, for it was only temporary,
+continuing but a single month. Thirty millions of lbs. raised one
+English foot per bushel of coal of 88 lbs. is generally regarded as an
+excellent result for steam-engines. It is sometimes attained by engines
+of the Watt type, but very rarely surpassed. This latter product
+amounts, in French measures, to 104,000 kilograms raised one metre per
+kilogram of coal consumed.
+
+According to what is generally understood by one horse-power, in
+estimating the duty of steam-engines, an engine of ten horse-power
+should raise per second 10 × 75 kilograms, or 750 kilograms, to a height
+of one metre, or more, per hour; 750 × 3600 = 2,700,000 kilograms to one
+metre. If we suppose that each kilogram of coal raised to this height
+104,000 kilograms, it will be necessary, in order to ascertain how much
+coal is burnt in one hour by our ten-horse-power engine, to divide
+2,700,000 by 104,000, which gives ²⁷⁰⁰⁄₁₀₄ = 26 kilograms. Now it is
+seldom that a ten-horse-power engine consumes less than 26 kilograms of
+coal per hour.
+
+
+
+
+ APPENDIX C.
+ NOTE BY THE EDITOR.
+
+
+All the preceding data are to-day subject to modification.
+
+Thus a duty of 150,000,000 ft.-lbs. per 100 lbs. good coal is to-day
+attainable, and two thirds that figure is extremely common. With engines
+of large size the coal-consumption has fallen to one half, sometimes
+even to one fourth, the figure in the text.
+
+Hot air-engines are superseded by the gas-engine and the oil-vapor
+engine; which even threaten, in the opinion of many engineers, to
+ultimately displace the steam-engine.
+
+Compound and other multiple-cylinder engines, with two, three, and even
+four cylinders in series, are now always employed where fuel is costly.
+The reason of their success is, in part, that given in Note H; but in
+only small part. The real cause of their general adoption is the fact
+that the internal thermal waste by “cylinder condensation”—which in
+simple engines ordinarily amounts, according to size, to from 25 to 50
+per cent, or more, of all heat supplied by the boiler—is reduced nearly
+in proportion to the number of steam-cylinders in series.
+
+For the applied thermodynamics of the steam-engine, following Carnot and
+Thomson, see the pages of Rankine and of Clausius of 1850 to 1860, and
+especially the treatise of Rankine on the Steam-engine. The editor has
+adopted the methods of these great successors of Carnot in his “Manual
+of the Steam-engine” (2 vols. 8vo; N. Y., J. Wiley & Sons), which may be
+consulted in this connection, and especially for details of the theory
+and the structure of this prime mover.
+
+-----
+
+Footnote 1:
+
+ Tait: Thermodynamics, p. 13.
+
+Footnote 2:
+
+ Account of Carnot’s Theory of the Motive Power of Heat; Sir Wm.
+ Thomson; Trans. Roy. Soc. of Edinburgh, xvi. 1849; and Math. and Phys.
+ Papers, xli. vol. 1 (Cambridge, 1882), p. 113. In this paper the
+ corrections due to the introduction of the dynamic theory are first
+ applied.
+
+Footnote 3:
+
+ See the Appendix for these memoranda, and for other previously
+ unpublished matter.
+
+Footnote 4:
+
+ Sadi Carnot’s _Réflexions sur la puissance motrice du feu_ (Paris,
+ Bachelier 1824) was long ago completely exhausted. As but a small
+ number of copies were printed, this remarkable work remained long
+ unknown to the earlier writers on Thermodynamics. It was therefore for
+ the benefit of savants unable to study a work out of print, as well as
+ to render honor to the memory of Sadi Carnot, that the new publishers
+ of the _Annales Scientifique de l’École Normale supérieure_ (ii.
+ series, t. 1, 1872) published a new edition, from which this
+ translation is reproduced.
+
+Footnote 5:
+
+ It may be said that coal-mining has increased tenfold in England since
+ the invention of the steam-engine. It is almost equally true in regard
+ to the mining of copper, tin, and iron. The results produced in a
+ half-century by the steam-engine in the mines of England are to-day
+ paralleled in the gold and silver mines of the New World—mines of
+ which the working declined from day to day, principally on account of
+ the insufficiency of the motors employed in the draining and the
+ extraction of the minerals.
+
+Footnote 6:
+
+ We say, to lessen the dangers of journeys. In fact, although the use
+ of the steam-engine on ships is attended by some danger which has been
+ greatly exaggerated, this is more than compensated by the power of
+ following always an appointed and well-known route, of resisting the
+ force of the winds which would drive the ship towards the shore, the
+ shoals, or the rocks.
+
+Footnote 7:
+
+ We use here the expression motive power to express the useful effect
+ that a motor is capable of producing. This effect can always be
+ likened to the elevation of a weight to a certain height. It has, as
+ we know, as a measure, the product of the weight multiplied by the
+ height to which it is raised.
+
+Footnote 8:
+
+ We distinguish here the steam-engine from the heat-engine in general.
+ The latter may make use of any agent whatever, of the vapor of water
+ or of any other, to develop the motive power of heat.
+
+Footnote 9:
+
+ Certain engines at high pressure throw the steam out into the
+ atmosphere instead of the condenser. They are used specially in places
+ where it would be difficult to procure a stream of cold water
+ sufficient to produce condensation.
+
+Footnote 10:
+
+ The existence of water in the liquid state here necessarily assumed,
+ since without it the steam-engine could not be fed, supposes the
+ existence of a pressure capable of preventing this water from
+ vaporizing, consequently of a pressure equal or superior to the
+ tension of vapor at that temperature. If such a pressure were not
+ exerted by the atmospheric air, there would be instantly produced a
+ quantity of steam sufficient to give rise to that tension, and it
+ would be necessary always to overcome this pressure in order to throw
+ out the steam from the engines into the new atmosphere. Now this is
+ evidently equivalent to overcoming the tension which the steam retains
+ after its condensation, as effected by ordinary means.
+
+ If a very high temperature existed at the surface of our globe, as it
+ seems certain that it exists in its interior, all the waters of the
+ ocean would be in a state of vapor in the atmosphere, and no portion
+ of it would be found in a liquid state.
+
+Footnote 11:
+
+ It is considered unnecessary to explain here what is quantity of
+ caloric or quantity of heat (for we employ these two expressions
+ indifferently), or to describe how we measure these quantities by the
+ calorimeter. Nor will we explain what is meant by latent heat, degree
+ of temperature, specific heat, etc. The reader should be familiarized
+ with these terms through the study of the elementary treatises of
+ physics or of chemistry.
+
+Footnote 12:
+
+ We may perhaps wonder here that the body _B_ being at the same
+ temperature as the steam is able to condense it. Doubtless this is not
+ strictly possible, but the slightest difference of temperature will
+ determine the condensation, which suffices to establish the justice of
+ our reasoning. It is thus that, in the differential calculus, it is
+ sufficient that we can conceive the neglected quantities indefinitely
+ reducible in proportion to the quantities retained in the equations,
+ to make certain of the exact result.
+
+ The body _B_ condenses the steam without changing its own
+ temperature—this results from our supposition. We have admitted that
+ this body may be maintained at a constant temperature. We take away
+ the caloric as the steam furnishes it. This is the condition in which
+ the metal of the condenser is found when the liquefaction of the steam
+ is accomplished by applying cold water externally, as was formerly
+ done in several engines. Similarly, the water of a reservoir can be
+ maintained at a constant level if the liquid flows out at one side as
+ it flows in at the other.
+
+ One could even conceive the bodies _A_ and _B_ maintaining the same
+ temperature, although they might lose or gain certain quantities of
+ heat. If, for example, the body _A_ were a mass of steam ready to
+ become liquid, and the body _B_ a mass of ice ready to melt, these
+ bodies might, as we know, furnish or receive caloric without
+ thermometric change.
+
+Footnote 13:
+
+ Note A, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 14:
+
+ We assume here no chemical action between the bodies employed to
+ realize the motive power of heat. The chemical action which takes
+ place in the furnace is, in some sort, a preliminary action,—an
+ operation destined not to produce immediately motive power, but to
+ destroy the equilibrium of the caloric, to produce a difference of
+ temperature which may finally give rise to motion.
+
+Footnote 15:
+
+ This kind of loss is found in all steam-engines. In fact, the water
+ destined to feed the boiler is always cooler than the water which it
+ already contains. There occurs between them a useless re-establishment
+ of equilibrium of caloric. We are easily convinced, _à posteriori_,
+ that this re-establishment of equilibrium causes a loss of motive
+ power if we reflect that it would have been possible to previously
+ heat the feed-water by using it as condensing water in a small
+ accessory engine, when the steam drawn from the large boiler might
+ have been used, and where the condensation might be produced at a
+ temperature intermediate between that of the boiler and that of the
+ principal condenser. The power produced by the small engine would have
+ cost no loss of heat, since all that which had been used would have
+ returned into the boiler with the water of condensation.
+
+Footnote 16:
+
+ The matter here dealt with being entirely new, we are obliged to
+ employ expressions not in use as yet, and which perhaps are less clear
+ than is desirable.
+
+Footnote 17:
+
+ Note 13, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 18:
+
+ We tacitly assume in our demonstration, that when a body has
+ experienced any changes, and when after a certain number of
+ transformations it returns to precisely its original state, that is,
+ to that state considered in respect to density, to temperature, to
+ mode of aggregation—let us suppose, I say, that this body is found to
+ contain the same quantity of heat that it contained at first, or else
+ that the quantities of heat absorbed or set free in these different
+ transformations are exactly compensated. This fact has never been
+ called in question. It was first admitted without reflection, and
+ verified afterwards in many cases by experiments with the calorimeter.
+ To deny it would be to overthrow the whole theory of heat to which it
+ serves as a basis. For the rest, we may say in passing, the main
+ principles on which the theory of heat rests require the most careful
+ examination. Many experimental facts appear almost inexplicable in the
+ present state of this theory.
+
+Footnote 19:
+
+ We will suppose, in what follows, the reader to be _au courant_ with
+ the later progress of modern Physics in regard to gaseous substances
+ and heat.
+
+Footnote 20:
+
+ M. Poisson, to whom this figure is due, has shown that it accords very
+ well with the result of an experiment of MM. Clement and Desormes on
+ the return of air into a vacuum, or rather, into air slightly
+ rarefied. It also accords very nearly with results found by MM.
+ Gay-Lussac and Welter. (See note, p. 87.)
+
+Footnote 21:
+
+ The law of Mariotte, which is here made the foundation upon which to
+ establish our demonstration, is one of the best authenticated physical
+ laws. It has served as a basis to many theories verified by
+ experience, and which in turn verify all the laws on which they are
+ founded. We can cite also, as a valuable verification of Mariotte’s
+ law and also of that of MM. Gay-Lussac and Dalton, for a great
+ difference of temperature, the experiments of MM. Dulong and Petit.
+ (See _Annales de Chimie et de Physique_, Feb. 1818, t. vii. p. 122.)
+
+ The more recent experiments of Davy and Faraday can also be cited.
+
+ The theories that we deduce here would not perhaps be exact if applied
+ outside of certain limits either of density or temperature. They
+ should be regarded as true only within the limits in which the laws of
+ Mariotte and of MM. Gay-Lussac and Dalton are themselves proven.
+
+Footnote 22:
+
+ When the volume is reduced ¹⁄₁₁₆, that is, when it becomes ¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆ of
+ what it was at first, the temperature rises one degree. Another
+ reduction of ¹⁄₁₁₆ carries the volume to (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)^2, and the
+ temperature should rise another degree. After _x_ similar reductions
+ the volume becomes (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)^{_x_}, and the temperature should be
+ raised _x_ degrees. If we suppose (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)^{_x_} = ¹⁄₁₄, and if we
+ take the logarithms of both, we find
+
+ _x_ = about 300°.
+
+ If we suppose (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)^{_x_} = ½, we find
+
+ _x_ = 80°;
+
+ which shows that air compressed one half rises 80°.
+
+ All this is subject to the hypothesis that the specific heat of air
+ does not change, although the volume diminishes. But if, for the
+ reasons hereafter given (pp. 86, 89), we regard the specific heat of
+ air compressed one half as reduced in the relation of 700 to 616, the
+ number 80° must be multiplied by ⁷⁰⁰⁄₆₁₆, which raises it to 90°.
+
+Footnote 23:
+
+ MM. Gay-Lussac and Welter have found by direct experiments, cited in
+ the _Mécanique Céleste_ and in the _Annales de Chimie et de Physique_,
+ July, 1822, p. 267, that the ratio between the specific heat at
+ constant pressure and the specific heat at constant volume varies very
+ little with the density of the gas. According to what we have just
+ seen, the difference should remain constant, and not the ratio. As,
+ further, the specific heat of gases for a given weight varies very
+ little with the density, it is evident that the ratio itself
+ experiences but slight changes.
+
+ The ratio between the specific heat of atmospheric air at constant
+ pressure and at constant volume is, according to MM. Gay-Lussac and
+ Welter, 1.3748, a number almost constant for all pressures, and even
+ for all temperatures. We have come, through other considerations, to
+ the number (267 + 116)/(267) = 1.44, which differs from the former
+ (1)/(20), and we have used this number to prepare a table of the
+ specific heats of gases at constant volume. So we need not regard this
+ table as very exact, any more than the table given on p. 89. These
+ tables are mainly intended to demonstrate the laws governing specific
+ heats of aeriform fluids.
+
+Footnote 24:
+
+ Note C, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 25:
+
+ Note D, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 26:
+
+ Note E, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 27:
+
+ We find (_Annales de Chimie et de Physique_, July, 1818, p. 294) in a
+ memoir of M. Petit an estimate of the motive power of heat applied to
+ air and to vapor of water. This estimate leads us to attribute a great
+ advantage to atmospheric air, but it is derived by a method of
+ considering the action of heat which is quite imperfect.
+
+Footnote 28:
+
+ Note F, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 29:
+
+ Those that we need are the expansive force acquired by solids and
+ liquids by a given increase of temperature, and the quantity of heat
+ absorbed or relinquished in the changes of volume of these bodies.
+
+Footnote 30:
+
+ The recent experiments of M. Oerstedt on the compressibility of water
+ have shown that, for a pressure of five atmospheres, the temperature
+ of this liquid exhibits no appreciable change. (_See Annales de Chimie
+ et de Physique_, Feb. 1823, p. 192.)
+
+Footnote 31:
+
+ Note G, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 32:
+
+ We find in the work called _De la Richesse Minérale_, by M. Heron de
+ Villefosse, vol. iii. p. 50 and following, a good description of the
+ steam-engines actually in use in mining. In England the steam-engine
+ has been very fully discussed in the _Encyclopedia Britannica_. Some
+ of the data here employed are drawn from the latter work.
+
+Footnote 33:
+
+ Note I, Appendix B.
+
+Footnote 34:
+
+ From _Transactions of the Edinburgh Royal Society_, xiv. 1849;
+ _Annales de Chimie_, xxxv. 1852.
+
+Footnote 35:
+
+ Published in 1824, in a work entitled “_Réflexions sur la Puissance
+ Motrice du Feu, et sur les Machines Propres à Developer cette
+ Puissance. Par S. Carnot._” [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. The original work
+ has now been republished, with a biographical notice, Paris, 1878.]
+
+Footnote 36:
+
+ An account of the first part of a series of researches undertaken by
+ Mons. Regnault, by order of the late French Government, for
+ ascertaining the various physical data of importance in the theory of
+ the steam-engine, has been recently published (under the title
+ “_Relation des Expériences_,” etc.) in the _Mémoires de l’Institut_,
+ of which it constitutes the twenty-first volume (1847). The second
+ part of these researches has not yet been published. [Note of Nov. 5,
+ 1881. The continuation of these researches has now been published;
+ thus we have for the whole series, vol. i. in 1847; vol. ii. in 1862;
+ and vol. iii. in 1870.]
+
+Footnote 37:
+
+ Carnot, p. 67.
+
+Footnote 38:
+
+ The _evolution_ of heat in a fixed conductor, through which a
+ galvanic current is sent from any source whatever, has long been
+ known to the scientific world; but it was pointed out by Mr. Joule
+ that we cannot infer from any previously-published experimental
+ researches, the actual _generation_ of heat when the current
+ originates in electro-magnetic induction; since the question occurs,
+ _is the heat which is evolved in one part of the closed conductor
+ merely transferred from those parts which are subject to the
+ inducing influence?_ Mr. Joule, after a most careful experimental
+ investigation with reference to this question, finds that it must be
+ answered in the negative. (See a paper “On the Calorific Effects of
+ Magneto-Electricity, and on the Mechanical Value of Heat; by J. P.
+ Joule, Esq.” Read before the British Association at Cork in 1843,
+ and subsequently communicated by the Author to the _Philosophical
+ Magazine_, vol. xxiii., pp. 263, 347, 435.)
+
+ Before we can finally conclude that heat is absolutely generated in
+ such operations, it would be necessary to prove that the inducing
+ magnet does not become lower in temperature, and thus compensate for
+ the heat evolved in the conductor. I am not aware that any examination
+ with reference to the truth of this conjecture has been instituted;
+ but, in the case where the inducing body is a pure electro-magnet
+ (without any iron), the experiments actually performed by Mr. Joule
+ render the conclusion probable that the heat evolved in the wire of
+ the electro-magnet is not affected by the inductive action, otherwise
+ than through the reflected influence which increases the strength of
+ its own current.
+
+Footnote 39:
+
+ So generally is Carnot’s principle tacitly admitted as an axiom, that
+ its application in this case has never, so far as I am aware, been
+ questioned by practical engineers. (1849).
+
+Footnote 40:
+
+ When “thermal agency” is thus spent in conducting heat through a
+ solid, what becomes of the mechanical effect which it might produce?
+ Nothing can be lost in the operations of nature—no energy can be
+ destroyed. What effect, then, is produced in place of the mechanical
+ effect which is lost? A perfect theory of heat imperatively demands an
+ answer to this question; yet no answer can be given in the present
+ state of science. A few years ago, a similar confession must have been
+ made with reference to the mechanical effect lost in a fluid set in
+ motion in the interior of a rigid closed vessel, and allowed to come
+ to rest by its own internal friction; but in this case the foundation
+ of a solution of the difficulty has been actually found in Mr. Joule’s
+ discovery of the generation of heat, by the internal friction of a
+ fluid in motion. Encouraged by this example, we may hope that the very
+ perplexing question in the theory of heat, by which we are at present
+ arrested, will before long be cleared up. [Note of Sept., 1881. The
+ Theory of the Dissipation of Energy completely answers this question
+ and removes the difficulty.]
+
+ It might appear that the difficulty would be entirely avoided by
+ abandoning Carnot’s fundamental axiom; a view which is strongly urged
+ by Mr. Joule (at the conclusion of his paper “On the Changes of
+ Temperature produced by the Rarefaction and Condensation of Air.”
+ _Phil. Mag._, May 1845, vol. xxvi.) If we do so, however, we meet with
+ innumerable other difficulties—insuperable without farther
+ experimental investigation, and an entire reconstruction of the theory
+ of heat from its foundation. It is in reality to experiment that we
+ must look—either for a verification of Carnot’s axiom, and an
+ explanation of the difficulty we have been considering; or for an
+ entirely new basis of the Theory of Heat.
+
+Footnote 41:
+
+ For a demonstration, see § 29.
+
+Footnote 42:
+
+ A case minutely examined in another paper, to be laid before the
+ Society at the present meeting. “Theoretical Considerations on the
+ Effect of Pressure in Lowering the Freezing-point of Water,” by Prof.
+ James Thomson.
+
+Footnote 43:
+
+ In all that follows, the pressure of the atmosphere on the upper side
+ of the piston will be included in the applied forces, which, in the
+ successive operations described, are sometimes overcome by the upward
+ motion, and sometimes yielded to in the motion downwards. It will be
+ unnecessary, in reckoning at the end of a cycle of operations, to take
+ into account the work thus spent upon the atmosphere, and the
+ restitution which has been made, since these precisely compensate for
+ one another.
+
+Footnote 44:
+
+ [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. Maxwell has simplified the correction by
+ beginning the cycle with Carnot’s second operation, and completing it
+ through his third, fourth, and first operations, with his third
+ operation nearly as follows:
+
+
+ _let the piston be pushed down to any position E_{3}F_{3}_;
+
+ then Carnot’s fourth operation altered to the following:
+
+ _let the piston be pushed down from E_{3}F_{3} until the temperature
+ reaches its primitive value S_;
+
+ and lastly, Carnot’s first operation altered to the following:
+
+ _let the piston rise to its primitive position_.]
+
+
+Footnote 45:
+
+ In Carnot’s work some perplexity is introduced with reference to the
+ temperature of the water, which, in the operations he describes, is
+ not brought back exactly to what it was at the commencement; but the
+ difficulty which arises is explained by the author. No such difficulty
+ occurs with reference to the cycle of operation described in the text,
+ for which I am indebted to Mons. Clapeyron.
+
+Footnote 46:
+
+ Thus, _dq_/_dv_ will be the partial differential coefficient, with
+ respect to _v_, of that function of _v_ and _t_ which expresses the
+ quantity of heat that must be added to a mass of air when in a
+ “standard” state (such as at the temperature zero, and under the
+ atmospheric pressure), to bring it to the temperature _t_ and the
+ volume _v_. That there is such a function, of two independent
+ variables _v_ and _t_, is merely an analytical expression of Carnot’s
+ fundamental axiom, as applied to a mass of air. The general principle
+ may be analytically stated in the following terms:—If _Mdv_ denote the
+ accession of heat received by a mass of any kind, not possessing a
+ destructible texture, when the volume is increased by _dv_, the
+ temperature being kept constant, and if _Ndt_ denote the amount of
+ heat which must be supplied to raise the temperature by _dt_, without
+ any alteration of volume; then _Mdv_ + _Ndt_ must be the differential
+ of a function of _v_ and _t_. [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. In the corrected
+ theory it is (_M_ − _Jp_)_dv_ + _Ndt_, that is a complete
+ differential, not _Mdv_ + _Ndt_. See _Dynamical Theory of Heat_ (Art.
+ XLVIII., below), § 20.]
+
+Footnote 47:
+
+ We might also investigate another relation, to express the fact that
+ there is no accession or removal of heat during either the second or
+ the fourth operation; but it will be seen that this will not affect
+ the result in the text, although it would enable us to determine both
+ φ and ω in terms of τ.
+
+Footnote 48:
+
+ This result might have been obtained by applying the usual notation of
+ the integral calculus to express the area of the curvilinear
+ quadrilateral, which, according to Clapeyron’s graphical construction,
+ would be found to represent the entire mechanical effect gained in the
+ cycle of operations of the air-engine. It is not necessary, however,
+ to enter into the details of this investigation, as the formula (3),
+ and the consequences derived from it, include the whole theory of the
+ air-engine, in the best practical form; and the investigation of it
+ which I have given in the text will probably give as clear a view of
+ the reasoning on which it is founded as could be obtained by the
+ graphical method, which in this case is not so valuable as it is from
+ its simplicity in the case of the steam-engine.
+
+Footnote 49:
+
+ This paragraph is the demonstration, referred to above, of the
+ proposition stated in § 13, as it is readily seen that it is
+ applicable to any conceivable kind of thermodynamic engine.
+
+Footnote 50:
+
+ The results of these investigations are exhibited in Tables I and II.
+
+Footnote 51:
+
+ It is, comparatively speaking, of little consequence to know
+ accurately the value of σ, for the factor (1 − σ) of the expression
+ for μ, since it is so small (being less than ¹⁄₁₇₀₀ for all
+ temperatures between 0° and 100°) that, unless all the data are known
+ with more accuracy than we can count upon at present, we might neglect
+ it altogether, and take _dp_/_kdt_ simply, as the expression for μ,
+ without committing any error of important magnitude.
+
+Footnote 52:
+
+ This is well established, within the ordinary atmospheric limits, in
+ Regnault’s Études Météorologiques, in the _Annales de Chimie_, vol.
+ xv., 1846.
+
+Footnote 53:
+
+ It appears that the vol. of 1 kilog. must be 1.69076 according to the
+ data here assumed.
+
+ The density of saturated steam at 100° is taken as ¹⁄₁₆₉₃.5 of that of
+ water at its maximum. Rankine takes it as ¹⁄₁₆₉₆.
+
+Footnote 54:
+
+ The part of this expression in the first vinculum (see Regnault, end
+ of ninth memoir) is what is known as “the total heat” of a pound of
+ steam, or the amount of heat necessary to convert a pound of water at
+ 0° into a pound of saturated steam at _t°_; which, according to
+ “Watt’s law” thus approximately verified, would be constant. The
+ second part, which would consist of the single term _t_, if the
+ specific heat of water were constant for all temperatures, is the
+ number of thermic units necessary to raise the temperature of a pound
+ of water from 0° to _t°_, and expresses empirically the results of
+ Regnault’s experiments on the specific heat of water (see end of the
+ tenth memoir), described in the work already referred to.
+
+Footnote 55:
+
+ In strictness, the 230th is the last degree for which the experimental
+ data are complete; but the data for the 231st may readily be assumed
+ in a sufficiently satisfactory manner.
+
+Footnote 56:
+
+ The numbers here tabulated may also be regarded as _the actual values
+ of μ for t_ = ½, _t_ = 1½, _t_ = 2½, _t_ = 3½, etc.
+
+Footnote 57:
+
+ For at the end of the fourth operation the whole mass is liquid, and
+ at the temperature _S_. Now, this state might be arrived at by first
+ compressing the vapor into water at the temperature _t_, and then
+ raising the temperature of the liquid to _S_; and however this state
+ may be arrived at, there cannot, on the whole, be any heat added to or
+ subtracted from the contents of the cylinder, since, during the fourth
+ operation, there is neither gain nor loss of heat. This reasoning is,
+ of course, founded on Carnot’s fundamental principle, which is tacitly
+ assumed in the commonly-received ideas connected with “Watt’s law,”
+ the “latent heat of steam,” and “the total heat of steam.”
+
+Footnote 58:
+
+ Thus, from Carnot’s calculations, we find, in the case of alcohol
+ 4.035, and in the case of water 3.648, instead of 3.963 and 3.658,
+ which are Clapeyron’s results in the same cases.
+
+Footnote 59:
+
+ A still closer agreement must be expected when more accurate
+ experimental data are afforded with reference to the other media.
+ Mons. Regnault informs me that he is engaged in completing some
+ researches, from which we may expect, possibly before the end of the
+ present year, to be furnished with all the data for five or six
+ different liquids which we possess at present for water. It is
+ therefore to be hoped that, before long, a most important test of the
+ validity of Carnot’s theory will be afforded.
+
+Footnote 60:
+
+ The _Napierian_ logarithm of _V_/_V′_ is here understood.
+
+Footnote 61:
+
+ Carnot varies the statement of his theorem, and illustrates it in a
+ passage, pp. 81, 82, of which the following is translation:
+
+ “_When a gas varies in volume without any change of temperature, the
+ quantities of heat absorbed or evolved by this gas are in arithmetical
+ progression, if the augmentation or diminutions of volume are in
+ geometrical progression._
+
+ “When we compress a litre of air maintained at the temperature 10°,
+ and reduce it to half a litre, it disengages a certain quantity of
+ heat. If, again, the volume be reduced from half a litre to a quarter
+ of a litre, from a quarter to an eighth, and so on the quantities of
+ heat successively evolved will be the same.
+
+ “If, in place of compressing the air, we allow it to expand to two
+ litres, four litres, eight litres, etc., it will be necessary to
+ supply equal quantities of heat to maintain the temperature always at
+ the same degree.”
+
+Footnote 62:
+
+ The best figure (1896) is _J_ = 778 ft.-lbs. = 1 B.T.U., or _J_ =
+ 426.8 kgm. = 1 calorie, and probably with great accuracy.
+
+Footnote 63:
+
+ Or the capacity of a unit of volume for heat.
+
+Footnote 64:
+
+ Carnot suggests a combination of the two principles, with air as the
+ medium for receiving the heat at a very high temperature from the
+ furnace; and a second medium, alternately in the state of saturated
+ vapor and liquid water, to receive the heat, discharged at an
+ intermediate temperature from the air, and transmit it to the coldest
+ part of the apparatus. It is possible that a complex arrangement of
+ this kind might be invented which would enable us to take the heat at
+ a higher temperature, and discharge it at a lower temperature than
+ would be practicable in any simple air-engine or simple steam-engine.
+ If so, it would no doubt be equally possible, and perhaps more
+ convenient, to employ steam alone, but to use it at a very high
+ temperature not in contact with water in the hottest part of the
+ apparatus, instead of, as in the steam-engine, always in a saturated
+ state.
+
+Footnote 65:
+
+ It is probably this invention to which Carnot alludes in the following
+ passage: “Il a été fait, dit-on, tout récemment en Angleterre des
+ essais heureux sur le développement de la puissance motrice par
+ l’action de la chaleur sur l’air atmosphérique. Nous ignorons
+ entièrement ne quoi ces essais ont consisté, si toutefois ils sont
+ réels.”
+
+Footnote 66:
+
+ From this point of view, we see very clearly how imperfect is the
+ steam-engine, even after all Watt’s improvements. For to “push the
+ principle of expansion to the utmost,” we must allow the steam, before
+ leaving the cylinder, to expand until its pressure is the same as that
+ of the vapor in the condenser. According to “Watt’s law,” its
+ temperature would then be the same as (actually a little above, as
+ Regnault has shown) that of the condenser, and hence the steam-engine
+ worked in this most advantageous way has in reality the very fault
+ that Watt found in Newcomen’s engine. This defect is partially
+ remedied by Hornblower’s system of using a separate expansion
+ cylinder, an arrangement the advantages of which did not escape
+ Carnot’s notice, although they have not been recognized extensively
+ among practical engineers, until within the last few years.
+
+Footnote 67:
+
+ I am indebted to the kindness of Professor Gordon of Glasgow for the
+ information regarding the various cases given in the text.
+
+Footnote 68:
+
+ In different Cornish engines, the pressure in the boiler is from 2½ to
+ 5 atmospheres; and, therefore, as we find from Regnault’s table of the
+ pressure of saturated steam, the temperature of the water in the
+ boiler must, in all of them, lie between 128° and 152°. For the better
+ class of engines, the average temperature of the water in the boiler
+ may be estimated at 140°, the corresponding pressure of steam being 3½
+ atmospheres.
+
+Footnote 69:
+
+ This number agrees very closely with the number corresponding to the
+ fall from 100° to 0°, given in Table II. Hence, the fall from 140° to
+ 30° of the scale of the air-thermometer is equivalent, with reference
+ to motive power, to the fall from 100° to 0°.
+
+Footnote 70:
+
+ It being assumed that the temperatures of the boiler and condenser are
+ the same as those of the Cornish engines. If, however, the pressure be
+ lower, two atmospheres, for instance, the numbers would stand thus:
+ The temperature in the boiler would be only 121. Consequently, for
+ each pound of steam evaporated, only 614 units of heat would be
+ required; and therefore the work performed for each unit of heat
+ transmitted would be 160.3 foot-pounds, which is _more_ than according
+ to the estimate in the text. On the other hand, the range of
+ temperatures, or the fall utilized, is only from 131 to 30, instead of
+ from 140 to 30°, and consequently (Table II.), the theoretical duty
+ for each unit of heat is only 371 foot-pounds. Hence, if the engine,
+ to work according to the specification, requires a pressure of only 15
+ lbs. on the square inch (i.e., a total steam-pressure of two
+ atmospheres), its performance is (160.3)/(371) or 43.2 per cent of its
+ theoretical duty.
+
+Footnote 71:
+
+ If, in this case again, the pressure required in the boiler to make
+ the engine work according to the contract were only 15 lbs. on the
+ square inch, we should have a different estimate of the economy, for
+ which see Table B, at the end of this paper.
+
+Footnote 72:
+
+ These engines are provided with separate expansion cylinders, which
+ have been recently added to them by Mr. M‘Naught of Glasgow.
+
+Footnote 73:
+
+ [Note added March 15, 1881. Total work for thermal unit, 1390 (Joule),
+ 377.1 corrected by the dynamical theory, March 15, 1851.
+
+ 377.1 = .2713 × 1390,
+ 253 = .1820 × 1390 = (1)/(5.49) × 1390.]
+
+Footnote 74:
+
+ Pressure 15 lbs. on the square inch.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ Page Changed from Changed to
+
+ 110 no appreciable change. (See no appreciable change. (See
+ Annales de Ohimie et de Annales de Chimie et de
+
+ 246 If, to abridge, we call _N_ the If, to abridge, we call _N_ the
+ quantity (_P_)/(726), the quantity (_P_)/(267), the
+
+ ● Fixed typos; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Renumbered footnotes and moved them all to the end of the final
+ chapter.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+ ● Enclosed blackletter font in =equals=.
+ ● The caret (^) is used to indicate superscript, whether applied to a
+ single character (as in 2^d) or to an entire expression (as in
+ 1^{st}).
+ ● Subscripts are shown using an underscore (_) with curly braces { },
+ as in H_{2}O.
+ ● Images without captions use HTML alt text.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78610 ***
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+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78610 ***</div>
+
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>SADI CARNOT<br> <br> <span class='sc'>At the Age of 17.</span><br> <br> (From a Portrait by Bailly, 1813.)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'><span class='xlarge'>REFLECTIONS</span><br> <span class='large'>ON THE</span><br> <span class='sc'>Motive Power of Heat</span>.</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><i>FROM THE ORIGINAL FRENCH OF</i></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>N.-L.-S. CARNOT,</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><i>Graduate of the Polytechnic School</i>.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>ACCOMPANIED BY</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>AN ACCOUNT OF CARNOT’S THEORY.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By</span> SIR WILLIAM THOMSON (LORD KELVIN).</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>EDITED BY</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='large'>R. H. THURSTON, M.A., LL.D., <span class='sc'>Dr.Eng’g</span>;</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><i>Director of Sibley College, Cornell University</i>;</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>“<i><span lang="fr">Officier de l’Instruction Publique de France</span></i>,”</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><cite>etc., etc., etc.</cite></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id002'>
+<img src='images/i_title.jpg' alt='Classical laurel wreath with ribbon banner bearing Greek text' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>SECOND, REVISED, EDITION</i>.</div>
+ <div>FIRST THOUSAND.</div>
+ <div class='c002'>NEW YORK:</div>
+ <div><span class='large'>JOHN WILEY &#38; SONS.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>London</span>: CHAPMAN &#38; HALL, <span class='sc'>Limited</span>.</div>
+ <div>1897.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='small'>Copyright, 1890,</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Robert H. Thurston</span>.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>ROBERT DRUMMOND, ELECTROTYPER AND PRINTER, NEW YORK.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>DEDICATED</div>
+ <div class='c003'>TO</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='large'><span class='blackletter'>Sadi Carnot,</span></span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='c004'><span class='sc'>President of the French Republic</span>,</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>That distinguished member of the Profession of Engineering whose whole Life has been an Honor to his Profession and to his Country</span>;</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='fss'>AND WHO, ELEVATED TO THE HIGHEST OFFICE WITHIN THE GIFT OF THE</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='c004'><span class='sc'>French Nation</span>,</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>has proven by the quiet dignity and the efficiency with which he has performed his august duties that he is a worthy member of a noble family, already rendered famous by an earlier Sadi Carnot, now immortal in the annals of science, and is himself deserving of enrolment in a list of great men which includes that other distinguished engineer, our own first president</span>,</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='c004'>GEORGE WASHINGTON.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>I.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c007'></th>
+ <th class='c008'>PAGE</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Work of N.-L.-Sadi Carnot.</span> <i>By the Editor</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>II.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Life of N.-L.-Sadi Carnot.</span> <i>By Mons. H. Carnot</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>III.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Reflections on the Motive Power of Heat and on Machines Fitted to Develop that Power.</span> <i>By Mons. N.-L.-Sadi Carnot</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>IV.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Account of Carnot’s Theory.</span> <i>By Sir William Thomson</i> (<i>Lord Kelvin</i>),</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_127'>127</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>APPENDIX.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>A. <span class='sc'>Extracts from Unpublished Writings of Carnot</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_205'>205</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>B. <span class='sc'>Carnot’s Foot-notes</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_237'>237</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007'>C. <span class='sc'>Note by the Editor</span>,</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_261'>261</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>PUBLISHERS’ NOTE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The <i><span lang="fr">raison d’être</span></i> of the following translation of
+the famous work of Carnot is not the usual one,
+either with the Publishers or the Editor—expectation
+of gain in either purse or fame. Neither
+could reasonably be anticipated from the reproduction
+of the work of an author of more than a half-century
+ago, in a field then unrecognized, and
+to-day familiar to but few; and especially when,
+as is in this case the fact, the work itself has been
+long out of date as a scientific authority, even had
+it ever held such a position. It could not be presumed
+that a very large proportion of even the
+men of science of the English-speaking world
+would be sufficiently familiar with the subject, or
+interested in its origin, to purchase such a relic of
+a primitive period as is this little book. Nor
+could the translation of the work, or the gathering
+together by the Editor of related matter, be
+supposed likely to be productive of any form of
+compensation. The hook is published as matter
+of limited but most intense scientific interest,
+and on that score only.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>It has seemed to the Editor and to the Publishers
+that the product of the wonderful genius of
+Carnot,—the great foundation-stone of one of the
+most marvellous and important of modern sciences,
+the first statement of the grand though simple laws
+of Thermodynamics,—as illustrated in this one little
+treatise, should be made accessible to all who
+desire to study the work in English, and preserved,
+so far as its publication in this form could accomplish
+it, as a permanent memorial, in a foreign
+tongue, of such grand truths, and of such a great
+genius as was their discoverer. It is with this
+purpose that Publishers and Editor have cooperated
+in this project.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The book consists, as will be seen on inspection,
+of the translation of Carnot’s <i><span lang="fr">Réflexions sur la
+Puissance Motrice du Feu</span></i>, preceded by a notice
+written by the Editor calling attention to its
+remarkable features, and its extraordinary character
+as the product of a most remarkable genius;
+and by a biographical sketch of the great author,
+written by his brother, Mons. Hyppolyte Carnot,
+which sketch we find in the French copy of the
+work as published by Gauthier-Villars, the latest
+reproduction of the book in the original tongue.
+To the main portion of the book, Carnot’s <cite><span lang="fr">Réflexions</span></cite>,
+is appended the celebrated paper of Sir
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>William Thomson, his “Account of Carnot’s
+Theory,” in which that great physicist first points
+out to the world the treasure so long concealed,
+unnoticed, among the scientific literature, already
+mainly antiquated, of the first quarter of the nineteenth
+century. The distinguished writer of this
+paper has kindly interested himself in the scheme
+of the Editor, and has consented to its insertion
+as a natural and desirable commentary upon the
+older work, and especially as exhibiting the relations
+of the fundamental principles discovered and
+enunciated by Carnot to the modern view of the
+nature of thermodynamic phenomena—relations
+evidently understood by that writer, but not by
+the leaders of scientific thought of his time, and
+therefore ignored by him in the construction of
+his new science.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The Appendix contains a number of Carnot’s
+own notes, too long to be inserted in the body of
+the paper in its present form, and which have
+therefore been removed to their present location
+simply as a matter of convenience in bookmaking.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The dedication of the work to the grandnephew
+of the author, who by a singular coincidence
+happens to-day to occupy the highest position
+that any citizen can aspire to reach in that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>now prosperous Republic, will be recognized as in
+all respects appropriate by every reader of the work
+of the earlier Sadi Carnot who is familiar with
+the character, the history, the attainments, the
+achievements, of the later Sadi Carnot in so
+many and widely diverse fields. The Carnot
+talent and the Carnot character are equally observable
+in both men, widely as they are separated
+in time and in the nature of their professional
+labors. Both are great representatives of a noble
+family, whose honor and fame they have both
+splendidly upheld.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The Publishers offer this little book to its
+readers as a small, yet in one sense not unimportant,
+contribution to the great cause of modern
+science, as a relic, a memorial, a corner-stone.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>NOTE BY THE EDITOR.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>“<i><span lang="fr">Je me suis proposé de grands desseins dans ce
+petit ouvrage</span></i>,” as Bernardin de Saint-Pierre says in
+the preface to his pathetic story of <cite><span lang="fr">Paul et Virginie</span></cite>.
+I have sought to present to the great English-speaking
+world the work of a genius hitherto only
+known to a few men of science, and not well known,
+even among the people of France, for whose credit
+he has done so much. In placing before the readers
+of this translation his book—small of size but
+great in matter as it is—I feel that I have accomplished
+an easy task, but one of real importance.
+I have been asked, as Corresponding Member for
+the United States of the Société des Ingénieurs
+Civils de France, to communicate to my colleagues
+scientific and professional memoirs and whatever
+may be of interest to them—“<i><span lang="fr">en un mot, que nous
+resserrions les liens qui font des ingénieurs en général
+une seule famille</span></i>.” That were a pleasant
+task; but a grander and a more agreeable one still
+is that of bringing “nearer in heart and thought”
+the members of that still larger community, the
+men of science of the world, and of weaving still
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>more firmly and closely those bonds of kindly
+thought and feeling which are growing continually
+more numerous and stronger as the nations are
+brought to see that humanity is larger and more
+important than political divisions, and that the
+labors of educated men and of the guiding minds
+in the great industries are constantly doing more
+to promote a true brotherhood of mankind than
+ever have, or ever can, the greatest statesmen.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>When the wonderful intellectual accomplishments
+of men like the elder Sadi Carnot become
+known and appreciated by the world, much more
+will have been accomplished in this direction. It
+is perhaps from this point of view that the importance
+of such work will be most fully recognized.
+When the little treatise which is here for the first
+time published in English becomes familiar to
+those for whom it is intended, it will be, to many
+at least, a matter of surprise no less than pleasure
+to discover that France has produced a writer on
+this now familiar subject whose inspiration anticipated
+many of the principles that those founders
+of the modern science, Rankine and Clausius,
+worked out through the tedious and difficult
+methods of the higher mathematics, and which
+were hailed by their contemporaries as marvellous
+discoveries.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>NOTE TO SECOND EDITION.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>The present edition of this little work is improved
+by the removal of a few errata observed in
+the first issue, and by the addition of a recent and
+excellent portrait of Lord Kelvin, as a frontispiece
+to his era-making paper, at page <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>. This picture,
+taken within the last year, is thought by the
+friends of its distinguished subject to be one of the
+best yet produced. That it is satisfactory to him
+and his friends is indicated by the fact that the
+original of this reproduction was presented to the
+writer by Lady Kelvin, in 1895, immediately after
+it was taken, and the autograph supplied by her
+distinguished husband. The Editor takes this
+occasion to acknowledge cordially the letters of
+appreciation and commendation received from
+those who have agreed with M. Haton de la Goupillière
+that the translation of Carnot and its
+publication in this manner, with the famous paper
+of Lord Kelvin, will be considered as worthy of
+approval by English-speaking readers as well as
+“appreciated by the whole French nation.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>I.<br> <span class='c011'>THE WORK OF SADI CARNOT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By the Editor.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Nicolas-Léonard-Sadi Carnot was, perhaps,
+the greatest genius, in the department of physical
+science at least, that this century has produced.
+By this I mean that he possessed in highest degree
+that combination of the imaginative faculty with
+intellectual acuteness, great logical power and capacity
+for learning, classifying and organizing in
+their proper relations, all the facts, phenomena,
+and laws of natural science which distinguishes
+the real genius from other men and even from the
+simply talented man. Only now and then, in the
+centuries, does such a genius come into view.
+Euclid was such in mathematics; Newton was
+such in mechanics; Bacon and Compte were such
+in logic and philosophy; Lavoisier and Davy were
+such in chemistry; and Fourier, Thomson, Maxwell,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>and Clausius were such in mathematical
+physics. Among engineers, we have the examples
+of Watt as inventor and philosopher, Rankine
+as his mathematical complement, developing the
+theory of that art of which Watt illustrated the
+practical side; we have Hirn as engineer-experimentalist,
+and philosopher, as well; Corliss as inventor
+and constructor; and a dozen creators of
+the machinery of the textile manufactures, in
+which, in the adjustment of cam-work, the highest
+genius of the mechanic appears.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>But Carnot exhibited that most marked characteristic
+of real genius, the power of applying such
+qualities as I have just enumerated to great purposes
+and with great result while still a youth.
+Genius is not dependent, as is talent, upon the
+ripening and the growth of years for its prescience;
+it is ready at the earliest maturity, and
+sometimes earlier, to exhibit its marvellous works;
+as, for example, note Hamilton the mathematician
+and Mill the logician; the one becoming
+master of a dozen languages when hardly more
+than as many years of age, reading Newton’s Principia
+at sixteen and conceiving that wonderful
+system, quaternions, at eighteen; the other competent
+to begin the study of Greek at three, learning
+Latin at seven and reading Plato before he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>was eight. Carnot had done his grandest work of
+the century in his province of thought, and had
+passed into the Unseen, at thirty-six; his one little
+volume, which has made him immortal, was written
+when he was but twenty-three or twenty-four.
+It is unnecessary, here, to enter into the particulars
+of his life; that has been given us in ample
+detail in the admirable sketch by his brother
+which is here republished. It will be quite sufficient
+to indicate, in a few words, what were the
+conditions amid which he lived and the relation
+of his work to that great science of which it was
+the first exposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>At the time of Carnot, the opinion of the
+scientific world was divided, as it had been for
+centuries, on the question of the true nature of
+heat and light, and as it still is, to a certain extent,
+regarding electricity. On the one hand it
+was held by the best-known physicists that heat
+is a substance which pervades all bodies in greater
+or less amount, and that heating and cooling are
+simply the absorption and the rejection of this
+“imponderable substance” by the body affected;
+while, on the other hand, it was asserted by a
+small but increasing number that heat is a
+“mode of motion,” a form of energy, not only
+imponderable, but actually immaterial; a quality
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>of bodies, not a substance, and that it is identical,
+in its nature, with other forms of recognizable
+energy, as, for example, mechanical energy. A
+quarter of a century before Carnot wrote, the experiments
+of Rumford and of Davy had been crucial
+in the settlement of the question and in the
+proof of the correctness of the second of the two
+opposing parties; but their work had not become
+so generally known or so fully accepted as to be
+acknowledged as representative of the right views
+of the subject. The prevalent opinion, following
+Newton, was favorable to the first hypothesis;
+and it was in deference to this opinion that Carnot
+based his work on an inaccurate hypothesis;
+though, fortunately, the fact did not seriously
+militate against its value or his credit and fame.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“With true philosophical caution, he avoids
+committing himself to this hypothesis; though he
+makes it the foundation of his attempt to discover
+how work is produced from heat.”<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The results of Carnot’s reasoning are, fortunately,
+mainly independent of any hypothesis as
+to the nature of heat or the method or mechanism
+of development and transfer or transformation of
+its energy. Carnot was in error in assuming no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>loss of heat in a completed cycle and in thus ignoring
+the permanent transformation of a definite
+proportion into mechanical energy; but his proposition
+that efficiency increases with increase of
+temperature-range is still correct; as is his assertion
+of its independence of the nature of the
+working substance.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Carnot’s “<cite><span lang="fr">Réflexions sur la Puissance Motrice
+du Feu</span></cite>,” published in 1824, escaped notice at the
+time, was only now and then slightly referred to
+later, until Clapeyron seized upon its salient ideas
+and illustrated them by the use of the Watt diagram
+of energy, and might, perhaps, have still remained
+unknown to the world except for the fact
+that Sir William Thomson, that greatest of modern
+mathematical physicists, fortunately, when still a
+youth and at the commencement of his own great
+work, discovered it, revealed its extraordinary
+merit, and, readjusting Carnot’s principles in accordance
+with the modern views of heat-energy,
+gave it the place that it is so well entitled to in
+the list of the era-making books of the age. But
+it still remained inaccessible to all who could not
+find the original paper until, only a few years
+since, it was reprinted by Gauthier-Villars, the
+great publishing house of Paris, accompanied by a
+biographical sketch by the younger brother, which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>it has been thought wise to reproduce with the
+translation of Carnot’s book. In making the
+translation, also, this later text has been followed;
+and now, for the first time, so far as is known to
+the writer, the work of Carnot is made accessible
+to the reader in English.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The original manuscript of Carnot has been deposited
+by his brother in the archives of the
+French Academy of Sciences, and thus insured
+perpetual care. The work of Carnot includes not
+only the treatise which it is the principal object of
+this translation to give to our readers, but also a
+considerable amount of hitherto unpublished matter
+which has been printed by his brother, with
+the new edition of the book, as illustrative of the
+breadth and acuteness of the mind of the Founder
+of the Science of Thermodynamics.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>These previously unpublished materials consist
+of memoranda relating to the specific heats of
+substances, their variations, and various other
+facts and data, and principles as well; some of
+which are now recognized as essential elements of
+the new science, even of its fundamental part.
+The book is particularly rich in what have been
+generally supposed to be the discoveries of later
+writers, and in enunciations of principles now
+recognized as those forming the base and the supporting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>framework of that latest of the sciences.
+As stated by Tait, in his history of Thermodynamics,
+the “two grand things” which Carnot originated
+and introduced were his idea of a “cycle”
+and the notion of its “reversibility,” when perfect.
+“Without this work of Carnot, the modern theory
+of energy, and especially that branch of it which
+is at present by far the most important in practice,
+the dynamical theory of heat, could not have
+attained its now enormous development.” These
+conceptions, original with our author, have been,
+in the hands of his successors, Clausius and other
+Continental writers, particularly, most fruitful of
+interesting and important results; and Clapeyron’s
+happy thought of so employing the Watt diagram
+of energy as to render them easy of comprehension
+has proved a valuable aid in this direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The exact experimental data needed for numerical
+computations in application of Carnot’s principles
+were inaccessible at the date of his writing;
+they were supplied, later, by Mayer, by Colding,
+by Joule, and by later investigators. Even the
+idea of equivalence, according to Hypolyte Carnot,
+was not originally familiar to the author of
+this remarkable work; but was gradually developed
+and defined as he progressed with his philosophy.
+It is sufficiently distinctly enunciated in his later
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>writings. He then showed a familiarity with
+those notions which have been ascribed generally
+to Mayer and which made the latter famous, and
+with those ideas which are now usually attributed
+to Joule with similar result. He seems actually to
+have planned the very kind of research which Joule
+finally carried out. All these advanced views
+must, of course, have been developed by Carnot
+before 1832, the date of his illness and death, and
+ten or fifteen years earlier than they were made
+public by those who have since been commonly
+considered their discoverers. These until lately
+unpublished notes of Carnot contain equally well-constructed
+arguments in favor of the now accepted
+theory of heat as energy. While submitting to
+the authority of the greatest physicists of his time,
+and so far as to make their view the basis of his
+work, to a certain extent, he nevertheless adhered
+privately to the true idea. His idea of the equivalence
+of heat and other forms of energy was as distinct
+and exact as was his notion of the nature of
+that phenomenon. He states it with perfect accuracy.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In making his measures of heat-energy, he assumes
+as a unit a measure not now common, but
+one which may be easily and conveniently reduced
+to the now general system of measurement. He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>takes the amount of power required to exert an
+energy equal to that needed to raise one cubic
+meter of water through a height of one meter,
+as his unit; this is 1000 kilogrammeters, taken
+as his unit of motive power; while he says that
+this is the equivalent of 2.7 of his units of
+heat; which latter quantity would be destroyed
+in its production of this amount of power, or
+rather work. His unit of heat is thus seen
+to be 1000 ÷ 2.7, or 370 kilogrammeters. This
+is almost identical with the figure obtained by
+Mayer, more than ten years later, and from
+presumably the same approximate physical data,
+the best then available, in the absence of a Regnault
+to determine the exact values. Mayer obtained
+365, a number which the later work of
+Regnault enabled us to prove to be 15 per cent.
+too low, a conclusion verified experimentally by
+the labors of Joule and his successors. Carnot was
+thus <i>a</i> discoverer of the equivalence of the units of
+heat and work, as well as the revealer of the principles
+which have come to be known by his name.
+Had he lived a little longer, there can be little
+doubt that he would have established the facts, as
+well as the principles, by convincing proof. His
+early death frustrated his designs, and deprived the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>world of one of its noblest intellects, just when it
+was beginning its marvellous career.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The following sentence from Carnot illustrates
+in brief his wonderful prescience; one can hardly
+believe it possible that it should have been written
+in the first quarter of the nineteenth century:
+“<i><span lang="fr">On peut donc poser en thèse générale que la puissance
+motrice est en quantité invariable dans la
+Nature; qu’elle n’est jamais, à proprement parler,
+ni produite, ni détruite. A la vérité, elle change
+de forme, c’est a dire qu’elle produit tantôt un genre
+de mouvement, tantôt un autre; mais elle n’est
+jamais anéantie.</span></i>” It is this man who has probably
+inaugurated the development of the modern
+science of thermodynamics and the whole range of
+sciences dependent upon it, and who has thus made
+it possible to construct a science of the energetics
+of the universe, and to read the mysteries of every
+physical phenomenon of nature; it is this man who
+has done more than any contemporary in his field,
+and who thus displayed a more brilliant genius
+than any man of science of the nineteenth century:
+yet not even his name appears in the biographical
+dictionaries; and in the Encyclopædia Britannica
+it is only to be found incidentally in the article on
+Thermodynamics.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Throughout his little book, we find numerous
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>proofs of his clearness of view and of the wonderful
+powers of mind possessed by him. He opens
+his treatise by asserting that “<i><span lang="fr">C’est à la chaleur
+que doivent être attribués les grands mouvements
+qui frappent nos regards sur la terre; c’est à elle
+que sont dues les agitations de l’atmosphère, l’ascension
+des nuages, la chute des pluies et des autres
+météores, les courants d’eau qui sillonnent la surface
+du globe et dont l’homme est parvenue à employer
+pour son usage une faible partie; enfin les tremblements
+de terre, les éruptions volcaniques reconnaissent
+aussi pour cause la chaleur.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Carnot was the first to declare that the maximum
+of work done by heat, in any given case of application
+of the heat-energy, is determined solely by
+the range of temperature through which it fell in
+the operation, and is entirely independent of the
+nature of the working substance chosen as the
+medium of transfer of energy and the vehicle of
+the heat. His assumption of the materiality of
+heat led, logically, to the conclusion that the
+same quantity of heat was finally stored in the
+refrigerator as had, initially, left the furnace, and
+that the effect produced was a consequence of a fall
+of temperature analogous to a fall of water; but,
+aside from this error—which he himself was evidently
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>inclined to regard as such,—his process and
+argument are perfectly correct.<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Throughout his whole work are distributed condensed
+assertions of principles now well recognized
+and fully established, which indicate that he not
+only had anticipated later writers in their establishment,
+but that he fully understood their real
+importance in a theory of heat-energy and of heat-engines.
+In fact, he often italicizes them, placing
+them as independent paragraphs to more thoroughly
+impress the reader with their fundamental
+importance. Thus he says: “<i><span lang="fr">Partout où il existe
+une différence de température, il peut y avoir production
+de puissance motrice</span></i>;” and again, this
+extraordinary anticipation of modern science: “<i><span lang="fr">le
+maximum de puissance résultant de l’emploi de la
+vapeur est aussi le maximum de puissance motrice
+réalisable par quelque moyen que ce soit</span></i>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr">La puissance motrice de la chaleur est indépendante
+des agents mis en œuvre pour la réaliser;
+sa quantité est fixée uniquement par les températures
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>des corps entre lesquels se fait, en dernier résultat,
+le transport du calorique.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr">Lorsqu’un gaz passe, sans changer de température,
+d’un volume et d’une pression déterminés à une
+autre pression également déterminée, la quantité
+de calorique absorbée ou abandonnée est toujours la
+même, quelle que soit la nature du gaz choisi comme
+sujet d’expérience.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Perhaps as remarkable a discovery as any one of
+the preceding (and one which, like those, has been
+rediscovered and confirmed by later physicists;
+one which was the subject of dispute between
+Clausius, who proved its truth by the later methods
+which are now the source of his fame, and the
+physicists of his earlier days, who had obtained
+inaccurate measures of the specific heats of the
+gases;—values which were finally corrected by Regnault,
+thus proving Carnot and Clausius to be
+right—is thus stated by Carnot, and is italicized
+in his manuscript and book:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr">La différence entre la chaleur spécifique sous
+pression constante et la chaleur spécifique sous volume
+constant est la même pour tous les gaz.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>He bases his conclusion upon the simplest of
+thermodynamic considerations. He says that the
+increase of volumes with the same differences of
+temperature are the same, according to Gay-Lussac
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>and Dalton; and that, therefore, according to the
+laws of thermodynamics as he has demonstrated
+them, the heat absorbed with equal augmentations
+of volume being the same, the two specific
+heats are constant, and their difference as well. As
+will be seen on referring to the text, he bases upon
+this principle a determination of the specific heats
+of constant volume, taking as his values of the determined
+specific heats of constant pressure those
+of Delaroche and Bérard, making the constant
+difference 0.300, that of air at constant pressure
+being taken as the standard and as unity. The
+establishment of this point, in the face of the opposition,
+and apparently of the facts, of the best
+physicists of his time, was one of those circumstances
+which did so much to win for Clausius his
+great fame. How much greater credit, then,
+should be given Carnot, who not only anticipated
+the later physicists in this matter, but who must
+have enunciated his principle under far more serious
+discouragements and uncertainty!</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It must be remembered, when reading Carnot,
+that all the “constants of nature” were, in
+his time, very inaccurately ascertained. It is only
+since the time of Regnault’s grand work that it has
+been the rule that such determinations have been
+published only when very exactly determined. No
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>change has been attempted in Carnot’s figures, in
+any respect; as it would be far less satisfactory to
+read a paraphrased work, and the exact figures are
+now easily accessible to every one, and his computations
+may all be made, if desired, on the basis of
+modern data. Sir William Thomson has already
+performed this task in the paper appended.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Throughout the whole of this treatise, small as
+it is, we find distributed a singular number of
+these anticipations of modern thermodynamic
+principles. Studying the relation of heat-energy
+to work done, he concludes:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr">La chute du calorique produit plus de puissance
+motrice dans les degrés inférieurs que dans
+les degrés supérieurs.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We to-day admit that, since the one degree at a
+low temperature, and the corresponding quantity
+of heat, are larger fractions of the total temperature,
+and the total heat stored in the substance,
+than the one degree at a higher point on the scale
+of absolute temperature, this principle of Carnot
+has become obvious.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the enunciation of the essential principles of
+efficiency of the heat-engine, we find the proofs of
+this same wonderful prescience. He asserts that,
+for best effect: “(1) The temperature of the
+working fluid must be raised to the highest degree
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>possible, in order to secure a commensurate range
+of temperature; (2) The cooling must be carried
+to the lowest point on the scale that may be found
+practicable; (3) The passage of the fluid from the
+upper to the lower limit of temperature must be
+produced by expansion;” i.e., “it is necessary
+that the cooling of the gas shall occur spontaneously
+by its rarefaction;” which is simply his
+method of stating the now universally understood
+principle that, for highest efficiency, the expansion
+must be adiabatic, from a maximum to a minimum
+temperature. He goes on to explain these
+principles, and then says that the advantage of
+high-pressure engines lies “<i><span lang="fr">essentiellement dans la
+faculté de rendre utile une plus grande chute de calorique</span></i>.”
+This principle, as a practical system of
+operation, had already, as he tells us, been enunciated
+by M. Clement, and had been practised, as
+we well know, since the days of its originator,
+Watt; but Carnot saw clearly the thermodynamic
+principle which underlies it, and as clearly states
+it, for the first time.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>He sees clearly, too, the reasons for the attempts
+of Hornblower and of Woolf, premature as they
+proved and as he also sees, in the introduction of
+the compound engine, and even suggests that this
+idea might be still further developed by the use
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>of a triple-expansion engine, a type which is to-day
+just coming into use, more than a half-century
+after Carnot’s date. He recognizes the advantages
+of the compound engine in better distribution
+of pressures and in distribution of the work
+of expansion, but does not, of course, perceive the
+then undiscovered limitation of the efficiency of
+the simple engine, due to “cylinder condensation,”
+which has finally led, perhaps more than any other
+circumstance, to its displacement so largely by
+the multi-cylinder machine. No one has more exactly
+and plainly stated the respective advantages
+to be claimed for air and the gases, used as working
+fluids in heat-engines, than does Carnot; nor
+does any one to-day better recognize the difficulties
+which lie in the path to success in that direction,
+in the necessity of finding a means of handling
+them at high temperatures and of securing
+high mean pressures.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>His closing paragraph shows his extraordinary
+foresight, and the precision with which that wonderful
+intellect detected the practical elements
+of the problem which the engineer, from the days
+of Savery, of Newcomen, and of Watt has been
+called upon to study, and the importance of the
+work, which he began, in the development of a
+theory of the action, or of the operation, of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>heat-engines, which should give effective assistance
+in the development of their improved forms:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i><span lang="fr">On ne doit pas se flatter de mettre jamais à
+profit, dans la pratique, toute la puissance des combustibles.
+Les tentatives que l’on ferait pour approcher
+ce résultat seraient même plus nuisibles
+qu’utiles, si elles faisaient négliger d’autres considérations
+importantes. L’économie du combustible
+n’est qu’une des conditions à remplir par les machines
+à feu; dans beaucoup de circonstances, elle
+n’est que secondaire: elle doit souvent céder le pas
+à la sûreté, à la solidité, à la durée de la machine,
+au peu de place qu’il faut lui faire occuper, au peu
+de frais de son établissement, etc. Savoir apprécier,
+dans chaque cas, à leur juste valeur, les considérations
+de convenance et d’économie qui peuvent
+se présenter; savoir discerner les plus importantes
+de celles qui sont seulement accessoires, les balancer
+toutes convenablement entre elles, afin de parvenir,
+par les moyens les plus faciles, au meilleur résultat:
+tel doit être le principal talent de l’homme
+appelé à diriger, à co-ordonner entre eux les travaux
+de ses semblables, à les faire concourir vers un but
+utile de quelque genre qu’il soit.</span></i>”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Such was the work and such the character of
+this wonderful man. Those whose desire to follow
+more closely and to witness the process of development
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>of the work of which this initial paper
+of Carnot was the introductory, should study the
+contribution of Sir William Thomson to this development,
+as published in 1849,—a paper which
+constitutes that physicist the virtual discoverer of
+Carnot and the godfather of the man and his
+thoughts. This paper constitutes the final chapter
+of this little book.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>From that time the additional progress so rapidly
+made in the new science was as inevitable
+as the development of a gold-field, once the precious
+metal has been found in paying quantities
+in the hitherto unvisited cañons and gorges of
+a distant and unexplored mountain-range. But
+great as is the work since done, and great as have
+been the discoveries and the discoverers of later
+years, none claims our gratitude and compels our
+respect in greater degree than does the original
+discoverer—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Sadi Carnot</span>.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>II.<br> <span class='c011'>LIFE OF SADI CARNOT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By M. H. Carnot.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>As the life of Sadi Carnot was not marked by
+any notable event, his biography would have occupied
+only a few lines; but a scientific work by him,
+after remaining long in obscurity, brought again
+to light many years after his death, has caused his
+name to be placed among those of great inventors.
+In regard to his person, his mind, his character,
+nothing whatever has been known. Since there remains
+a witness of his private life—the sole witness,
+has he not a duty to fulfil? Ought he not to
+satisfy the natural and legitimate interest which
+attaches to any man whose work has deserved a
+portion of glory?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Nicolas-Léonard-Sadi Carnot was born June 1,
+1796, in the smaller Luxembourg. This was that
+part of the palace where our father then dwelt as
+a member of the Directory. Our father had a
+predilection for the name of Sadi, which recalled
+to his mind ideas of wisdom and poetry. His firstborn
+had borne this name, and despite the fate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>of this poor child, who lived but a few months,
+he called the second also Sadi, in memory of the
+celebrated Persian poet and moralist.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Scarcely a year had passed when the proscription,
+which included the Director, obliged him to
+give up his life, or at least his liberty, to the conspirators
+of fructidor. Our mother carried her
+son far from the palace in which violation of law
+had just triumphed. She fled to St. Omer, with
+her family, while her husband was exiled to Switzerland,
+then to Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Our mother often said to me, “Thy brother was
+born in the midst of the cares and agitations of
+grandeur, thou in the calm of an obscure retreat.
+Your constitutions show this difference of origin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>My brother in fact was of delicate constitution.
+He increased his strength later, by means of varied
+and judicious bodily exercises. He was of
+medium size, endowed with extreme sensibility
+and at the same time with extreme energy, more
+than reserved, almost rude, but singularly courageous
+on occasion. When he felt himself to be
+contending against injustice, nothing could restrain
+him. The following is an anecdote in illustration.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The Directory had given place to the Consulate.
+Carnot, after two years of exile, returned to his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>country and was appointed Minister of War.
+Bonaparte at the same time was still in favor with
+the republicans. He remembered that Carnot had
+assisted him in the beginning of his military career,
+and he resumed the intimate relation which
+had existed between them during the Directory.
+When the minister went to Malmaison to work
+with the First Consul, he often took with him his
+son, then about four years old, to stay with
+Madame Bonaparte, who was greatly attached to
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>She was one day with some other ladies in a
+small boat on a pond, the ladies rowing the boat
+themselves, when Bonaparte, unexpectedly appearing,
+amused himself by picking up stones and
+throwing them near the boat, spattering water on
+the fresh toilets of the rowers. The ladies dared
+not manifest their displeasure, but the little Sadi,
+after having looked on at the affair for some time,
+suddenly placed himself boldly before the conqueror
+of Marengo, and threatening him with his
+fist, he cried “Beast of a First Consul, will you
+stop tormenting those ladies!”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Bonaparte, at this unexpected attack, stopped
+and looked in astonishment at the child. Then
+he was seized with a fit of laughter in which all
+the spectators of the scene joined.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>At another time, when the minister, wishing to
+return to Paris, sought his son, who had been left
+with Madame Bonaparte, it was discovered that he
+had run away. They found him a long way off, in
+a mill, the mechanism of which he was trying to
+understand. This desire had been in the child’s
+mind for days, and the honest miller, not knowing
+who he was, was kindly answering all his questions.
+Curiosity, especially in regard to mechanics
+and physics, was one of the essential traits of
+Sadi’s mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>On account of this disposition so early manifested,
+Carnot did not hesitate to give a scientific
+direction to the studies of his son. He was able
+to undertake this task himself when the monarchical
+tendencies of the new government had determined
+him to retire. For a few months only Sadi
+followed the course of M. Bourdon at the Charlemagne
+Lycée to prepare himself for the Polytechnic
+School.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The pupil made rapid progress. He was just
+sixteen years old when he was admitted to the
+school, the twenty-fourth on the list. This was
+in 1812. The following year he left it, first in
+artillery. But he was considered too young for the
+school of Metz, and he continued his studies at
+Paris for a year. To this circumstance is due the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>fact that he took part in March, 1814, in the
+military exploits of Vincennes, and not of the
+butte Chaumont, as almost all the historians of
+the siege of Paris declared. M. Chasles, one of
+Sadi’s school-fellows, took pains to rectify this
+error at a séance of the Institute in 1869.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the pupils of the Polytechnic School did not
+earlier enter into the campaign, it was not because
+they had not asked to do so. I find in my brother’s
+papers the copy of an address to the Emperor,
+signed by them December 29, 1813:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<span class='sc'>Sire</span>: The country needs all its defenders.
+The pupils of the Polytechnic School, faithful to
+their motto, ask to be permitted to hasten to the
+frontiers to share the glory of the brave men who
+are consecrating themselves to the safety of France.
+The battalion, proud of having contributed to the
+defeat of the enemy, will return to the school to
+cultivate the sciences and prepare for new services.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>General Carnot was at Anvers, which he had just
+been defending against the confederate English,
+Prussians, and Swedes, where the French flag yet
+floated, when he wrote to his son, April 12, 1814:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<span class='sc'>My dear Sadi</span>: I have learned with extreme
+pleasure that the battalion of the Polytechnic
+School has distinguished itself, and that you have
+performed your first military exploits with honor.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>When I am recalled, I shall be very glad if the
+Minister of War will give you permission to come
+to me. You will become acquainted with a fine
+country and a beautiful city, where I have had the
+satisfaction of remaining in peace while disaster
+has overwhelmed so many other places.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Peace being restored, Sadi rejoined his father at
+Anvers and returned with him into France.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the month of October he left the Polytechnic
+School, ranking sixth on the list of young
+men destined to service in the engineer corps,
+and went to Metz as a cadet sub-lieutenant at the
+school. Many scientific papers that he wrote there
+were a decided success. One is particularly referred
+to as very clever, a memoir on the instrument
+called the <i>theodolite</i> which is used in astronomy
+and geodesy.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I obtain these details from M. Ollivier, who was
+of the same rank as Sadi and who, later, was one
+of the founders of the <i><span lang="fr">École Centrale</span></i>. Among his
+other comrades besides M. Chasles, the learned
+geometrician just now referred to, was Gen. Duvivier,
+lamented victim of the insurrection of
+June 1848. I ought also to mention M. Robelin,
+Sadi’s most intimate friend, who came to help me
+nurse him during his last illness, and who published
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>a notice concerning him in the <cite><span lang="fr">Revue encyclopédique</span></cite>,
+t. lv.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The events of 1815 brought General Carnot back
+into politics during the “<i><span lang="fr">Cent Jours</span></i>” which ended
+in a fresh catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This gave Sadi a glimpse of human nature of
+which he could not speak without disgust. His
+little sub-lieutenant’s room was visited by certain
+superior officers who did not disdain to mount to
+the third floor to pay their respects to the son of
+the new minister.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Waterloo put an end to their attentions. The
+Bourbons re-established on the throne, Carnot was
+proscribed and Sadi sent successively into many
+trying places to pursue his vocation of engineer,
+to count bricks, to repair walls, and to draw plans
+destined to be hidden in portfolios. He performed
+these duties conscientiously and without hope of
+recompense, for his name, which not long before
+had brought him so many flatteries, was henceforth
+the cause of his advancement being long
+delayed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In 1818 there came an unlooked-for royal ordinance,
+authorizing the officers of all branches of
+the service to present themselves at the examinations
+for the new corps of the staff. Sadi was
+well aware that favor had much more to do with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>this matter than ability, but he was weary of
+garrison life. The stay in small fortresses to
+which the nature of his work confined him did
+not offer sufficient resources to his love of study.
+Then he hoped, and his hope was realized, that a
+request for a furlough would be obtained without
+difficulty, and would insure him the leisure that
+he sought. In spite of the friendly opposition of
+some chiefs of the engineer corps, testifying to a
+sincere regret at the removal from their register
+of a name which had gained honor among them,
+Sadi came to Paris to take the examination, and
+was appointed lieutenant on the staff, January 20,
+1819.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>He hastened to obtain his furlough, and availed
+himself of it to lead, in Paris and in the country
+round about Paris, a studious life interrupted but
+once, in 1821, by a journey to Germany to visit our
+father in his exile at Magdeburg. We had then
+the pleasure of passing some weeks all three together.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>When, two years later, death took from us this
+revered father and I returned alone to France, I
+found Sadi devoting himself to his scientific studies,
+which he alternated with the culture of the arts.
+In this way also, his tastes had marked out for
+him an original direction, for no one was more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>opposed than he to the traditional and the conventional.
+On his music-desk were seen only the
+compositions of Lully that he had studied, and
+the concerti of Viotti which he executed. On his
+table were seen only Pascal, Molière, or La Fontaine,
+and he knew his favorite books almost by
+heart. I call this direction original, because it
+was anterior to the artistic and literary movement
+which preceded the revolution of 1830. As to the
+sympathy of Sadi for the author of the <cite><span lang="fr">Provinciales</span></cite>,
+it was due not only to the respect of the
+young mathematician for one of the masters of
+science, but his devoutly religious mind regarded
+with horror hypocrisy and hypocrites.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Appreciating the useful and the beautiful, Sadi
+frequented the museum of the Louvre and the
+Italian Theatre, as well as the Jardin des Plantes
+and the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers. Music
+was almost a passion with him. He probably inherited
+this from our mother, who was an excellent
+pianist, to whom Dalayrac and especially
+Monsigny, her compatriot, had given instruction.
+Not content with being able to play well on the
+violin, Sadi carried to great length his theoretical
+studies.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>His insatiable intellect, moreover, would not
+allow him to remain a stranger to any branch of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>knowledge. He diligently followed the course of
+the College of France and of the Sorbonne, of
+the École des Mines, of the Museum, and of the
+Bibliothèque. He visited the workshops with
+eager interest, and made himself familiar with the
+processes of manufacture; mathematical sciences,
+natural history, industrial art, political economy,—all
+these he cultivated with equal ardor. I have
+seen him not only practise as an amusement, but
+search theoretically into, gymnastics, fencing,
+swimming, dancing, and even skating. In even
+these things Sadi acquired a superiority which
+astonished specialists when by chance he forgot
+himself enough to speak of them, for the satisfaction
+of his own mind was the only aim that he
+sought.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>He had such a repugnance to bringing himself
+forward that, in his intimate conversations with a
+few friends, he kept them ignorant of the treasures
+of science which he had accumulated. They never
+knew of more than a small part of them. How
+was it that he determined to formulate his ideas
+about the motive power of heat, and especially to
+publish them? I still ask myself this question,—I,
+who lived with him in the little apartment where
+our father was confined in the Rue du Parc-Royal
+while the police of the first Restoration were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>threatening him. Anxious to be perfectly clear,
+Sadi made me read some passages of his manuscript
+in order to convince himself that it would
+be understood by persons occupied with other
+studies.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Perhaps a solitary life in small garrisons, in the
+work-room and in the chemical laboratory, had
+increased his natural reserve. In small companies,
+however, he was not at all taciturn. He took
+part voluntarily in the gayest plays, abandoning
+himself to lively chat. “The time passed in
+laughing is well spent,” he once wrote. His language
+was at such times full of wit, keen without
+malice, original without eccentricity, sometimes
+paradoxical, but without other pretension than
+that of an innocent activity of intelligence. He
+had a very warm heart under a cold manner. He
+was obliging and devoted, sincere and true in his
+dealings.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Towards the end of 1826, a new royal ordinance
+having obliged the staff lieutenants to return to
+the ranks, Sadi asked and obtained a return to the
+engineer corps, in which he received the following
+year, as his rank of seniority, the grade of captain.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Military service, however, weighed upon him.
+Jealous of his liberty, in 1828, he laid aside his
+uniform that he might be free to come and go at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>will. He took advantage of his leisure to make
+journeys and to visit our principal centres of
+industry.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>He frequently visited M. Clement Desormes,
+professor at the <i><span lang="fr">Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers</span></i>,
+who had made great advances in applied chemistry.
+M. Desormes willingly took counsel with him.
+He was a native of Bourgogne, our family country,
+which circumstance, I believe, brought them
+together.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It was before this period (in 1824) that Sadi had
+published his <cite><span lang="fr">Réflexions sur la puissance motrice
+du feu</span></cite>. He had seen how little progress had been
+made in the theory of machines in which this
+power was employed. He had ascertained that
+the improvements made in their arrangement were
+effected tentatively, and almost by chance. He
+comprehended that in order to raise this important
+art above empiricism, and to give it the rank of a
+science, it was necessary to study the phenomena
+of the production of motion by heat, from the
+most general point of view, independently of any
+mechanism, of any special agent; and such had
+been the thought of his life.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Did he foresee that this small brochure would
+become the foundation of a new science? He
+must have attached much importance to it to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>publish it, and bring himself out of his voluntary
+obscurity.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In fact (as his working notes prove), he perceived
+the existing relation between heat and
+mechanical work; and after having established the
+principle to which savants have given his name,
+he devoted himself to the researches which should
+enable him to establish with certainty the second
+principle, that of equivalence, which he already
+clearly divined. Thermodynamics was established
+from that time.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>But these researches were rudely interrupted by
+a great event—the Revolution of July, 1830.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Sadi welcomed it enthusiastically—not, however,
+it is evident, as a personal advantage.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Several old members of the Convention were
+still living, even of those who had become celebrated;
+no favor of the new government was
+accorded them. To the son of Philippe-Egalité
+was ascribed a saying which, if it was untrue, at
+least agreed well with the sentiment of his position:
+“I can do nothing for the members of the
+Convention themselves,” he said, “but for their
+families whatever they will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>However it may be, some of those about him
+vaguely questioned my brother as to his desires in
+case one of us should be called to the Chamber of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>Peers, of which Carnot had been a member in
+1815. We had on this occasion a brief conference.
+Unknown to us both, this distinction could be
+offered only to a title in some sort hereditary.
+We could not accept it without forsaking the principles
+of Carnot, who had combated the heredity
+of the peerage. The paternal opinion therefore
+came to second our distaste for the proposition,
+and dictated our reply.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Sadi frequented the popular reunions at this
+period without forsaking his <i><span lang="fr">rôle</span></i> of a simple observer.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Nevertheless he was, when occasion demanded
+it, a man of prompt and energetic action. One
+incident will suffice to prove this, and to show the
+<i><span lang="fr">sang-froid</span></i> which characterized him.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>On the day of the funeral of Gen. Lamarque,
+Sadi was walking thoughtfully in the vicinity of
+the insurrection. A horseman preceding a company,
+and who was evidently intoxicated, passed
+along the street on the gallop, brandishing his
+sabre and striking down the passers-by. Sadi
+darted forward, cleverly avoided the weapon of
+the soldier, seized him by the leg, threw him to
+the earth and laid him in the gutter, then continued
+on his way to escape from the cheers of the
+crowd, amazed at this daring deed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>Before 1830, Sadi had formed part of a <i><span lang="fr">Réunion
+polytechnique industrielle</span></i>, made up of old pupils
+of the school, with a plan of study in common.
+After 1830, he was a member of the <i><span lang="fr">Association
+polytechnique</span></i>, consisting also of graduates, the
+object being the popular propagation of useful
+knowledge. The president of this association was
+M. de Choiseul-Praslin; the vice-presidents, MM.
+de Tracy, Auguste Comte, etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The hopes of the democracy meanwhile seeming
+to be in abeyance, Sadi devoted himself anew to
+study, and pursued his scientific labors with all the
+greater energy, as he brought to bear upon them
+the political ardor now so completely repressed.
+He undertook profound researches on the physical
+properties of gases and vapors, and especially on
+their elastic tensions. Unfortunately, the tables
+which he prepared from his comparative experiments
+were not completed; but happily the excellent
+works of Victor Regnault, so remarkable for
+their accuracy, have supplied to science, in this
+respect, the blanks of which Sadi Carnot was conscious.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>His excessive application affected his health
+towards the end of June, 1832. Feeling temporarily
+better, he wrote gayly to one of his friends who
+had written several letters to him: “My delay this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>time is not without excuse. I have been sick for
+a long time, and in a very wearisome way. I have
+had an inflammation of the lungs, followed by scarlet-fever.
+(Perhaps you know what this horrible
+disease is.) I had to remain twelve days in bed,
+without sleep or food, without any occupation,
+amusing myself with leeches, with drinks, with
+baths, and other toys out of the same shop. This
+little diversion is not yet ended, for I am still very
+feeble.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This letter was written at the end of July.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>There was a relapse, then brain fever; then finally,
+hardly recovered from so many violent illnesses
+which had weakened him morally and physically,
+Sadi was carried off in a few hours, August 24,
+1832, by an attack of cholera. Towards the last,
+and as if from a dark presentiment, he had given
+much attention to the prevailing epidemic, following
+its course with the attention and penetration
+that he gave to everything.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Sadi Carnot died in the vigor of life, in the
+brightness of a career that he bade fair to run with
+glory, leaving memory of profound esteem and
+affection in the hearts of many friends.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>His copy-books, filled with memoranda, attest
+the activity of his mind, the variety of his knowledge,
+his love of humanity, his clear sentiments of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>justice and of liberty. We can follow therein the
+traces of all his various studies. But the only
+work that he actually completed is this which is
+here published. It will suffice to preserve his
+name from oblivion.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>His moral character has other claims on our
+recognition. Our only ambition here is to present
+a sketch of it. But, much better than through
+the perusal of these few pages, Sadi Carnot can be
+appreciated by reading the thoughts scattered
+through his memoranda, which are to be carefully
+collected. There are many practical rules of conduct
+which he records for himself; many observations
+that he desires to fix in his memory; sometimes
+an impression that has just come to him,
+grave or gay; sometimes too, though rarely, a
+trace of ill-humor directed against men or society.
+He never thought that these notes, the outpouring
+of his mind, would be read by other eyes than his
+own, or that they would some day be used to judge
+him. I find in them, for my part, touching analogies
+with the thoughts of my father, although the
+father and son had, unfortunately, lived almost
+always apart, by force of circumstances.<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>III.<br> <span class='c011'>REFLECTIONS ON THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT, AND ON MACHINES FITTED TO DEVELOP THAT POWER.<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By S. Carnot.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>Every one knows that heat can produce motion.
+That it possesses vast motive power no one can
+doubt, in these days when the steam-engine is
+everywhere so well known.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>To heat also are due the vast movements which
+take place on the earth. It causes the agitations
+of the atmosphere, the ascension of clouds, the fall
+of rain and of meteors, the currents of water which
+channel the surface of the globe, and of which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>man has thus far employed but a small portion.
+Even earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are the
+result of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>From this immense reservoir we may draw the
+moving force necessary for our purposes. Nature,
+in providing us with combustibles on all sides,
+has given us the power to produce, at all times and
+in all places, heat and the impelling power which
+is the result of it. To develop this power, to
+appropriate it to our uses, is the object of heat-engines.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The study of these engines is of the greatest
+interest, their importance is enormous, their use
+is continually increasing, and they seem destined
+to produce a great revolution in the civilized world.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Already the steam-engine works our mines, impels
+our ships, excavates our ports and our rivers,
+forges iron, fashions wood, grinds grains, spins
+and weaves our cloths, transports the heaviest
+burdens, etc. It appears that it must some day
+serve as a universal motor, and be substituted for
+animal power, waterfalls, and air currents.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Over the first of these motors it has the advantage
+of economy, over the two others the inestimable
+advantage that it can be used at all times and
+places without interruption.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If, some day, the steam-engine shall be so perfected
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>that it can be set up and supplied with fuel
+at small cost, it will combine all desirable qualities,
+and will afford to the industrial arts a range the
+extent of which can scarcely be predicted. It is
+not merely that a powerful and convenient motor
+that can be procured and carried anywhere is
+substituted for the motors already in use, but that
+it causes rapid extension in the arts in which it is
+applied, and can even create entirely new arts.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The most signal service that the steam-engine
+has rendered to England is undoubtedly the
+revival of the working of the coal-mines, which had
+declined, and threatened to cease entirely, in consequence
+of the continually increasing difficulty of
+drainage, and of raising the coal.<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a> We should
+rank second the benefit to iron manufacture, both
+by the abundant supply of coal substituted for
+wood just when the latter had begun to grow scarce,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>and by the powerful machines of all kinds, the use
+of which the introduction of the steam-engine has
+permitted or facilitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Iron and heat are, as we know, the supporters,
+the bases, of the mechanic arts. It is doubtful if
+there be in England a single industrial establishment
+of which the existence does not depend on
+the use of these agents, and which does not freely
+employ them. To take away to-day from England
+her steam-engines would be to take away at the
+same time her coal and iron. It would be to dry
+up all her sources of wealth, to ruin all on which
+her prosperity depends, in short, to annihilate that
+colossal power. The destruction of her navy,
+which she considers her strongest defence, would
+perhaps be less fatal.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The safe and rapid navigation by steamships
+may be regarded as an entirely new art due to the
+steam-engine. Already this art has permitted the
+establishment of prompt and regular communications
+across the arms of the sea, and on the great
+rivers of the old and new continents. It has made
+it possible to traverse savage regions where before
+we could scarcely penetrate. It has enabled us to
+carry the fruits of civilization over portions of the
+globe where they would else have been wanting for
+years. Steam navigation brings nearer together
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the most distant nations. It tends to unite the
+nations of the earth as inhabitants of one country.
+In fact, to lessen the time, the fatigues, the uncertainties,
+and the dangers of travel—is not this the
+same as greatly to shorten distances?<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The discovery of the steam-engine owed its birth,
+like most human inventions, to rude attempts
+which have been attributed to different persons,
+while the real author is not certainly known. It
+is, however, less in the first attempts that the principal
+discovery consists, than in the successive improvements
+which have brought steam-engines to
+the condition in which we find them to-day. There
+is almost as great a distance between the first apparatus
+in which the expansive force of steam was
+displayed and the existing machine, as between the
+first raft that man ever made and the modern vessel.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the honor of a discovery belongs to the nation
+in which it has acquired its growth and all its
+developments, this honor cannot be here refused
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>to England. Savery, Newcomen, Smeaton, the
+famous Watt, Woolf, Trevithick, and some other
+English engineers, are the veritable creators of the
+steam-engine. It has acquired at their hands all
+its successive degrees of improvement. Finally, it
+is natural that an invention should have its birth
+and especially be developed, be perfected, in that
+place where its want is most strongly felt.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Notwithstanding the work of all kinds done by
+steam-engines, notwithstanding the satisfactory
+condition to which they have been brought to-day,
+their theory is very little understood, and the attempts
+to improve them are still directed almost
+by chance.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The question has often been raised whether the
+motive power of heat<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a> is unbounded, whether the
+possible improvements in steam-engines have an
+assignable limit,—a limit which the nature of
+things will not allow to be passed by any means
+whatever; or whether, on the contrary, these improvements
+may be carried on indefinitely. We
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>have long sought, and are seeking to-day, to ascertain
+whether there are in existence agents preferable
+to the vapor of water for developing the motive
+power of heat; whether atmospheric air, for example,
+would not present in this respect great advantages.
+We propose now to submit these questions
+to a deliberate examination.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The phenomenon of the production of motion
+by heat has not been considered from a sufficiently
+general point of view. We have considered it only
+in machines the nature and mode of action of
+which have not allowed us to take in the whole
+extent of application of which it is susceptible.
+In such machines the phenomenon is, in a way,
+incomplete. It becomes difficult to recognize its
+principles and study its laws.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In order to consider in the most general way
+the principle of the production of motion by heat,
+it must be considered independently of any mechanism
+or any particular agent. It is necessary to
+establish principles applicable not only to steam-engines<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a>
+but to all imaginable heat-engines, whatever
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>the working substance and whatever the
+method by which it is operated.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Machines which do not receive their motion from
+heat, those which have for a motor the force of
+men or of animals, a waterfall, an air-current, etc.,
+can be studied even to their smallest details by
+the mechanical theory. All cases are foreseen, all
+imaginable movements are referred to these general
+principles, firmly established, and applicable under
+all circumstances. This is the character of a complete
+theory. A similar theory is evidently needed
+for heat-engines. We shall have it only when the
+laws of Physics shall be extended enough, generalized
+enough, to make known beforehand all the
+effects of heat acting in a determined manner on
+any body.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We will suppose in what follows at least a
+superficial knowledge of the different parts which
+compose an ordinary steam-engine; and we consider
+it unnecessary to explain what are the
+furnace, boiler, steam-cylinder, piston, condenser,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The production of motion in steam-engines is
+always accompanied by a circumstance on which
+we should fix our attention. This circumstance
+is the re-establishing of equilibrium in the caloric;
+that is, its passage from a body in which the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>temperature is more or less elevated, to another in
+which it is lower. What happens in fact in a
+steam-engine actually in motion? The caloric
+developed in the furnace by the effect of the combustion
+traverses the walls of the boiler, produces
+steam, and in some way incorporates itself with it.
+The latter carrying it away, takes it first into the
+cylinder, where it performs some function, and
+from thence into the condenser, where it is liquefied
+by contact with the cold water which it encounters
+there. Then, as a final result, the cold
+water of the condenser takes possession of the
+caloric developed by the combustion. It is heated
+by the intervention of the steam as if it had been
+placed directly over the furnace. The steam is
+here only a means of transporting the caloric.
+It fills the same office as in the heating of baths
+by steam, except that in this case its motion is
+rendered useful.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We easily recognize in the operations that we
+have just described the re-establishment of equilibrium
+in the caloric, its passage from a more or
+less heated body to a cooler one. The first of
+these bodies, in this case, is the heated air of the
+furnace; the second is the condensing water. The
+re-establishment of equilibrium of the caloric
+takes place between them, if not completely, at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>least partially, for on the one hand the heated air,
+after having performed its function, having passed
+round the boiler, goes out through the chimney
+with a temperature much below that which it had
+acquired as the effect of combustion; and on the
+other hand, the water of the condenser, after having
+liquefied the steam, leaves the machine with
+a temperature higher than that with which it
+entered.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The production of motive power is then due in
+steam-engines not to an actual consumption of
+caloric, but <i>to its transportation from a warm
+body to a cold body</i>, that is, to its re-establishment
+of equilibrium—an equilibrium considered as destroyed
+by any cause whatever, by chemical action
+such as combustion, or by any other. We shall
+see shortly that this principle is applicable to
+any machine set in motion by heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to this principle, the production of
+heat alone is not sufficient to give birth to the
+impelling power: it is necessary that there should
+also be cold; without it, the heat would be useless.
+And in fact, if we should find about us
+only bodies as hot as our furnaces, how can we
+condense steam? What should we do with it if
+once produced? We should not presume that we
+might discharge it into the atmosphere, as is done
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>in some engines;<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a> the atmosphere would not receive
+it. It does receive it under the actual condition
+of things, only because it fulfils the office
+of a vast condenser, because it is at a lower temperature;
+otherwise it would soon become fully
+charged, or rather would be already saturated.<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>Wherever there exists a difference of temperature,
+wherever it has been possible for the equilibrium
+of the caloric to be re-established, it is possible
+to have also the production of impelling power.
+Steam is a means of realizing this power, but it is
+not the only one. All substances in nature can
+be employed for this purpose, all are susceptible of
+changes of volume, of successive contractions and
+dilatations, through the alternation of heat and cold.
+All are capable of overcoming in their changes of
+volume certain resistances, and of thus developing
+the impelling power. A solid body—a metallic
+bar for example—alternately heated and cooled increases
+and diminishes in length, and can move
+bodies fastened to its ends. A liquid alternately
+heated and cooled increases and diminishes in volume,
+and can overcome obstacles of greater or less
+size, opposed to its dilatation. An aeriform fluid is
+susceptible of considerable change of volume by
+variations of temperature. If it is enclosed in an
+expansible space, such as a cylinder provided with
+a piston, it will produce movements of great extent.
+Vapors of all substances capable of passing
+into a gaseous condition, as of alcohol, of mercury,
+of sulphur, etc., may fulfil the same office as vapor
+of water. The latter, alternately heated and
+cooled, would produce motive power in the shape
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>of permanent gases, that is, without ever returning
+to a liquid state. Most of these substances
+have been proposed, many even have been tried,
+although up to this time perhaps without remarkable
+success.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have shown that in steam-engines the motive power
+is due to a re-establishment of equilibrium
+in the caloric; this takes place not only for steam-engines,
+but also for every heat-engine—that is,
+for every machine of which caloric is the motor.
+Heat can evidently be a cause of motion only by
+virtue of the changes of volume or of form which
+it produces in bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>These changes are not caused by uniform temperature,
+but rather by alternations of heat and
+cold. Now to heat any substance whatever requires
+a body warmer than the one to be heated; to cool
+it requires a cooler body. We supply caloric to
+the first of these bodies that we may transmit
+it to the second by means of the intermediary
+substance. This is to re-establish, or at least to
+endeavor to re-establish, the equilibrium of the
+caloric.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is natural to ask here this curious and important
+question: Is the motive power of heat invariable
+in quantity, or does it vary with the agent
+employed to realize it as the intermediary substance,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>selected as the subject of action of the
+heat?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is clear that this question can be asked only
+in regard to a given quantity of caloric,<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a> the difference
+of the temperatures also being given. We
+take, for example, one body <i>A</i> kept at a temperature
+of 100° and another body <i>B</i> kept at a temperature
+of 0°, and ask what quantity of motive power
+can be produced by the passage of a given portion
+of caloric (for example, as much as is necessary to
+melt a kilogram of ice) from the first of these
+bodies to the second. We inquire whether this
+quantity of motive power is necessarily limited,
+whether it varies with the substance employed to
+realize it, whether the vapor of water offers in this
+respect more or less advantage than the vapor of
+alcohol, of mercury, a permanent gas, or any other
+substance. We will try to answer these questions,
+availing ourselves of ideas already established.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>We have already remarked upon this self-evident
+fact, or fact which at least appears evident as soon
+as we reflect on the changes of volume occasioned
+by heat: <i>wherever there exists a difference of temperature,
+motive power can be produced</i>. Reciprocally,
+wherever we can consume this power, it is
+possible to produce a difference of temperature,
+it is possible to occasion destruction of equilibrium
+in the caloric. Are not percussion and the friction
+of bodies actually means of raising their temperature,
+of making it reach spontaneously a
+higher degree than that of the surrounding bodies,
+and consequently of producing a destruction of
+equilibrium in the caloric, where equilibrium previously
+existed? It is a fact proved by experience,
+that the temperature of gaseous fluids is raised by
+compression and lowered by rarefaction. This is
+a sure method of changing the temperature of
+bodies, and destroying the equilibrium of the
+caloric as many times as may be desired with the
+same substance. The vapor of water employed in
+an inverse manner to that in which it is used in
+steam-engines can also be regarded as a means of
+destroying the equilibrium of the caloric. To be
+convinced of this we need but to observe closely
+the manner in which motive power is developed by
+the action of heat on vapor of water. Imagine
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>two bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i>, kept each at a constant temperature,
+that of <i>A</i> being higher than that of <i>B</i>.
+These two bodies, to which we can give or from
+which we can remove the heat without causing
+their temperatures to vary, exercise the functions
+of two unlimited reservoirs of caloric. We will
+call the first the furnace and the second the refrigerator.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we wish to produce motive power by carrying
+a certain quantity of heat from the body <i>A</i> to the
+body <i>B</i> we shall proceed as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) To borrow caloric from the body <i>A</i> to make
+steam with it—that is, to make this body fulfil
+the function of a furnace, or rather of the metal
+composing the boiler in ordinary engines—we here
+assume that the steam is produced at the same
+temperature as the body <i>A</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The steam having been received in a space
+capable of expansion, such as a cylinder furnished
+with a piston, to increase the volume of this space,
+and consequently also that of the steam. Thus rarefied,
+the temperature will fall spontaneously, as
+occurs with all elastic fluids; admit that the rarefaction
+may be continued to the point where the
+temperature becomes precisely that of the body <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) To condense the steam by putting it in contact
+with the body <i>B</i>, and at the same time exerting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>on it a constant pressure until it is entirely
+liquefied. The body <i>B</i> fills here the place of the
+injection-water in ordinary engines, with this difference,
+that it condenses the vapor without
+mingling with it, and without changing its own
+temperature.<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>The operations which we have just described
+might have been performed in an inverse direction
+and order. There is nothing to prevent forming
+vapor with the caloric of the body <i>B</i>, and at the
+temperature of that body, compressing it in such
+a way as to make it acquire the temperature of the
+body <i>A</i>, finally condensing it by contact with this
+latter body, and continuing the compression to
+complete liquefaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>By our first operations there would have been
+at the same time production of motive power
+and transfer of caloric from the body <i>A</i> to the
+body <i>B</i>. By the inverse operations there is at the
+same time expenditure of motive power and return
+of caloric from the body <i>B</i> to the body <i>A</i>. But
+if we have acted in each case on the same quantity
+of vapor, if there is produced no loss either of
+motive power or caloric, the quantity of motive
+power produced in the first place will be equal to
+that which would have been expended in the second,
+and the quantity of caloric passed in the first case
+from the body <i>A</i> to the body <i>B</i> would be equal to
+the quantity which passes back again in the second
+from the body <i>B</i> to the body <i>A</i>; so that an indefinite
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>number of alternative operations of this sort
+could be carried on without in the end having
+either produced motive power or transferred caloric
+from one body to the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Now if there existed any means of using heat
+preferable to those which we have employed, that
+is, if it were possible by any method whatever to
+make the caloric produce a quantity of motive
+power greater than we have made it produce by our
+first series of operations, it would suffice to divert
+a portion of this power in order by the method just
+indicated to make the caloric of the body <i>B</i> return
+to the body <i>A</i> from the refrigerator to the furnace,
+to restore the initial conditions, and thus to be
+ready to commence again an operation precisely
+similar to the former, and so on: this would be
+not only perpetual motion, but an unlimited creation
+of motive power without consumption either
+of caloric or of any other agent whatever. Such
+a creation is entirely contrary to ideas now accepted,
+to the laws of mechanics and of sound physics.
+It is inadmissible.<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a> We should then conclude that
+<i>the maximum of motive power resulting from the
+employment of steam is also the maximum of motive
+power realizable by any means whatever</i>. We will
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>soon give a second more rigorous demonstration of
+this theory. This should be considered only as
+an approximation. (See page <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.)</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have a right to ask, in regard to the proposition
+just enunciated, the following questions:
+What is the sense of the word <i>maximum</i> here?
+By what sign can it be known that this maximum
+is attained? By what sign can it be known whether
+the steam is employed to greatest possible advantage
+in the production of motive power?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Since every re-establishment of equilibrium in
+the caloric may be the cause of the production of
+motive power, every re-establishment of equilibrium
+which shall be accomplished without production of
+this power should be considered as an actual loss.
+Now, very little reflection would show that all
+change of temperature which is not due to a change
+of volume of the bodies can be only a useless re-establishment
+of equilibrium in the caloric.<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a> The
+necessary condition of the maximum is, then, <i>that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>in the bodies employed to realize the motive power
+of heat there should not occur any change of temperature
+which may not be due to a change of
+volume</i>. Reciprocally, every time that this condition
+is fulfilled the maximum will be attained.
+This principle should never be lost sight of in the
+construction of heat-engines; it is its fundamental
+basis. If it cannot be strictly observed, it should
+at least be departed from as little as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Every change of temperature which is not due
+to a change of volume or to chemical action (an
+action that we provisionally suppose not to occur
+here) is necessarily due to the direct passage of the
+caloric from a more or less heated body to a colder
+body. This passage occurs mainly by the contact
+of bodies of different temperatures; hence such
+contact should be avoided as much as possible. It
+cannot probably be avoided entirely, but it should
+at least be so managed that the bodies brought in
+contact with each other differ as little as possible
+in temperature. When we just now supposed, in
+our demonstration, the caloric of the body <i>A</i> employed
+to form steam, this steam was considered as
+generated at the temperature of the body <i>A</i>; thus
+the contact took place only between bodies of equal
+temperatures; the change of temperature occurring
+afterwards in the steam was due to dilatation, consequently
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>to a change of volume. Finally, condensation
+took place also without contact of bodies of
+different temperatures. It occurred while exerting
+a constant pressure on the steam brought in
+contact with the body <i>B</i> of the same temperature
+as itself. The conditions for a maximum are thus
+found to be fulfilled. In reality the operation
+cannot proceed exactly as we have assumed. To
+determine the passage of caloric from one body to
+another, it is necessary that there should be an
+excess of temperature in the first, but this excess
+may be supposed as slight as we please. We can
+regard it as insensible in theory, without thereby
+destroying the exactness of the arguments.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>A more substantial objection may be made to
+our demonstration, thus: When we borrow caloric
+from the body <i>A</i> to produce steam, and when this
+steam is afterwards condensed by its contact with
+the body <i>B</i>, the water used to form it, and which
+we considered at first as being of the temperature
+of the body <i>A</i>, is found at the close of the operation
+at the temperature of the body <i>B</i>. It has
+become cool. If we wish to begin again an operation
+similar to the first, if we wish to develop a
+new quantity of motive power with the same instrument,
+with the same steam, it is necessary first
+to re-establish the original condition—to restore
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>the water to the original temperature. This can
+undoubtedly be done by at once putting it again
+in contact with the body <i>A</i>; but there is then
+contact between bodies of different temperatures,
+and loss of motive power.<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a> It would be impossible
+to execute the inverse operation, that is, to
+return to the body <i>A</i> the caloric employed to raise
+the temperature of the liquid.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This difficulty may be removed by supposing the
+difference of temperature between the body <i>A</i> and
+the body <i>B</i> indefinitely small. The quantity of
+heat necessary to raise the liquid to its former
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>temperature will be also indefinitely small and unimportant
+relatively to that which is necessary to
+produce steam—a quantity always limited.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The proposition found elsewhere demonstrated
+for the case in which the difference between the
+temperatures of the two bodies is indefinitely small,
+may be easily extended to the general case. In
+fact, if it operated to produce motive power by the
+passage of caloric from the body <i>A</i> to the body <i>Z</i>,
+the temperature of this latter body being very different
+from that of the former, we should imagine
+a series of bodies <i>B</i>, <i>C</i>, <i>D</i>&#160;... of temperatures
+intermediate between those of the bodies <i>A</i>, <i>Z</i>,
+and selected so that the differences from <i>A</i> to <i>B</i>,
+from <i>B</i> to <i>C</i>, etc., may all be indefinitely small.
+The caloric coming from <i>A</i> would not arrive at <i>Z</i>
+till after it had passed through the bodies <i>B</i>, <i>C</i>, <i>D</i>,
+etc., and after having developed in each of these
+stages maximum motive power. The inverse
+operations would here be entirely possible, and the
+reasoning of page <a href='#Page_52'>52</a> would be strictly applicable.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to established principles at the present
+time, we can compare with sufficient accuracy the
+motive power of heat to that of a waterfall. Each
+has a maximum that we cannot exceed, whatever
+may be, on the one hand, the machine which is
+acted upon by the water, and whatever, on the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>other hand, the substance acted upon by the heat.
+The motive power of a waterfall depends on its
+height and on the quantity of the liquid; the
+motive power of heat depends also on the quantity
+of caloric used, and on what may be termed, on
+what in fact we will call, the <i>height of its fall</i>,<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a>
+that is to say, the difference of temperature of the
+bodies between which the exchange of caloric is
+made. In the waterfall the motive power is exactly
+proportional to the difference of level between
+the higher and lower reservoirs. In the fall of
+caloric the motive power undoubtedly increases
+with the difference of temperature between the
+warm and the cold bodies; but we do not know
+whether it is proportional to this difference. We
+do not know, for example, whether the fall of caloric
+from 100 to 50 degrees furnishes more or less
+motive power than the fall of this same caloric from
+50 to zero. It is a question which we propose to
+examine hereafter.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We shall give here a second demonstration of
+the fundamental proposition enunciated on page
+<a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, and present this proposition under a more general
+form than the one already given.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>When a gaseous fluid is rapidly compressed its
+temperature rises. It falls, on the contrary, when
+it is rapidly dilated. This is one of the facts best
+demonstrated by experiment. We will take it for
+the basis of our demonstration.<a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If, when the temperature of a gas has been
+raised by compression, we wish to reduce it to its
+former temperature without subjecting its volume
+to new changes, some of its caloric must be removed.
+This caloric might have been removed in
+proportion as pressure was applied, so that the
+temperature of the gas would remain constant.
+Similarly, if the gas is rarefied we can avoid lowering
+the temperature by supplying it with a certain
+quantity of caloric. Let us call the caloric
+employed at such times, when no change of temperature
+occurs, <i>caloric due to change of volume</i>.
+This denomination does not indicate that the
+caloric appertains to the volume: it does not appertain
+to it any more than to pressure, and
+might as well be called <i>caloric due to the change
+of pressure</i>. We do not know what laws it
+follows relative to the variations of volume: it is
+possible that its quantity changes either with the
+nature of the gas, its density, or its temperature. Experiment
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>has taught us nothing on this subject. It
+has only shown us that this caloric is developed in
+greater or less quantity by the compression of the
+elastic fluids.</p>
+
+<div class='figright id003'>
+<img src='images/i_063.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 1.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This preliminary idea being established, let us
+imagine an elastic fluid, atmospheric air for example,
+shut up in a cylindrical vessel, <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 1),
+provided with a movable diaphragm
+or piston, <i>cd</i>. Let
+there be also two bodies, <i>A</i> and
+<i>B</i>, kept each at a constant
+temperature, that of <i>A</i> being
+higher than that of <i>B</i>. Let
+us picture to ourselves now
+the series of operations which
+are to be described:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) Contact of the body
+<i>A</i> with the air enclosed in the
+space <i>abcd</i> or with the wall
+of this space—a wall that we
+will suppose to transmit the
+caloric readily. The air becomes
+by such contact of the
+same temperature as the body <i>A</i>; <i>cd</i> is the actual
+position of the piston.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The piston gradually rises and takes the
+position <i>ef</i>. The body <i>A</i> is all the time in contact
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>with the air, which is thus kept at a constant
+temperature during the rarefaction. The body <i>A</i>
+furnishes the caloric necessary to keep the temperature
+constant.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) The body <i>A</i> is removed, and the air is then
+no longer in contact with any body capable of furnishing
+it with caloric. The piston meanwhile
+continues to move, and passes from the position <i>ef</i>
+to the position <i>gh</i>. The air is rarefied without
+receiving caloric, and its temperature falls. Let
+us imagine that it falls thus till it becomes equal
+to that of the body <i>B</i>; at this instant the piston
+stops, remaining at the position <i>gh</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The air is placed in contact with the body
+<i>B</i>; it is compressed by the return of the piston as
+it is moved from the position <i>gh</i> to the position
+<i>cd</i>. This air remains, however, at a constant
+temperature because of its contact with the body
+<i>B</i>, to which it yields its caloric.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(5) The body <i>B</i> is removed, and the compression
+of the air is continued, which being then
+isolated, its temperature rises. The compression
+is continued till the air acquires the temperature
+of the body <i>A</i>. The piston passes during this
+time from the position <i>cd</i> to the position <i>ik</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(6) The air is again placed in contact with the
+body <i>A</i>. The piston returns from the position <i>ik</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>to the position <i>ef</i>; the temperature remains unchanged.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(7) The step described under number 3 is renewed,
+then successively the steps 4, 5, 6, 3, 4, 5,
+6, 3, 4, 5; and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In these various operations the piston is subject
+to an effort of greater or less magnitude, exerted
+by the air enclosed in the cylinder; the elastic
+force of this air varies as much by reason of the
+changes in volume as of changes of temperature.
+But it should be remarked that with equal
+volumes, that is, for the similar positions of the
+piston, the temperature is higher during the movements
+of dilatation than during the movements of
+compression. During the former the elastic force
+of the air is found to be greater, and consequently
+the quantity of motive power produced by the
+movements of dilatation is more considerable than
+that consumed to produce the movements of compression.
+Thus we should obtain an excess of
+motive power—an excess which we could employ
+for any purpose whatever. The air, then, has
+served as a heat-engine; we have, in fact, employed
+it in the most advantageous manner possible, for
+no useless re-establishment of equilibrium has
+been effected in the caloric.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>All the above-described operations may be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>executed in an inverse sense and order. Let us
+imagine that, after the sixth period, that is to say
+the piston having arrived at the position <i>ef</i>, we
+cause it to return to the position <i>ik</i>, and that at
+the same time we keep the air in contact with the
+body <i>A</i>. The caloric furnished by this body
+during the sixth period would return to its source,
+that is, to the body <i>A</i>, and the conditions would
+then become precisely the same as they were at the
+end of the fifth period. If now we take away the
+body <i>A</i>, and if we cause the piston to move from
+<i>ef</i> to <i>cd</i>, the temperature of the air will diminish
+as many degrees as it increased during the fifth
+period, and will become that of the body <i>B</i>. We
+may evidently continue a series of operations the
+inverse of those already described. It is only
+necessary under the same circumstances to execute
+for each period a movement of dilatation
+instead of a movement of compression, and reciprocally.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The result of these first operations has been the
+production of a certain quantity of motive power
+and the removal of caloric from the body <i>A</i> to the
+body <i>B</i>. The result of the inverse operations is
+the consumption of the motive power produced and
+the return of the caloric from the body <i>B</i> to the
+body <i>A</i>; so that these two series of operations annul
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>each other, after a fashion, one neutralizing the
+other.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The impossibility of making the caloric produce
+a greater quantity of motive power than that which
+we obtained from it by our first series of operations,
+is now easily proved. It is demonstrated by
+reasoning very similar to that employed at page <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;
+the reasoning will here be even more exact. The
+air which we have used to develop the motive
+power is restored at the end of each cycle of operations
+exactly to the state in which it was at first
+found, while, as we have already remarked, this
+would not be precisely the case with the vapor of
+water.<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>We have chosen atmospheric air as the instrument
+which should develop the motive power of
+heat, but it is evident that the reasoning would
+have been the same for all other gaseous substances,
+and even for all other bodies susceptible of change
+of temperature through successive contractions and
+dilatations, which comprehends all natural substances,
+or at least all those which are adapted to
+realize the motive power of heat. Thus we are led
+to establish this general proposition:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The motive power of heat is independent of the
+agents employed to realize it; its quantity is fixed
+solely by the temperatures of the bodies between
+which is effected, finally, the transfer of the caloric.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We must understand here that each of the
+methods of developing motive power attains the
+perfection of which it is susceptible. This condition
+is found to be fulfilled if, as we remarked
+above, there is produced in the body no other
+change of temperature than that due to change of
+volume, or, what is the same thing in other words,
+if there is no contact between bodies of sensibly
+different temperatures.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Different methods of realizing motive power may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>be taken, as in the employment of different substances,
+or in the use of the same substance in two
+different states—for example, of a gas at two different
+densities.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This leads us naturally to those interesting researches
+on the aeriform fluids—researches which
+lead us also to new results in regard to the motive
+power of heat, and give us the means of verifying,
+in some particular cases, the fundamental proposition
+above stated.<a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We readily see that our demonstration would
+have been simplified by supposing the temperatures
+of the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> to differ very little. Then
+the movements of the piston being slight during
+the periods 3 and 5, these periods might have been
+suppressed without influencing sensibly the production
+of motive power. A very little change of
+volume should suffice in fact to produce a very
+slight change of temperature, and this slight change
+of volume may be neglected in presence of that of
+the periods 4 and 6, of which the extent is unlimited.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we suppress periods 3 and 5, in the series of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>operations above described, it is reduced to the following:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) Contact of the gas confined in <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 2)
+with the body <i>A</i>, passage of the piston from <i>cd</i> to <i>ef</i>.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_070.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 2.</span>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; <span class='sc'>Fig. 3.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) Removal of the body <i>A</i>, contact of the gas
+confined in <i>abef</i> with the body <i>B</i>, return of the
+piston from <i>ef</i> to <i>cd</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) Removal of the body <i>B</i>, contact of the gas
+with the body <i>A</i>, passage of the piston from <i>cd</i> to
+<i>ef</i>, that is, repetition of the first period, and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The motive power resulting from the <i>ensemble</i>
+of operations 1 and 2 will evidently be the difference
+between that which is produced by the expansion
+of the gas while it is at the temperature of the
+body <i>A</i>, and that which is consumed to compress
+this gas while it is at the temperature of the
+body <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>Let us suppose that operations 1 and 2 be performed
+on two gases of different chemical natures
+but under the same pressure—under atmospheric
+pressure, for example. These two gases will behave
+exactly alike under the same circumstances,
+that is, their expansive forces, originally equal,
+will remain always equal, whatever may be the
+variations of volume and of temperature, provided
+these variations are the same in both. This results
+obviously from the laws of Mariotte and MM. Gay-Lussac
+and Dalton—laws common to all elastic
+fluids, and in virtue of which the same relations
+exist for all these fluids between the volume, the
+expansive force, and the temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Since two different gases at the same temperature
+and under the same pressure should behave
+alike under the same circumstances, if we subjected
+them both to the operations above described, they
+should give rise to equal quantities of motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Now this implies, according to the fundamental
+proposition that we have established, the employment
+of two equal quantities of caloric; that is, it
+implies that the quantity of caloric transferred from
+the body <i>A</i> to the body <i>B</i> is the same, whichever
+gas is used.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The quantity of caloric transferred from the
+body <i>A</i> to the body <i>B</i> is evidently that which is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>absorbed by the gas in its expansion of volume, or
+that which this gas relinquishes during compression.
+We are led, then, to establish the following
+proposition:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>When a gas passes without change of temperature
+from one definite volume and pressure to another
+volume and another pressure equally definite,
+the quantity of caloric absorbed or relinquished is
+always the same, whatever may be the nature of
+the gas chosen as the subject of the experiment.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Take, for example, 1 litre of air at the temperature
+of 100° and under the pressure of one atmosphere.
+If we double the volume of this air and
+wish to maintain it at the temperature of 100°, a
+certain quantity of heat must be supplied to it.
+Now this quantity will be precisely the same if,
+instead of operating on the air, we operate upon
+carbonic-acid gas, upon nitrogen, upon hydrogen,
+upon vapor of water or of alcohol, that is, if we
+double the volume of 1 litre of these gases taken at
+the temperature of 100° and under atmospheric
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It will be the same thing in the inverse sense if,
+instead of doubling the volume of gas, we reduce
+it one half by compression. The quantity of heat
+that the elastic fluids set free or absorb in their
+changes of volume has never been measured by
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>any direct experiment, and doubtless such an experiment
+would be very difficult, but there exists a
+datum which is very nearly its equivalent. This
+has been furnished by the theory of sound. It deserves
+much confidence because of the exactness of
+the conditions which have led to its establishment.
+It consists in this:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Atmospheric air should rise one degree Centigrade
+when by sudden compression it experiences
+a reduction of volume of ¹⁄₁₁₆.<a id='r20'></a><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Experiments on the velocity of sound having
+been made in air under the pressure of 760 millimetres
+of mercury and at the temperature of 6°,
+it is only to these two circumstances that our
+datum has reference. We will, however, for greater
+facility, refer it to the temperature 0°, which is
+nearly the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Air compressed ¹⁄₁₁₆, and thus heated one degree,
+differs from air heated directly one degree only in
+its density. The primitive volume being supposed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>to be <i>V</i>, the compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆ reduces it to
+<i>V</i> − ¹⁄₁₁₆ <i>V</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Direct heating under constant pressure should,
+according to the rule of M. Gay-Lussac, increase
+the volume of air ¹⁄₂₆₇ above what it would be at 0°:
+so the air is, on the one hand, reduced to the volume
+<i>V</i> − ¹⁄₁₁₆ <i>V</i>; on the other, it is increased to
+<i>V</i> + ¹⁄₂₆₇ <i>V</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The difference between the quantities of heat
+which the air possesses in both cases is evidently
+the quantity employed to raise it directly one degree;
+so then the quantity of heat that the air
+would absorb in passing from the volume <i>V</i> − ¹⁄₁₁₆ <i>V</i>
+to the volume <i>V</i> + ¹⁄₂₆₇ <i>V</i> is equal to that which
+is required to raise it one degree.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose now that, instead of heating one
+degree the air subjected to a constant pressure and
+able to dilate freely, we inclose it within an invariable
+space, and that in this condition we cause it
+to rise one degree in temperature. The air thus
+heated one degree will differ from the air compressed
+¹⁄₁₁₆ only by its ¹⁄₁₁₆ greater volume. So
+then the quantity of heat that the air would set
+free by a reduction of volume of ¹⁄₁₁₆ is equal to
+that which would be required to raise it one degree
+Centigrade under constant volume. As the differences
+between the volumes <i>V</i> − ¹⁄₁₁₆ <i>V</i>, <i>V</i>, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span><i>V</i> + ¹⁄₂₆₇ <i>V</i> are small relatively to the volumes
+themselves, we may regard the quantities of heat
+absorbed by the air in passing from the first of
+these volumes to the second, and from the first to
+the third, as sensibly proportional to the changes
+of volume. We are then led to the establishment
+of the following relation:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The quantity of heat necessary to raise one degree
+air under constant pressure is to the quantity
+of heat necessary to raise one degree the same air
+under constant volume, in the ratio of the numbers</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ to ¹⁄₁₁₆;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>or, multiplying both by 116 × 267, in the ratio of
+the numbers 267 + 116 to 267.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This, then, is the ratio which exists between the
+capacity of air for heat under constant pressure
+and its capacity under constant volume. If the
+first of these two capacities is expressed by unity,
+the other will be expressed by the number <span class='fraction'>267<br><span class='vincula'>267 + 116</span></span>,
+or very nearly 0.700; their difference, 1 − 0.700 or
+0.300, will evidently express the quantity of heat
+which will produce the increase of volume in the
+air when it is heated one degree under constant
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to the law of MM. Gay-Lussac and
+Dalton, this increase of volume would be the same
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>for all other gases; according to the theory demonstrated
+on page <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, the heat absorbed by these equal
+increases of volume is the same for all the elastic
+fluids, which leads to the establishment of the following
+proposition:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The difference between specific heat under constant
+pressure and specific heat under constant
+volume is the same for all gases.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It should be remarked here that all the gases
+are considered as taken under the same pressure,
+atmospheric pressure for example, and that the
+specific heats are also measured with reference to
+the volumes.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is a very easy matter now for us to prepare a
+table of the specific heat of gases under constant
+volume, from the knowledge of their specific heats
+under constant pressure. Here is the table:</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Table of the Specific Heat of Gases.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt brt c014'><span class='sc'>Names of Gases.</span></th>
+ <th class='btt bbt brt c014'>Specific Heat under Const. Press.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'>Specific Heat at Const. Vol.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Atmospheric Air,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1.000</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.700</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Hydrogen Gas,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>0.903</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.603</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Carbonic Acid,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1.258</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.958</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Oxygen,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>0.976</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.676</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Nitrogen,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1.000</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.700</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Protoxide of Nitrogen,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1.350</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.050</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c015'>Olefiant Gas,</td>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1.553</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.253</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt brt c015'>Oxide of Carbon,</td>
+ <td class='bbt brt c014'>1.034</td>
+ <td class='bbt c014'>0.734</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>The first column is the result of the direct
+experiments of MM. Delaroche and Bérard on the
+specific heat of the gas under atmospheric pressure,
+and the second column is composed of the numbers
+of the first diminished by 0.300.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The numbers of the first column and those of
+the second are here referred to the same unit, to
+the specific heat of atmospheric air under constant
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The difference between each number of the first
+column and the corresponding number of the second
+being constant, the relation between these
+numbers should be variable. Thus the relation
+between the specific heat of gases under constant
+pressure and the specific heat at constant volume,
+varies in different gases.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have seen that air when it is subjected to a
+sudden compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆ of its volume rises one
+degree in temperature. The other gases through
+a similar compression should also rise in temperature.
+They should rise, but not equally, in inverse
+ratio with their specific heat at constant volume.
+In fact, the reduction of volume being by hypothesis
+always the same, the quantity of heat due to
+this reduction should likewise be always the same,
+and consequently should produce an elevation of
+temperature dependent only on the specific heat
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>acquired by the gas after its compression, and
+evidently in inverse ratio with this specific heat.
+Thus we can easily form the table of the elevations
+of temperature of the different gases for a compression
+of ¹⁄₁₁₆.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Table of the Elevation of Temperature<br>of</span></th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'><i>Gases through the Effect of Compression</i>.</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'><span class='sc'>Names of Gases.</span></th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c014'>Elevation of Temperature for a Reduction of Volume of ¹⁄₁₁₆.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c016'></th>
+ <th class='blt c014'>°</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Atmospheric Air,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Hydrogen Gas,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.160</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Carbonic Acid,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.730</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Oxygen,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.035</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Nitrogen,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Protoxide of Nitrogen,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.667</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c016'>Olefiant Gas,</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.558</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c016'>Carbonic Oxide,</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c014'>0.955</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>A second compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆ (of the altered volume),
+as we shall presently see, would also raise the
+temperature of these gases nearly as much as the
+first; but it would not be the same with a third, a
+fourth, a hundredth such compression. The capacity
+of gases for heat changes with their volume.
+It is not unlikely that it changes also with the
+temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We shall now deduce from the general proposition
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>stated on page <a href='#Page_68'>68</a> a second theory, which will
+serve as a corollary to that just demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose that the gas enclosed in the
+cylindrical space <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 2) be transported into
+the space <i>a′b′c′d′</i> (Fig. 3) of equal height, but of
+different base and wider. This gas would increase
+in volume, would diminish in density and in elastic
+force, in the inverse ratio of the two volumes <i>abcd</i>,
+<i>a′b′c′d′</i>. As to the total pressure exerted in each
+piston <i>cd</i>, <i>c′d′</i>, it would be the same from all quarters,
+for the surface of these pistons is in direct
+ratio to the volumes.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose that we perform on the gas inclosed
+in <i>a′b′c′d′</i> the operations described on page
+<a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, and which were taken as having been performed
+upon the gas inclosed in <i>abcd</i>; that is, let us suppose
+that we have given to the piston <i>c′d′</i> motions
+equal to those of the piston <i>cd</i>, that we have made
+it occupy successively the positions <i>c′d′</i> corresponding
+to <i>cd</i>, and <i>e′f′</i> corresponding to <i>ef</i>, and that at
+the same time we have subjected the gas by means
+of the two bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> to the same variations
+of temperature as when it was inclosed in <i>abcd</i>.
+The total effort exercised on the piston would be
+found to be, in the two cases, always the same at
+the corresponding instants. This results solely from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>the law of Mariotte.<a id='r21'></a><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a> In fact, the densities of the
+two gases maintaining always the same ratio for
+similar positions of the pistons, and the temperatures
+being always equal in both, the total pressures
+exercised on the pistons will always maintain the
+same ratio to each other. If this ratio is, at any
+instant whatever, unity, the pressures will always
+be equal.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>As, furthermore, the movements of the two pistons
+have equal extent, the motive power produced
+by each will evidently be the same; whence we
+should conclude, according to the proposition on
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>page <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, that the quantities of heat consumed by
+each are the same, that is, that there passes from
+the body <i>A</i> to the body <i>B</i> the same quantity of
+heat in both cases.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The heat abstracted from the body <i>A</i> and communicated
+to the body <i>B</i>, is simply the heat absorbed
+during the rarefaction of the gas, and afterwards
+liberated by its compression. We are therefore
+led to establish the following theorem:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>When an elastic fluid passes without change of
+temperature from the volume U to the volume V,
+and when a similar ponderable quantity of the
+same gas passes at the same temperature from the
+volume U′ to the volume V′, if the ratio of U′ to
+V′ is found to be the same as the ratio of U to V,
+the quantities of heat absorbed or disengaged in
+the two cases will be equal.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This theorem might also be expressed as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>When a gas varies in volume without change of
+temperature, the quantities of heat absorbed or
+liberated by this gas are in arithmetical progression,
+if the increments or the decrements of volume
+are found to be in geometrical progression.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>When a litre of air maintained at a temperature
+of ten degrees is compressed, and when it is reduced
+to one half a litre, a certain quantity of
+heat is set free. This quantity will be found always
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>the same if the volume is further reduced from a
+half litre to a quarter litre, from a quarter litre to
+an eighth, and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If, instead of compressing the air, we carry it
+successively to two litres, four litres, eight litres,
+etc., it will be necessary to supply to it always equal
+quantities of heat in order to maintain a constant
+temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This readily accounts for the high temperature
+attained by air when rapidly compressed. We
+know that this temperature inflames tinder and
+even makes air luminous. If, for a moment, we
+suppose the specific heat of air to be constant, in
+spite of the changes of volume and temperature,
+the temperature will increase in arithmetical progression
+for reduction of volume in geometrical
+progression.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Starting from this datum, and admitting that
+one degree of elevation in the temperature corresponds
+to a compression of ¹⁄₁₁₆, we shall readily
+come to the conclusion that air reduced to ¹⁄₁₄ of
+its primitive volume should rise in temperature
+about 300 degrees, which is sufficient to inflame
+tinder.<a id='r22'></a><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>The elevation of temperature ought, evidently,
+to be still more considerable if the capacity of the
+air for heat becomes less as its volume diminishes.
+Now this is probable, and it also seems to follow
+from the experiments of MM. Delaroche and
+Bérard on the specific heat of air taken at different
+densities. (See the Mémoire in the <i>Annales de
+Chimie</i>, t. lxxxv. pp. 72, 224.)</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The two theorems explained on pp. <a href='#Page_72'>72</a> and 81
+suffice for the comparison of the quantities of heat
+absorbed or set free in the changes of volume of
+elastic fluids, whatever may be the density and the
+chemical nature of these fluids, provided always
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>that they be taken and maintained at a certain invariable
+temperature. But these theories furnish
+no means of comparing the quantities of heat liberated
+or absorbed by elastic fluids which change in
+volume at different temperatures. Thus we are
+ignorant what relation exists between the heat relinquished
+by a litre of air reduced one half, the
+temperature being kept at zero, and the heat relinquished
+by the same litre of air reduced one half,
+the temperature being kept at 100°. The knowledge
+of this relation is closely connected with that
+of the specific heat of gases at various temperatures,
+and to some other data that Physics as yet does not
+supply.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The second of our theorems offers us a means of
+determining according to what law the specific
+heat of gases varies with their density.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose that the operations described on
+p. <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, instead of being performed with two bodies,
+<i>A</i>, <i>B</i>, of temperatures differing indefinitely small,
+were carried on with two bodies whose temperatures
+differ by a finite quantity—one degree, for
+example. In a complete circle of operations the
+body <i>A</i> furnishes to the elastic fluid a certain quantity
+of heat, which may be divided into two portions:
+(1) That which is necessary to maintain the
+temperature of the fluid constant during dilatation;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>(2) that which is necessary to restore the temperature
+of the fluid from that of the body <i>B</i> to
+that of the body <i>A</i>, when, after having brought
+back this fluid to its primitive volume, we place it
+again in contact with the body <i>A</i>. Let us call the
+first of these quantities <i>a</i> and the second <i>b</i>. The
+total caloric furnished by the body A will be expressed
+by <i>a</i> + <i>b</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The caloric transmitted by the fluid to the body
+<i>B</i> may also be divided into two parts: one, <i>b′</i>, due
+to the cooling of the gas by the body <i>B</i>; the other,
+<i>a′</i>, which the gas abandons as a result of its reduction
+of volume. The sum of these two quantities
+is <i>a′</i> + <i>b′</i>; it should be equal to <i>a</i> + <i>b</i>, for,
+after a complete cycle of operations, the gas is
+brought back exactly to its primitive state. It has
+been obliged to give up all the caloric which has
+first been furnished to it. We have then</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>a</i> + <i>b</i> = <i>a′</i> + <i>b′</i>;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>or rather,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>a</i> − <i>a′</i> = <i>b′</i> − <i>b</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Now, according to the theorem given on page <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>,
+the quantities <i>a</i> and <i>a′</i> are independent of the density
+of the gas, provided always that the ponderable
+quantity remains the same and that the variations
+of volume be proportional to the original volume.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>The difference <i>a</i> − <i>a′</i> should fulfil the same conditions,
+and consequently also the difference <i>b′</i> − <i>b</i>,
+which is equal to it. But <i>b′</i> is the caloric necessary
+to raise the gas enclosed in <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 2) one degree;
+<i>b′</i> is the caloric surrendered by the gas when,
+enclosed in <i>abef</i>, it is cooled one degree. These
+quantities may serve as a measure for specific heats.
+We are then led to the establishment of the following
+proposition:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The change in the specific heat of a gas caused
+by change of volume depends entirely on the ratio
+between the original volume and the altered volume.</i>
+That is, the difference of the specific heats does not
+depend on the absolute magnitude of the volumes,
+but only on their ratio.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This proposition might also be differently expressed,
+thus:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>When a gas increases in volume in geometrical
+progression, its specific heat increases in arithmetical
+progression.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus, <i>a</i> being the specific heat of air taken at a
+given density, and <i>a</i> + <i>h</i> the specific heat for a
+density one half less, it will be, for a density equal
+to one quarter, <i>a</i> + 2<i>h</i>; for a density equal to one
+eighth, <i>a</i> + 3<i>h</i>; and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The specific heats are here taken with reference
+to weight. They are supposed to be taken at an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>invariable volume, but, as we shall see, they would
+follow the same law if they were taken under constant
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>To what cause is the difference between specific
+heats at constant volume and at constant pressure
+really due? To the caloric required to produce in
+the second case increase of volume. Now, according
+to the law of Mariotte, increase of volume of a
+gas should be, for a given change of temperature,
+a determined fraction of the original volume, a
+fraction independent of pressure. According to
+the theorem expressed on page <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, if the ratio between
+the primitive volume and the altered volume
+is given, that determines the heat necessary to produce
+increase of volume. It depends solely on this
+ratio and on the weight of the gas. We must then
+conclude that:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The difference between specific heat at constant
+pressure and specific heat at constant volume is
+always the same, whatever may be the density of the
+gas, provided the weight remains the same.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>These specific heats both increase accordingly as
+the density of the gas diminishes, but their difference
+does not vary.<a id='r23'></a><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>Since the difference between the two capacities
+for heat is constant, if one increases in arithmetical
+progression the other should follow a similar progression:
+thus one law is applicable to specific
+heats at constant pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have tacitly assumed the increase of specific
+heat with that of volume. This increase is indicated
+by the experiments of MM. Delaroche and
+Bérard: in fact these physicists have found 0.967
+for the specific heat of air under the pressure of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>1 metre of mercury (see Mémoire already cited),
+taking for the unit the specific heat of the same
+weight of air under the pressure of 0<sup>m</sup>.760.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to the law that specific heats follow
+with relation to pressures, it is only necessary to
+have observed them in two particular cases to
+deduce them in all possible cases: it is thus that,
+making use of the experimental result of MM.
+Delaroche and Bérard which has just been given,
+we have prepared the following table of the specific
+heat of air under different pressures:</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Specific Heat of Air</span>.</th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt brt c014'>Pressure in Atmospheres.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'>Specific Heat, that of Air under Atmospheric Pressure being 1.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₁₀₂₄</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.840</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₅₁₂</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.756</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₂₅₆</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.672</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₁₂₈</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.588</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₆₄</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.504</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₃₂</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.420</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¹⁄₁₆</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.336</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>⅛</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.252</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>¼</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.165</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>½</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.084</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>1</td>
+ <td class='c014'>1.000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>2</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.916</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>4</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.832</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>8</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.748</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>16</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.664</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>32</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.580</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>64</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.496</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>128</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.412</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>256</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.328</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c014'>512</td>
+ <td class='c014'>0.244</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt brt c014'>1024</td>
+ <td class='bbt c014'>0.160</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>The first column is, as we see, a geometrical
+progression, and the second an arithmetical progression.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>We have carried out the table to the extremes
+of compression and rarefaction. It may be believed
+that air would be liquefied before acquiring
+a density 1024 times its normal density, that is,
+before becoming more dense than water. The
+specific heat would become zero and even negative
+on extending the table beyond the last term. We
+think, furthermore, that the figures of the second
+column here decrease too rapidly. The experiments
+which serve as a basis for our calculation
+have been made within too contracted limits for us
+to expect great exactness in the figures which we
+have obtained, especially in the outside numbers.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Since we know, on the one hand, the law according
+to which heat is disengaged in the compression
+of gases, and on the other, the law according
+to which specific heat varies with volume, it
+will be easy for us to calculate the increase of temperature
+of a gas that has been compressed without
+being allowed to lose heat. In fact, the compression
+may be considered as composed of two
+successive operations: (1) compression at a constant
+temperature; (2) restoration of the caloric
+emitted. The temperature will rise through the
+second operation in inverse ratio with the specific
+heat acquired by the gas after the reduction of
+volume,—specific heat that we are able to calculate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>by means of the law demonstrated above. The
+heat set free by compression, according to the
+theorem of page <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, ought to be represented by an
+expression of the form</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>s</i> = <i>A</i> + <i>B</i> log <i>v</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>s</i> being this heat, <i>v</i> the volume of the gas after
+compression, <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> arbitrary constants dependent
+on the primitive volume of the gas, on its
+pressure, and on the units chosen.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The specific heat varying with the volume according
+to the law just demonstrated, should be
+represented by an expression of the form</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>z</i> = <i>A′</i> + <i>B′</i> log <i>v</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>A′</i> and <i>B′</i> being the different arbitrary constants
+of <i>A</i> and <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The increase of temperature acquired by the
+gas, as the effect of compression, is proportional to
+the ratio <span class='fraction'><i>s</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>z</i></span></span> or to the relation <span class='fraction'><i>A</i> + <i>B</i> log <i>v</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>A′</i> + <i>B′</i> log <i>v</i></span></span>. It
+can be represented by this ratio itself; thus, calling
+it <i>t</i>, we shall have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>t</i> = (<i>A</i> + <i>B</i> log <i>v</i>)/(<i>A′</i> + <i>B′</i> log <i>v</i>).</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the original volume of the gas is 1, and the
+original temperature zero, we shall have at the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>same time <i>t</i> = 0, log <i>v</i> = 0, whence <i>A</i> = 0; <i>t</i> will
+then express not only the increase of temperature,
+but the temperature itself above the thermometric
+zero.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We need not consider the formula that we have
+just given as applicable to very great changes in
+the volume of gases. We have regarded the elevation
+of temperature as being in inverse ratio to
+the specific heat; which tacitly supposes the specific
+heat to be constant at all temperatures. Great
+changes of volume lead to great changes of temperature
+in the gas, and nothing proves the constancy
+of specific heat at different temperatures,
+especially at temperatures widely separated. This
+constancy is only an hypothesis admitted for gases
+by analogy, to a certain extent verified for solid
+bodies and liquids throughout a part of the thermometric
+scale, but of which the experiments of
+MM. Dulong and Petit have shown the inaccuracy
+when it is desirable to extend it to temperatures
+far above 100°.<a id='r24'></a><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to a law of MM. Clement and Desormes,
+a law established by direct experiment, the
+vapor of water, under whatever pressure it may
+be formed, contains always, at equal weights, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>same quantity of heat; which leads to the assertion
+that steam, compressed or expanded mechanically
+without loss of heat, will always be found in a
+saturated state if it was so produced in the first
+place. The vapor of water so made may then be
+regarded as a permanent gas, and should observe
+all the laws of one. Consequently the formula</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>t</i> = (<i>A</i> + <i>B</i> log <i>v</i>)/(<i>A′</i> + <i>B′</i> log <i>v</i>)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>should be applicable to it, and be found to accord
+with the table of tensions derived from the direct
+experiments of M. Dalton.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We may be assured, in fact, that our formula,
+with a convenient determination of arbitrary constants,
+represents very closely the results of experiment.
+The slight irregularities which we find
+therein do not exceed what we might reasonably
+attribute to errors of observation.<a id='r25'></a><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We will return, however, to our principal subject,
+from which we have wandered too far—the
+motive power of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have shown that the quantity of motive
+power developed by the transfer of caloric from
+one body to another depends essentially upon the
+temperature of the two bodies, but we have not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>shown the relation between these temperatures and
+the quantities of motive power produced. It would
+at first seem natural enough to suppose that for
+equal differences of temperature the quantities of
+motive power produced are equal; that is, for example,
+the passage of a given quantity of caloric
+from a body, <i>A</i>, maintained at 100°, to a body, <i>B</i>,
+maintained at 50°, should give rise to a quantity of
+motive power equal to that which would be developed
+by the transfer of the same caloric from a
+body, <i>B</i>, at 50°, to a body, <i>C</i>, at zero. Such a law
+would doubtless be very remarkable, but we do not
+see sufficient reason for admitting it <i><span lang="fr">à priori</span></i>. We
+will investigate its reality by exact reasoning.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us imagine that the operations described on
+p. <a href='#Page_70'>70</a> be conducted successively on two quantities
+of atmospheric air equal in weight and volume,
+but taken at different temperatures. Let us suppose,
+further, the differences of temperature between
+the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> equal, so these bodies
+would have for example, in one of these cases, the
+temperatures 100° and 100° − <i>h</i> (<i>h</i> being indefinitely
+small), and in the other 1° and 1° − <i>h</i>. The
+quantity of motive power produced is, in each case,
+the difference between that which the gas supplies
+by its dilatation and that which must be expended
+to restore its primitive volume. Now this difference
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>is the same in both cases, as any one can
+prove by simple reasoning, which it seems unnecessary
+to give here in detail; hence the motive
+power produced is the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us now compare the quantities of heat employed
+in the two cases. In the first, the quantity
+of heat employed is that which the body <i>A</i> furnishes
+to the air to maintain it at the temperature
+of 100° during its expansion. In the second, it is
+the quantity of heat which this same body should
+furnish to it, to keep its temperature at one degree
+during an exactly similar change of volume. If
+these two quantities of heat were equal, there
+would evidently result the law that we have already
+assumed. But nothing proves that it is so, and we
+shall find that these quantities are not equal.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The air that we shall first consider as occupying
+the space <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 2), and having 1 degree of
+temperature, can be made to occupy the space <i>abef</i>,
+and to acquire the temperature of 100 degrees by
+two different means:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) We may heat it without changing its volume,
+then expand it, keeping its temperature
+constant.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) We may begin by expanding it, maintaining
+the temperature constant, then heat it, when it
+has acquired its greater volume.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>Let <i>a</i> and <i>b</i> be the quantities of heat employed
+successively in the first of the two operations, and
+let <i>b′</i> and <i>a′</i> be the quantities of heat employed
+successively in the second. As the final result of
+these two operations is the same, the quantities of
+heat employed in both should be equal. We have
+then</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>a</i> + <i>b</i> = <i>a′</i> + <i>b′</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>whence</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>a′</i> − <i>a</i> = <i>b</i> − <i>b′</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>a′</i> is the quantity of heat required to cause the
+gas to rise from 1° to 100° when it occupies the
+space <i>abef</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>a</i> is the quantity of heat required to cause the
+gas to rise from 1° to 100° when it occupies the
+space <i>abcd</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The density of the air is less in the first than in
+the second case, and according to the experiments
+of MM. Delaroche and Bérard, already cited on
+page <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, its capacity for heat should be a little
+greater.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The quantity <i>a′</i> being found to be greater than
+the quantity <i>a</i>, <i>b</i> should be greater than <i>b′</i>. Consequently,
+generalizing the proposition, we should
+say:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The quantity of heat due to the change of volume
+of a gas is greater as the temperature is higher.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>Thus, for example, more caloric is necessary to
+maintain at 100° the temperature of a certain
+quantity of air the volume of which is doubled,
+than to maintain at 1° the temperature of this
+same air during a dilatation exactly equal.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>These unequal quantities of heat would produce,
+however, as we have seen, equal quantities of
+motive power for equal fall of caloric taken at different
+heights on the thermometric scale; whence
+we draw the following conclusion:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The fall of caloric produces more motive power at
+inferior than at superior temperatures.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus a given quantity of heat will develop more
+motive power in passing from a body kept at 1
+degree to another maintained at zero, than if these
+two bodies were at the temperature of 101° and
+100°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The difference, however, should be very slight.
+It would be nothing if the capacity of the air for
+heat remained constant, in spite of changes of
+density. According to the experiments of MM.
+Delaroche and Bérard, this capacity varies little—so
+little even, that the differences noticed might
+strictly have been attributed to errors of observation
+or to some circumstances of which we have
+failed to take account.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We are not prepared to determine precisely,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>with no more experimental data than we now possess,
+the law according to which the motive power
+of heat varies at different points on the thermometric
+scale. This law is intimately connected
+with that of the variations of the specific heat of
+gases at different temperatures—a law which experiment
+has not yet made known to us with sufficient
+exactness.<a id='r26'></a><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We will endeavor now to estimate exactly the
+motive power of heat, and in order to verify our
+fundamental proposition, in order to determine
+whether the agent used to realize the motive power
+is really unimportant relatively to the quantity of
+this power, we will select several of them successively:
+atmospheric air, vapor of water, vapor of
+alcohol.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose that we take first atmospheric
+air. The operation will proceed according to the
+method indicated on page <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>. We will make the
+following hypotheses: The air is taken under
+atmospheric pressure. The temperature of the
+body <i>A</i> is ¹⁄₁₀₀₀ of a degree above zero, that of the
+body <i>B</i> is zero. The difference is, as we see, very
+slight—a necessary condition here.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The increase of volume given to the air in our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>operation will be ¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ of the primitive volume;
+this is a very slight increase, absolutely
+speaking, but great relatively to the difference of
+temperature between the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The motive power developed by the whole of
+the two operations described (page <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>) will be very
+nearly proportional to the increase of volume and
+to the difference between the two pressures exercised
+by the air, when it is found at the temperatures
+0°.001 and zero.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This difference is, according to the law of M.
+Gay-Lussac, ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of the elastic force of the gas,
+or very nearly ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of the atmospheric pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The atmospheric pressure balances at 10.40
+metres head of water; ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ of this pressure
+equals ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ × 10<sup>m</sup>.40 of head of water.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>As to the increase of volume, it is, by supposition,
+¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇ of the original volume, that is, of
+the volume occupied by one kilogram of air at
+zero, a volume equal to 0<sup>mc</sup>.77, allowing for the
+specific weight of the air. So then the product,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>(¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇) × 0.77 × ¹⁄₂₆₇₀₀₀ × 10.40,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>will express the motive power developed. This
+power is estimated here in cubic metres of water
+raised one metre.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>If we carry out the indicated multiplications, we
+find the value of the product to be 0.000000372.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us endeavor now to estimate the quantity of
+heat employed to give this result; that is, the
+quantity of heat passed from the body <i>A</i> to the
+body <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The body <i>A</i> furnishes:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The heat required to carry the temperature
+of one kilogram of air from zero to 0°.001;</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The quantity necessary to maintain at this
+temperature the temperature of the air when it
+experiences a dilatation of</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>¹⁄₁₁₆ + ¹⁄₂₆₇.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>The first of these quantities of heat being very
+small in comparison with the second, we may disregard
+it. The second is, according to the reasoning
+on page <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, equal to that which would be
+necessary to increase one degree the temperature
+of one kilogram of air subjected to atmospheric
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to the experiments of MM. Delaroche
+and Bérard on the specific heat of gases, that of
+air is, for equal weights, 0.267 that of water. If,
+then, we take for the unit of heat the quantity
+necessary to raise 1 kilogram of water 1 degree,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>that which will be required to raise 1 kilogram of
+air 1 degree would have for its value 0.267. Thus
+the quantity of heat furnished by the body <i>A</i> is</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>0.267 units.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This is the heat capable of producing 0.000000372
+units of motive power by its fall from 0°.001 to
+zero.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>For a fall a thousand times greater, for a fall of
+one degree, the motive power will be very nearly a
+thousand times the former, or</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>0.000372.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If, now, instead of 0.267 units of heat we employ
+1000 units, the motive power produced will be
+expressed by the proportion</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id004'>
+<img src='images/i_101.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus 1000 units of heat passing from a body
+maintained at the temperature of 1 degree to
+another body maintained at zero would produce, in
+acting upon the air,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1.395 units of motive power.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>We will now compare this result with that furnished
+by the action of heat on the vapor of water.</p>
+
+<div class='figleft id005'>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>
+<img src='images/i_102.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 4.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose one kilogram of liquid water enclosed
+in the cylindrical vessel <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 4), between
+the bottom <i>ab</i> and the piston
+<i>cd</i>. Let us suppose, also, the two
+bodies <i>A</i>, <i>B</i> maintained each at a
+constant temperature, that of <i>A</i> being
+a very little above that of <i>B</i>. Let us
+imagine now the following operations:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) Contact of the water with the
+body <i>A</i>, movement of the piston from
+the position <i>cd</i> to the position <i>ef</i>, formation
+of steam at the temperature
+of the body <i>A</i> to fill the vacuum produced
+by the extension of volume. We will suppose
+the space <i>abef</i> large enough to contain all the
+water in a state of vapor.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) Removal of the body <i>A</i>, contact of the vapor
+with the body <i>B</i>, precipitation of a part of this
+vapor, diminution of its elastic force, return of
+the piston from <i>ef</i> to <i>ab</i>, liquefaction of the rest of
+the vapor through the effect of the pressure combined
+with the contact of the body <i>B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) Removal of the body <i>B</i>, fresh contact of
+the water with the body <i>A</i>, return of the water
+to the temperature of this body, renewal of the
+former period, and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The quantity of motive power developed in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>complete cycle of operations is measured by the
+product of the volume of the vapor multiplied by
+the difference between the tensions that it possesses
+at the temperature of the body <i>A</i> and at
+that of the body <i>B</i>. As to the heat employed,
+that is to say, transported from the body <i>A</i> to the
+body <i>B</i>, it is evidently that which was necessary
+to turn the water into vapor, disregarding always
+the small quantity required to restore the temperature
+of the liquid water from that of <i>B</i> to that
+of <i>A</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Suppose the temperature of the body <i>A</i> 100 degrees,
+and that of the body <i>B</i> 99 degrees: the
+difference of the tensions will be, according to the
+table of M. Dalton, 26 millimetres of mercury or
+0<sup>m</sup>.36 head of water.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The volume of the vapor is 1700 times that of
+the water. If we operate on one kilogram, that
+will be 1700 litres, or 1<sup>mc</sup>.700.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus the value of the motive power developed
+is the product</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1.700 × 0.36 = 0.611 units,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>of the kind of which we have previously made use.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The quantity of heat employed is the quantity
+required to turn into vapor water already heated to
+100°. This quantity is found by experiment. We
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>have found it equal to 550°, or, to speak more
+exactly, to 550 of our units of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus 0.611 units of motive power result from
+the employment of 550 units of heat. The quantity
+of motive power resulting from 1000 units of
+heat will be given by the proportion</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>⁵⁵⁰⁄₀.611 = 1000/<i>x</i>, whence <i>x</i> = ⁶¹¹⁄₅₅₀ = 1.112.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus 1000 units of heat transported from one
+body kept at 100 degrees to another kept at 99
+degrees will produce, acting upon vapor of water,
+1.112 units of motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The number 1.112 differs by about ¼ from the
+number 1.395 previously found for the value of the
+motive power developed by 1000 units of heat acting
+upon the air; but it should be observed that in this
+case the temperatures of the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> were
+1 degree and zero, while here they are 100 degrees
+and 99 degrees. The difference is much the same;
+but it is not found at the same height in the thermometric
+scale. To make an exact comparison, it
+would have been necessary to estimate the motive
+power developed by the steam formed at 1 degree
+and condensed at zero. It would also have been
+necessary to know the quantity of heat contained
+in the steam formed at one degree.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>The law of MM. Clement and Desormes referred
+to on page <a href='#Page_92'>92</a> gives us this datum. The
+constituent heat of vapor of water being always the
+same at any temperature at which vaporization
+takes place, if 550 degrees of heat are required to
+vaporize water already brought up to 100 degrees,
+550 + 100 or 650 will be required to vaporize the
+same weight of water taken at zero.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Making use of this datum and reasoning exactly
+as we did for water at 100 degrees, we find, as is
+easily seen,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1.290</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>for the motive power developed by 1000 units of
+heat acting upon the vapor of water between one
+degree and zero. This number approximates more
+closely than the first to</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1.395.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>It differs from it only ¹⁄₁₃, an error which does not
+exceed probable limits, considering the great number
+of data of different sorts of which we have
+been obliged to make use in order to arrive at this
+approximation. Thus is our fundamental law verified
+in a special case.<a id='r27'></a><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>We will examine another case in which vapor of
+alcohol is acted upon by heat. The reasoning is
+precisely the same as for the vapor of water. The
+data alone are changed. Pure alcohol boils under
+ordinary pressure at 78°.7 Centigrade. One kilogram
+absorbs, according to MM. Delaroche and
+Bérard, 207 units of heat in undergoing transformation
+into vapor at this same temperature, 78°.7.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The tension of the vapor of alcohol at one degree
+below the boiling-point is found to be diminished
+¹⁄₂₅. It is ¹⁄₂₅ less than the atmospheric
+pressure; at least, this is the result of the experiment
+of M. Bétancour reported in the second part
+of <i>l’Architecture hydraulique</i> of M. Prony, pp.
+180, 195.<a id='r28'></a><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we use these data, we find that, in acting upon
+one kilogram of alcohol at the temperatures of
+78°.7 and 77°.7, the motive power developed will
+be 0.251 units.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This results from the employment of 207 units
+of heat. For 1000 units the proportion must be</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id006'>
+<img src='images/i_106.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>This number is a little more than the 1.112 resulting
+from the use of the vapor of water at the
+temperatures 100° and 99°; but if we suppose the
+vapor of water used at the temperatures 78° and
+77°, we find, according to the law of MM. Clement
+and Desorme, 1.212 for the motive power due to
+1000 units of heat. This latter number approaches,
+as we see, very nearly to 1.230. There
+is a difference of only ¹⁄₅₀.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We should have liked to be able to make other
+approximations of this sort—to be able to calculate,
+for example, the motive power developed by the
+action of heat on solids and liquids, by the congelation
+of water, and so on; but Physics as yet refuses
+us the necessary data.<a id='r29'></a><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The fundamental law that we propose to confirm
+seems to us to require, however, in order to be
+placed beyond doubt, new verifications. It is based
+upon the theory of heat as it is understood to-day,
+and it should be said that this foundation does not
+appear to be of unquestionable solidity. New experiments
+alone can decide the question. Meanwhile
+we can apply the theoretical ideas expressed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>above, regarding them as exact, to the examination
+of the different methods proposed up to date, for
+the realization of the motive power of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It has sometimes been proposed to develop motive
+power by the action of heat on solid bodies.
+The mode of procedure which naturally first occurs
+to the mind is to fasten immovably a solid body—a
+metallic bar, for example—by one of its extremities;
+to attach the other extremity to a movable
+part of the machine; then, by successive heating
+and cooling, to cause the length of the bar to vary,
+and so to produce motion. Let us try to decide
+whether this method of developing motive power
+can be advantageous. We have shown that the
+condition of the most effective employment of heat
+in the production of motion is, that all changes
+of temperature occurring in the bodies should be
+due to changes of volume. The nearer we come
+to fulfilling this condition the more fully will the
+heat be utilized. Now, working in the manner
+just described, we are very far from fulfilling this
+condition: change of temperature is not due here
+to change of volume; all the changes are due to
+contact of bodies differently heated—to the contact
+of the metallic bar, either with the body
+charged with furnishing heat to it, or with the
+body charged with carrying it off.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>The only means of fulfilling the prescribed condition
+would be to act upon the solid body exactly
+as we did on the air in the operations described on
+page <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>. But for this we must be able to produce,
+by a single change of volume of the solid
+body, considerable changes of temperature, that is,
+if we should want to utilize considerable falls of
+caloric. Now this appears impracticable. In
+short, many considerations lead to the conclusion
+that the changes produced in the temperature of
+solid or liquid bodies through the effect of compression
+and rarefaction would be but slight.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) We often observe in machines (particularly
+in steam-engines) solid pieces which endure considerable
+strain in one way or another, and
+although these efforts may be sometimes as great
+as the nature of the substances employed permits,
+the variations of temperature are scarcely perceptible.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) In the action of striking medals, in that of the
+rolling-mill, of the draw-plate, the metals undergo
+the greatest compression to which we can submit
+them, employing the hardest and strongest tools.
+Nevertheless the elevation of temperature is not
+great. If it were, the pieces of steel used in these
+operations would soon lose their temper.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) We know that it would be necessary to exert
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>on solids and liquids a very great strain in order to
+produce in them a reduction of volume comparable
+to that which they experience in cooling (cooling
+from 100° to zero, for example). Now the cooling
+requires a greater abstraction of caloric than would
+simple reduction of volume. If this reduction
+were produced by mechanical means, the heat set
+free would not then be able to make the temperature
+of the body vary as many degrees as the cooling
+makes it vary. It would, however, necessitate
+the employment of a force undoubtedly very considerable.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Since solid bodies are susceptible of little change
+of temperature through changes of volume, and
+since the condition of the most effective employment
+of heat for the development of motive power
+is precisely that all change of temperature should be
+due to a change of volume, solid bodies appear but
+ill fitted to realize this power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The same remarks apply to liquids. The same
+reasons may be given for rejecting them.<a id='r30'></a><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We are not speaking now of practical difficulties.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>They will be numberless. The motion produced
+by the dilatation and compression of solid or liquid
+bodies would only be very slight. In order to give
+them sufficient amplitude we should be forced to
+make use of complicated mechanisms. It would
+be necessary to employ materials of the greatest
+strength to transmit enormous pressure; finally,
+the successive operations would be executed very
+slowly compared to those of the ordinary steam-engine,
+so that apparatus of large dimensions and
+heavy cost would produce but very ordinary results.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The elastic fluids, gases or vapors, are the means
+really adapted to the development of the motive
+power of heat. They combine all the conditions
+necessary to fulfil this office. They are easy to
+compress; they can be almost infinitely expanded;
+variations of volume occasion in them great
+changes of temperature; and, lastly, they are very
+mobile, easy to heat and to cool, easy to transport
+from one place to another, which enables them to
+produce rapidly the desired effects. We can easily
+conceive a multitude of machines fitted to develop
+the motive power of heat through the use of
+elastic fluids; but in whatever way we look at it,
+we should not lose sight of the following principles:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>(1) The temperature of the fluid should be made
+as high as possible, in order to obtain a great fall
+of caloric, and consequently a large production of
+motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) For the same reason the cooling should be
+carried as far as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) It should be so arranged that the passage
+of the elastic fluid from the highest to the lowest
+temperature should be due to increase of volume;
+that is, it should be so arranged that the cooling of
+the gas should occur spontaneously as the effect of
+rarefaction. The limits of the temperature to
+which it is possible to bring the fluid primarily,
+are simply the limits of the temperature obtainable
+by combustion; they are very high.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The limits of cooling are found in the temperature
+of the coldest body of which we can easily and
+freely make use; this body is usually the water of
+the locality.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>As to the third condition, it involves difficulties
+in the realization of the motive power of heat
+when the attempt is made to take advantage of
+great differences of temperature, to utilize great
+falls of heat. In short, it is necessary then that
+the gas, by reason of its rarefaction, should pass
+from a very high temperature to a very low one,
+which requires a great change of volume and of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>density, which requires also that the gas be first
+taken under a very heavy pressure, or that it
+acquire by its dilatation an enormous volume—conditions
+both difficult to fulfil. The first necessitates
+the employment of very strong vessels to
+contain the gas at a very high temperature and
+under very heavy pressure. The second necessitates
+the use of vessels of large dimensions. These
+are, in a word, the principal obstacles which prevent
+the utilization in steam-engines of a great
+part of the motive power of the heat. We are
+obliged to limit ourselves to the use of a slight fall
+of caloric, while the combustion of the coal furnishes
+the means of procuring a very great one.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is seldom that in steam-engines the elastic
+fluid is produced under a higher pressure than six
+atmospheres—a pressure corresponding to about
+160° Centigrade, and it is seldom that condensation
+takes place at a temperature much under 40°.
+The fall of caloric from 160° to 40° is 120°, while
+by combustion we can procure a fall of 1000° to
+2000°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In order to comprehend this more clearly, let us
+recall what we have termed the fall of caloric.
+This is the passage of the heat from one body, <i>A</i>,
+having an elevated temperature, to another, <i>B</i>,
+where it is lower. We say that the fall of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>caloric is 100° or 1000° when the difference of
+temperature between the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> is 100°
+or 1000°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In a steam-engine which works under a pressure
+of six atmospheres the temperature of the boiler is
+160°. This is the body <i>A</i>. It is kept, by contact
+with the furnace, at the constant temperature of
+160°, and continually furnishes the heat necessary
+for the formation of steam. The condenser is the
+body <i>B</i>. By means of a current of cold water it
+is kept at a nearly constant temperature of 40°. It
+absorbs continually the caloric brought from the
+body <i>A</i> by the steam. The difference of temperature
+between these two bodies is 160° − 40°, or 120°.
+Hence we say that the fall of caloric is here 120°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Coal being capable of producing, by its combustion,
+a temperature higher than 1000°, and the
+cold water, which is generally used in our climate,
+being at about 10°, we can easily procure a fall of
+caloric of 1000°, and of this only 120° are utilized
+by steam-engines. Even these 120° are not wholly
+utilized. There is always considerable loss due
+to useless re-establishments of equilibrium in the
+caloric.</p>
+
+<div class='figright id005'>
+<img src='images/i_115.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p>Fig. 5.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is easy to see the advantages possessed by
+high-pressure machines over those of lower pressure.
+<i>This superiority lies essentially in the power
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>of utilizing a greater fall of caloric.</i> The steam
+produced under a higher pressure is found also
+at a higher temperature, and as, further, the
+temperature of condensation remains always about
+the same, it is evident that the fall of caloric is
+more considerable. But to obtain from high-pressure
+engines really advantageous results, it is
+necessary that the fall of caloric should be most
+profitably utilized. It is not enough that the steam
+be produced at a high temperature: it is also
+necessary that by the expansion of its volume
+its temperature should become sufficiently low. A
+good steam-engine, therefore, should not only employ
+steam under heavy pressure, <i>but under successive
+and very variable pressures, differing
+greatly from one another, and progressively
+decreasing</i>.<a id='r31'></a><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In order to understand in some sort
+<i><span lang="fr">à posteriori</span></i> the advantages of high-pressure
+engines, let us suppose steam
+to be formed under atmospheric
+pressure and introduced into the cylindrical
+vessel <i>abcd</i> (Fig. 5), under the
+piston <i>cd</i>, which at first touches the
+bottom <i>ab</i>. The steam, after having
+moved the piston from <i>ab</i> to <i>cd</i>, will continue
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>finally to produce its results in a manner with
+which we will not concern ourselves.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose that the piston having moved to <i>cd</i>
+is forced downward to <i>ef</i>, without the steam being
+allowed to escape, or any portion of its caloric to be
+lost. It will be driven back into the space <i>abef</i>, and
+will increase at the same time in density, elastic
+force, and temperature. If the steam, instead of
+being produced under atmospheric pressure, had
+been produced just when it was being forced back
+into <i>abef</i>, and so that after its introduction into the
+cylinder it had made the piston move from <i>ab</i> to
+<i>ef</i>, and had moved it simply by its extension of
+volume, from <i>ef</i> to <i>cd</i>, the motive power produced
+would have been more considerable than in the first
+case. In fact, the movement of the piston, while
+equal in extent, would have taken place under the
+action of a greater pressure, though variable,
+and though progressively decreasing.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The steam, however, would have required for its
+formation exactly the same quantity of caloric, only
+the caloric would have been employed at a higher
+temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is considerations of this nature which have led
+to the making of double-cylinder engines—engines
+invented by Mr. Hornblower, improved by Mr.
+Woolf, and which, as regards economy of the combustible,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>are considered the best. They consist of
+a small cylinder, which at each pulsation is filled
+more or less (often entirely) with steam, and of a
+second cylinder having usually a capacity quadruple
+that of the first, and which receives no steam except
+that which has already operated in the first
+cylinder. Thus the steam when it ceases to act
+has at least quadrupled in volume. From the
+second cylinder it is carried directly into the condenser,
+but it is conceivable that it might be carried
+into a third cylinder quadruple the second, and in
+which its volume would have become sixteen times
+the original volume. The principal obstacle to the
+use of a third cylinder of this sort is the capacity
+which it would be necessary to give it, and the large
+dimensions which the openings for the passage of
+the steam must have. We will say no more on this
+subject, as we do not propose here to enter into the
+details of construction of steam-engines. These
+details call for a work devoted specially to them,
+and which does not yet exist, at least in France.<a id='r32'></a><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>If the expansion of the steam is mainly limited
+by the dimensions of the vessels in which the dilatation
+must take place, the degree of condensation
+at which it is possible to use it at first is limited
+only by the resistance of the vessels in which it is
+produced, that is, of the boilers.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In this respect we have by no means attained
+the best possible results. The arrangement of the
+boilers generally in use is entirely faulty, although
+the tension of the steam rarely exceeds from four
+to six atmospheres. They often burst and cause
+severe accidents. It will undoubtedly be possible
+to avoid such accidents, and meantime to raise the
+steam to much greater pressures than is usually
+done.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Besides the high-pressure double-cylinder engines
+of which we have spoken, there are also high-pressure
+engines of one cylinder. The greater part
+of these latter have been constructed by two ingenious
+English engineers, Messrs. Trevithick and
+Vivian. They employ the steam under a very high
+pressure, sometimes eight to ten atmospheres, but
+they have no condenser. The steam, after it has
+been introduced into the cylinder, undergoes
+therein a certain increase of volume, but preserves
+always a pressure higher than atmospheric. When
+it has fulfilled its office it is thrown out into the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>atmosphere. It is evident that this mode of working
+is fully equivalent, in respect to the motive
+power produced, to condensing the steam at 100°,
+and that a portion of the useful effect is lost. But
+the engines working thus dispense with condenser
+and air-pump. They are less costly than the
+others, less complicated, occupy less space, and can
+be used in places where there is not sufficient water
+for condensation. In such places they are of inestimable
+advantage, since no others could take
+their place. These engines are principally employed
+in England to move coal-wagons on railroads
+laid either in the interior of mines or outside
+of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have, further, only a few remarks to make
+upon the use of permanent gases and other vapors
+than that of water in the development of the motive
+power of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Various attempts have been made to produce
+motive power by the action of heat on atmospheric
+air. This gas presents, as compared with vapor of
+water, both advantages and disadvantages, which
+we will proceed to examine.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) It presents, as compared with vapor of water,
+a notable advantage in that, having for equal volume
+a much less capacity for heat, it would cool
+more rapidly by an equal increase of volume.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>(This fact is proved by what has already been
+stated.) Now we have seen how important it is to
+produce by change of volume the greatest possible
+changes of temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) Vapors of water can be formed only through
+the intervention of a boiler, while atmospheric air
+could be heated directly by combustion carried on
+within its own mass. Considerable loss could thus
+be prevented, not only in the quantity of heat, but
+also in its temperature. This advantage belongs
+exclusively to atmospheric air. Other gases do
+not possess it. They would be even more difficult
+to heat than vapor of water.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) In order to give to air great increase of
+volume, and by that expansion to produce a great
+change of temperature, it must first be taken under
+a sufficiently high pressure; then it must be compressed
+with a pump or by some other means before
+heating it. This operation would require a
+special apparatus, an apparatus not found in steam-engines.
+In the latter, water is in a liquid state
+when injected into the boiler, and to introduce it
+requires but a small pump.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The condensing of the vapor by contact with
+the refrigerant body is much more prompt and
+much easier than is the cooling of air. There
+might, of course, be the expedient of throwing the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>latter out into the atmosphere, and there would be
+also the advantage of avoiding the use of a refrigerant,
+which is not always available, but it would be
+requisite that the increase of the volume of the air
+should not reduce its pressure below that of the
+atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(5) One of the gravest inconveniences of steam
+is that it cannot be used at high temperatures without
+necessitating the use of vessels of extraordinary
+strength. It is not so with air for which there exists
+no necessary relation between the elastic force
+and the temperature. Air, then, would seem more
+suitable than steam to realize the motive power of
+falls of caloric from high temperatures. Perhaps
+in low temperatures steam may be more convenient.
+We might conceive even the possibility of
+making the same heat act successively upon air and
+vapor of water. It would be only necessary that
+the air should have, after its use, an elevated temperature,
+and instead of throwing it out immediately
+into the atmosphere, to make it envelop a
+steam-boiler, as if it issued directly from a
+furnace.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The use of atmospheric air for the development
+of the motive power of heat presents in practice
+very great, but perhaps not insurmountable, difficulties.
+If we should succeed in overcoming them,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>it would doubtless offer a notable advantage over
+vapor of water.<a id='r33'></a><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>As to the other permanent gases, they should be
+absolutely rejected. They have all the inconveniences
+of atmospheric air, with none of its advantages.
+The same can be said of other vapors than
+that of water, as compared with the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we could find an abundant liquid body which
+would vaporize at a higher temperature than water,
+of which the vapor would have, for the same volume,
+a less specific heat, which would not attack
+the metals employed in the construction of machines,
+it would undoubtedly merit the preference.
+But nature provides no such body.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The use of the vapor of alcohol has been proposed.
+Machines have even been constructed for the
+purpose of using it, by avoiding the mixture of its
+vapor with the water of condensation, that is, by
+applying the cold body externally instead of introducing
+it into the machine. It has been thought
+that a remarkable advantage might be secured by
+using the vapor of alcohol in that it possesses a
+stronger tension than the vapor of water at the
+same temperature. We can see in this only a fresh
+obstacle to be overcome. The principal defect of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>the vapor of water is its excessive tension at an
+elevated temperature; now this defect exists still
+more strongly in the vapor of alcohol. As to the
+relative advantage in a greater production of motive
+power,—an advantage attributed to it,—we
+know by the principles above demonstrated that it
+is imaginary.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is thus upon the use of atmospheric air and
+vapor of water that subsequent attempts to perfect
+heat-engines should be based. It is to utilize by
+means of these agents the greatest possible falls of
+caloric that all efforts should be directed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Finally, we will show how far we are from having
+realized, by any means at present known, all the
+motive power of combustibles.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>One kilogram of carbon burnt in the calorimeter
+furnishes a quantity of heat capable of raising one
+degree Centigrade about 7000 kilograms of water,
+that is, it furnishes 7000 units of heat according to
+the definition of these units given on page <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The greatest fall of caloric attainable is measured
+by the difference between the temperature produced
+by combustion and that of the refrigerant
+bodies. It is difficult to perceive any other limits
+to the temperature of combustion than those in
+which the combination between oxygen and the
+combustible may take place. Let us assume, however,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>that 1000° may be this limit, and we shall
+certainly be below the truth. As to the temperature
+of the refrigerant, let us suppose it 0°. We
+estimated approximately (page <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>) the quantity of
+motive power that 1000 units of heat develop between
+100° and 99°. We found it to be 1.112 units
+of power, each equal to 1 metre of water raised to
+a height of 1 metre.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the motive power were proportional to the
+fall of caloric, if it were the same for each thermometric
+degree, nothing would be easier than to
+estimate it from 1000° to 0°. Its value would be</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1.112 × 1000 = 1112.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>But as this law is only approximate, and as possibly
+it deviates much from the truth at high temperatures,
+we can only make a very rough estimate.
+We will suppose the number 1112 reduced one half,
+that is, to 560.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Since a kilogram of carbon produces 7000 units
+of heat, and since the number 560 is relatively
+1000 units, it must be multiplied by 7, which gives</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>7 × 560 = 3920.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This is the motive power of 1 kilogram of carbon.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In order to compare this theoretical result with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>that of experiment, let us ascertain how much motive
+power a kilogram of carbon actually develops
+in the best-known steam-engines.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The engines which, up to this time, have shown
+the best results are the large double-cylinder engines
+used in the drainage of the tin and copper
+mines of Cornwall. The best results that have
+been obtained with them are as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>65 millions of lbs. of water have been raised one
+English foot by the bushel of coal burned (the
+bushel weighing 88 lbs.). This is equivalent to
+raising, by a kilogram of coal, 195 cubic metres of
+water to a height of 1 metre, producing thereby
+195 units of motive power per kilogram of coal
+burned.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>195 units are only the twentieth of 3920, the
+theoretical maximum; consequently ¹⁄₂₀ only of the
+motive power of the combustible has been utilized.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We have, nevertheless, selected our example from
+among the best steam-engines known.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Most engines are greatly inferior to these. The
+old engine of Chaillot, for example, raised twenty
+cubic metres of water thirty-three metres, for
+thirty kilograms of coal consumed, which amounts
+to twenty-two units of motive power per kilogram,—a
+result nine times less than that given above,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>and one hundred and eighty times less than the
+theoretical maximum.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We should not expect ever to utilize in practice
+all the motive power of combustibles. The attempts
+made to attain this result would be far more
+hurtful than useful if they caused other important
+considerations to be neglected. The economy of
+the combustible is only one of the conditions to be
+fulfilled in heat-engines. In many cases it is only
+secondary. It should often give precedence to
+safety, to strength, to the durability of the engine,
+to the small space which it must occupy, to small
+cost of installation, etc. To know how to appreciate
+in each case, at their true value, the considerations
+of convenience and economy which may present
+themselves; to know how to discern the more important
+of those which are only accessories; to balance
+them properly against each other, in order to
+attain the best results by the simplest means: such
+should be the leading characteristics of the man
+called to direct, to co-ordinate among themselves the
+labors of his comrades, to make them co-operate
+towards one useful end, of whatsoever sort it may
+be.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_127.jpg' alt='Yrs Sincerely Kelvin' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic007'>
+<p>(<i>To face p. <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</i>)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>IV.<a id='r34'></a><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a><br> <span class='c011'>CARNOT’S THEORY OF THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT.<a id='r35'></a><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a></span><br> <span class='c017'>WITH NUMERICAL RESULTS DEDUCED FROM REGNAULT’S EXPERIMENTS ON STEAM.<a id='r36'></a><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By Sir William Thomson</span> [<span class='sc'>Lord Kelvin</span>].</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>1. The presence of heat may be recognized in
+every natural object; and there is scarcely an
+operation in nature which is not more or less
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>affected by its all-pervading influence. An evolution
+and subsequent absorption of heat generally
+give rise to a variety of effects; among which may
+be enumerated, chemical combinations or decompositions;
+the fusion of solid substances; the
+vaporization of solids or liquids; alterations in the
+dimensions of bodies, or in the statical pressure
+by which their dimensions may be modified; mechanical
+resistance overcome; electrical currents
+generated. In many of the actual phenomena of
+nature several or all of these effects are produced
+together; and their complication will, if we
+attempt to trace the agency of heat in producing
+any individual effect, give rise to much perplexity.
+It will, therefore, be desirable, in laying the
+foundation of a physical theory of any of the
+effects of heat, to discover or to imagine phenomena
+free from all such complication, and depending
+on a definite thermal agency; in which
+the relation between the cause and effect, traced
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>through the medium of certain simple operations,
+may be clearly appreciated. Thus it is that
+Carnot, in accordance with the strictest principles
+of philosophy, enters upon the investigation of the
+theory of the motive power of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>2. The sole effect to be contemplated in investigating
+the motive power of heat is <i>resistance
+overcome</i>, or, as it is frequently called, “<i>work performed</i>,”
+or “<i>mechanical effect</i>.” The questions to
+be resolved by a complete theory of the subject are
+the following:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) What is the precise nature of the thermal
+agency by means of which <i>mechanical effect</i> is to
+be produced, without effects of any other kind?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) How may the amount of this thermal
+agency necessary for performing a given quantity
+of work be estimated?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>3. In the following paper I shall commence by
+giving a short abstract of the reasoning by which
+Carnot is led to an answer to the first of these
+questions; I shall then explain the investigation
+by which, in accordance with his theory, the experimental
+elements necessary for answering the
+second question are indicated; and, in conclusion,
+I shall state the <i>data</i> supplied by Regnault’s recent
+observations on steam, and apply them to obtain,
+as approximately as the present state of experimental
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>science enables us to do, a complete solution
+of the question.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I. On the nature of Thermal agency, considered
+as a motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>4. There are [at present known] two, and only
+two, distinct ways in which mechanical effect can
+be obtained from heat. One of these is by means
+of the alterations of volume, which bodies may experience
+through the action of heat; the other is
+through the medium of electric agency. Seebeck’s
+discovery of thermo-electric currents enables us at
+present to conceive of an electro-magnetic engine
+supplied from a thermal origin, being used as a
+motive power; but this discovery was not made
+until 1821, and the subject of thermo-electricity
+can only have been generally known in a few isolated
+facts, with reference to the electrical effects
+of heat upon certain crystals, at the time when
+Carnot wrote. He makes no allusion to it, but
+confines himself to the method for rendering
+thermal agency available as a source of mechanical
+effect, by means of the expansions and contractions
+of bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>5. A body expanding or contracting under the
+action of force may, in general, either produce
+mechanical effect by overcoming resistance, or receive
+mechanical effect by yielding to the action
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>of force. The amount of mechanical effect thus
+developed will depend not only on the calorific
+agency concerned, but also on the alteration in the
+physical condition of the body. Hence, after allowing
+the volume and temperature of the body to
+change, we must restore it to its original temperature
+and volume; and then we may estimate the
+aggregate amount of mechanical effect developed
+as due solely to the thermal origin.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>6. Now the ordinarily-received, and almost universally-acknowledged,
+principles with reference
+to “quantities of caloric” and “latent heat” lead
+us to conceive that, at the end of a cycle of operations,
+when a body is left in precisely its primitive
+physical condition, if it has absorbed any heat during
+one part of the operations, it must have given
+out again exactly the same amount during the remainder
+of the cycle. The truth of this principle
+is considered as axiomatic by Carnot, who admits
+it as the foundation of his theory; and expresses
+himself in the following terms regarding it, in a
+note on one of the passages of his treatise:<a id='r37'></a><a href='#f37' class='c012'><sup>[37]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“In our demonstrations we tacitly assume that
+after a body has experienced a certain number of
+transformations, if it be brought identically to its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>primitive physical state as to density, temperature,
+and molecular constitution, it must contain the
+same quantity of heat as that which it initially possessed;
+or, in other words, we suppose that the
+quantities of heat lost by the body under one set
+of operations are precisely compensated by those
+which are absorbed in the others. This fact has
+never been doubted; it has at first been admitted
+without reflection, and afterwards verified, in many
+cases, by calorimetrical experiments. To deny it
+would be to overturn the whole theory of heat, in
+which it is the fundamental principle. It must be
+admitted, however, that the chief foundations on
+which the theory of heat rests, would require a
+most attentive examination. Several experimental
+facts appear nearly inexplicable in the actual state
+of this theory.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>7. Since the time when Carnot thus expressed
+himself, the necessity of a most careful examination
+of the entire experimental basis of the theory
+of heat has become more and more urgent. Especially
+all those assumptions depending on the
+idea that heat is a <i>substance</i>, invariable in quantity;
+not convertible into any other element, and
+incapable of being <i>generated</i> by any physical
+agency; in fact the acknowledged principles of
+latent heat,—would require to be tested by a most
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>searching investigation before they ought to be
+admitted, as they usually have been, by almost
+every one who has been engaged on the subject,
+whether in combining the results of experimental
+research, or in general theoretical investigations.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>8. The extremely important discoveries recently
+made by Mr. Joule of Manchester, that heat is
+evolved in every part of a closed electric conductor,
+moving in the neighborhood of a magnet,<a id='r38'></a><a href='#f38' class='c012'><sup>[38]</sup></a> and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>that heat is <i>generated</i> by the friction of fluids in
+motion, seem to overturn the opinion commonly
+held that heat cannot be <i>generated</i>, but only produced
+from a source, where it has previously existed
+either in a sensible or in a latent condition.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the present state of science, however, no operation
+is known by which heat can be absorbed into
+a body without either elevating its temperature or
+becoming latent, and producing some alteration in
+its physical condition; and the fundamental axiom
+adopted by Carnot may be considered as still the
+most probable basis for an investigation of the motive
+power of heat; although this, and with it
+every other branch of the theory of heat, may
+ultimately require to be reconstructed upon another
+foundation, when our experimental data are more
+complete. On this understanding, and to avoid a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>repetition of doubts, I shall refer to Carnot’s fundamental
+principle, in all that follows, as if its truth
+were thoroughly established.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>9. We are now led to the conclusion that the
+origin of motive power, developed by the alternate
+expansions and contractions of a body, must be
+found in the agency of heat entering the body and
+leaving it; since there cannot, at the end of a complete
+cycle, when the body is restored to its primitive
+physical condition, have been any absolute absorption
+of heat, and consequently no conversion
+of heat, or caloric, into mechanical effect; and it
+remains for us to trace the precise nature of the
+circumstances under which heat must enter the
+body, and afterwards leave it, so that mechanical
+effect may be produced. As an example, we may
+consider that machine for obtaining motive power
+from heat with which we are most familiar—the
+steam-engine.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>10. Here, we observe, that heat enters the machine
+from the furnace, through the sides of the
+boiler, and that heat is continually abstracted by
+the water employed for keeping the condenser cool.
+According to Carnot’s fundamental principle, the
+quantity of heat thus discharged, during a complete
+revolution (or double stroke) of the engine, must be
+precisely equal to that which enters the water of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>the boiler;<a id='r39'></a><a href='#f39' class='c012'><sup>[39]</sup></a> provided the total mass of water and
+steam be invariable, and be restored to its primitive
+physical condition (which will be the case rigorously,
+if the condenser be kept cool by the external application
+of cold water instead of by injection, as is
+more usual in practice), and if the condensed
+water be restored to the boiler at the end of each
+complete revolution. Thus we perceive that a certain
+quantity of heat is <i>let down</i> from a hot body,
+the metal of the boiler, to another body at a lower
+temperature, the metal of the condenser; and that
+there results from this transference of heat a certain
+development of mechanical effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>11. If we examine any other case in which
+mechanical effect is obtained from a thermal origin,
+by means of the alternate expansions and contractions
+of any substance whatever, instead of the
+water of a steam-engine, we find that a similar
+transference of heat is effected, and we may therefore
+answer the first question proposed, in the following
+manner:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The thermal agency by which mechanical effect
+may be obtained is the transference of heat from
+one body to another at a lower temperature.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>11. On the measurement of Thermal Agency,
+considered with reference to its equivalent of
+mechanical effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>12. A <i>perfect</i> thermodynamic engine of any
+kind is a machine by means of which the greatest
+possible amount of mechanical effect can be obtained
+from a given thermal agency; and, therefore, if in
+any manner we can construct or imagine a perfect
+engine which may be applied for the transference
+of a given quantity of heat from a body at any
+given temperature to another body at a lower given
+temperature, and if we can evaluate the mechanical
+effect thus obtained, we shall be able to answer
+the question at present under consideration, and
+so to complete the theory of the motive power
+of heat. But whatever kind of engine we may
+consider with this view, it will be necessary for us
+to prove that it is a perfect engine; since the
+transference of the heat from one body to the other
+may be wholly, or partially, effected by conduction
+through a solid,<a id='r40'></a><a href='#f40' class='c012'><sup>[40]</sup></a> without the development of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>mechanical effect; and, consequently, engines may
+be constructed in which the whole or any portion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>of the thermal agency is wasted. Hence it is of
+primary importance to discover the criterion of a
+perfect engine. This has been done by Carnot, who
+proves the following proposition:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>13. <i>A perfect thermodynamic engine is such
+that, whatever amount of mechanical effect it can
+derive from a certain thermal agency, if an equal
+amount be spent in working it backwards, an equal
+reverse thermal effect will be produced.</i><a id='r41'></a><a href='#f41' class='c012'><sup>[41]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>14. This proposition will be made clearer by the
+applications of it which are given later (§ 29), in
+the cases of the air-engine and the steam-engine,
+than it could be by any general explanation; and it
+will also appear, from the nature of the operations
+described in those cases, and the principles of
+Carnot’s reasoning, that a perfect engine may be
+constructed with any substance of an indestructible
+texture as the alternately expanding and contracting
+medium. Thus we might conceive thermodynamic
+engines founded upon the expansions and
+contractions of a perfectly elastic solid, or of a
+liquid; or upon the alterations of volume experienced
+by substances in passing from the liquid to
+the solid state,<a id='r42'></a><a href='#f42' class='c012'><sup>[42]</sup></a> each of which being perfect, would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>produce the same amount of mechanical effect from
+a given thermal agency; but there are two cases
+which Carnot has selected as most worthy of minute
+attention, because of their peculiar appropriateness
+for illustrating the general principles of his theory,
+no less than on account of their very great practical
+importance: the steam-engine, in which the
+substance employed as the transferring medium is
+water, alternately in the liquid state and in the
+state of vapor; and the air-engine, in which the
+transference is effected by means of the alternate
+expansions and contractions of a medium always
+in the gaseous state. The details of an actually
+practicable engine of either kind are not contemplated
+by Carnot in his general theoretical reasonings,
+but he confines himself to the ideal construction,
+in the simplest possible way in each case,
+of an engine in which the economy is perfect. He
+thus determines the degree of perfectibility which
+cannot be surpassed; and by describing a conceivable
+method of attaining to this perfection by an
+air-engine or a steam-engine, he points out the
+proper objects to be kept in view in the practical
+construction and working of such machines. I now
+proceed to give an outline of these investigations.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>Carnot’s Theory of the Steam-Engine.</span></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c019'>15. Let <i>CDF<sub>2</sub>E<sub>2</sub></i> be a cylinder, of which the
+curved surface is perfectly impermeable to heat,
+with a piston also impermeable to heat, fitted in it;
+while the fixed bottom <i>CD</i>, itself with no capacity
+for heat, is possessed of perfect conducting power.
+Let <i>K</i> be an impermeable stand, such that when
+the cylinder is placed upon it the contents below
+the piston can neither gain nor lose heat. Let <i>A</i>
+and <i>B</i> be two bodies permanently retained at constant
+temperatures, <i>S°</i> and <i>T°</i>, respectively, of which
+the former is higher than the latter. Let the cylinder,
+placed on the impermeable stand, <i>K</i>, be partially
+filled with water, at the temperature <i>S</i>, of the
+body <i>A</i>, and (there being no air below it) let the
+piston be placed in a position <i>EF</i>, near the surface of
+the water. The pressure of the vapor above the
+water will tend to push up the piston, and must
+be resisted by a force applied to the piston,<a id='r43'></a><a href='#f43' class='c012'><sup>[43]</sup></a> till
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>the commencement of the operations, which are
+conducted in the following manner:</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_142.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The cylinder being placed on the body <i>A</i>,
+so that the water and vapor may be retained at the
+temperature <i>S</i>, <i>let the piston rise any convenient
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>height EE<sub>1</sub>, to a position E<sub>1</sub>F<sub>1</sub>, performing work
+by the pressure of the vapor below it during its
+ascent</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[During this operation a certain quantity, <i>H</i>, of heat,
+the amount of latent heat in the fresh vapor which is
+formed, is abstracted from the body <i>A</i>.]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The cylinder being removed, and placed on
+the impermeable stand <i>K, let the piston rise gradually,
+till, when it reaches a position E<sub>2</sub>F<sub>2</sub>, the
+temperature of the water and vapor is T, the same
+as that of the body B</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[During this operation the fresh vapor continually
+formed requires heat to become latent; and, therefore, as
+the contents of the cylinder are protected from any accession
+of heat, their temperature sinks.]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) The cylinder being removed from <i>K</i>, and
+placed on <i>B, let the piston be pushed down, till,
+when it reaches the position E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub>, the quantity of
+heat evolved and abstracted by B amounts to that
+which, during the first operation, was taken from A</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>[Note of Nov. 5, 1881. The specification of this
+operation, with a view to the return to the primitive
+condition, intended as the conclusion to the
+four operations, is the only item in which Carnot’s
+temporary and provisional assumption of the materiality
+of heat has effect. To exclude this hypothesis,
+Prof. James Thomson has suggested the following
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>corrected specification for the third operation:
+<i>Let the piston be pushed down, till it reaches
+a position E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub>, determined so as to fulfil the condition,
+that at the end of the fourth operation the
+primitive temperature S shall be reached</i>:<a id='r44'></a><a href='#f44' class='c012'><sup>[44]</sup></a>]</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[During this operation the temperature of the contents
+of the cylinder is retained constantly at <i>T°</i>, and all the
+latent heat of the vapor which is condensed into water at
+the same temperature is given out to <i>B</i>.]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The cylinder being removed from <i>B</i>, and
+placed on the impermeable stand, <i>let the piston be
+pushed down from E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub> to its original position EF</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[During this operation, the impermeable stand preventing
+any loss of heat, the temperature of the water and air
+must rise continually, till (since the quantity of heat
+evolved during the third operation was precisely equal to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>that which was previously absorbed) at the conclusion it
+reaches its primitive value, <i>S</i>, in virtue of Carnot’s fundamental
+axiom.]</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[Note of Nov. 5, 1881. With Prof. James Thomson’s
+correction of operation (3), the words in virtue of “Carnot’s
+Fundamental Axiom” must be replaced by “the
+condition fulfilled by operation (3),” in the description of
+the results of operation (4).]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>16. At the conclusion of this cycle of operations<a id='r45'></a><a href='#f45' class='c012'><sup>[45]</sup></a>
+the total thermal agency has been the <i>letting down</i>
+of <i>H</i> units of heat from the body <i>A</i>, at the temperature
+<i>S</i>, to <i>B</i>, at the lower temperature <i>T</i>; and
+the aggregate of the mechanical effect has been a
+certain amount of <i>work produced</i>, since during the
+ascent of the piston in the first and second operations,
+the temperature of the water and vapor, and
+therefore the pressure of the vapor on the piston,
+was on the whole higher than during the descent,
+in the third and fourth operations. It remains for
+us actually to evaluate this aggregate amount of
+work performed; and for this purpose the following
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>graphical method of representing the mechanical
+effect developed in the several operations, taken
+from Mons. Clapeyron’s paper, is extremely convenient.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>17. Let <i>OX</i> and <i>OY</i> be two lines at right angles
+to one another. Along <i>OX</i> measure off distances
+<i>ON<sub>1</sub></i>, <i>N<sub>1</sub>N<sub>2</sub></i>, <i>N<sub>2</sub>N<sub>3</sub></i>, <i>N<sub>3</sub>O</i>, respectively proportional
+to the spaces described by the piston during the
+four successive operations described above; and,
+with reference to these four operations respectively,
+let the following constructions be made:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) Along <i>OY</i> measure a length <i>OA</i>, to represent
+the pressure of the saturated vapor at the
+temperature <i>S</i>; and draw <i>AA<sub>1</sub></i> parallel to <i>OX</i>, and
+let it meet an ordinate through <i>N<sub>1</sub></i>, in <i>A<sub>1</sub></i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) Draw a curve <i>A<sub>1</sub>PA</i> such that, if <i>ON</i> represent,
+at any instant during the second operation,
+the distance of the piston from its primitive position,
+<i>NP</i> shall represent the pressure of the vapor
+at the same instant.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) Through <i>A</i><sub>2</sub> draw <i>A<sub>2</sub>A<sub>3</sub></i> parallel to <i>OX</i>, and
+let it meet an ordinate through <i>N<sub>3</sub></i> in <i>A<sub>3</sub></i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) Draw the curve <i>A<sub>3</sub>A</i> such that the abscissa
+and ordinate of any point in it may represent respectively
+the distances of the piston from its
+primitive position, and the pressure of the vapor,
+at each instant during the fourth operation. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>last point of this curve must, according to Carnot’s
+fundamental principle, coincide with <i>A</i>, since the
+piston is, at the end of the cycle of operations,
+again in its primitive position, and the pressure of
+the vapor is the same as it was at the beginning.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id008'>
+<img src='images/i_147.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>18. Let us now suppose that the lengths, <i>ON<sub>1</sub></i>,
+<i>N<sub>1</sub>N<sub>2</sub></i>, <i>N<sub>2</sub>N<sub>3</sub></i>, and <i>N<sub>3</sub>O</i>, <i>represent numerically</i> the
+volumes of the spaces moved through by the piston
+during the successive operations. It follows that
+the mechanical effect obtained during the first
+operation will be <i>numerically represented</i> by the
+area <i>AA<sub>1</sub>N<sub>1</sub>O</i>; that is, the number of superficial
+units in this area will be equal to the number of
+“foot-pounds” of work performed by the ascending
+piston during the first operation. The work
+performed by the piston during the second operation
+will be similarly represented by the area
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span><i>A<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>N<sub>2</sub>N<sub>1</sub></i>. Again, during the third operation a
+certain amount of work is spent on the piston,
+which will be represented by the area <i>A<sub>2</sub>A<sub>3</sub>N<sub>3</sub>N<sub>2</sub></i>;
+and lastly, during the fourth operation, work is
+spent in pushing the piston to an amount represented
+by the area <i>A<sub>3</sub>AON<sub>3</sub></i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>19. Hence the mechanical effect (represented
+by the area <i>OAA<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>N<sub>2</sub></i>) which was obtained during
+the first and second operations, exceeds the
+work (represented by <i>N<sub>2</sub>A<sub>2</sub>A<sub>3</sub>AO</i>) spent during
+the third and fourth, by an amount represented
+by the area of the quadrilateral figure <i>AA<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>A<sub>3</sub></i>;
+and, consequently, it only remains for us to
+evaluate this area, that we may determine the
+total mechanical effect gained in a complete
+cycle of operations. Now, from experimental data,
+at present nearly complete, as will be explained
+below, we may determine the length of the line
+<i>AA<sub>1</sub></i> for the given temperature <i>S</i>, and a given absorption
+<i>H</i>, of heat, during the first operation;
+and the length of <i>A<sub>2</sub>A<sub>3</sub></i> for the given lower temperature
+<i>T</i>, and the evolution of the same quantity
+of heat during the fourth operation: and the
+curves <i>A<sub>1</sub>PA<sub>2</sub></i>, <i>A<sub>3</sub>P′A</i> may be drawn as graphical
+representations of actual observations. The figure
+being thus constructed, its area may be measured,
+and we are, therefore, in possession of a graphical
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>method of determining the amount of mechanical
+effect to be obtained from any given thermal
+agency. As, however, it is merely the area of the
+figure which it is required to determine, it will not
+be necessary to be able to describe each of the
+curves <i>A<sub>1</sub>PA<sub>2</sub></i>, <i>A<sub>3</sub>P′A</i>, but it will be sufficient to
+know the difference of the abscissas corresponding
+to any equal ordinates in the two; and the following
+analytical method of completing the problem
+is the most convenient for leading to the actual
+numerical results.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>20. Draw any line <i>PP′</i> parallel to <i>OX</i>, meeting
+the curvilinear sides of the quadrilateral in <i>P</i> and
+<i>P′</i>. Let ξ denote the length of this line, and <i>p</i>
+its distance from <i>OX</i>. The area of the figure,
+according to the integral calculus, will be denoted
+by the expression</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id009'>
+<img src='images/i_149.svg' alt='alt="Integral from p3 to p1 of ξdp"' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>where <i>p<sub>1</sub></i> and <i>p<sub>3</sub></i> (the limits of integration indicated
+according to Fourier’s notation) denote the lines
+<i>OA</i> and <i>N<sub>3</sub>A<sub>3</sub></i>, which represent respectively the
+pressures during the first and third operations.
+Now, by referring to the construction described
+above, we see that ξ is the difference of the volumes
+below the piston at corresponding instants of the
+second and fourth operations, or instants at which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>the saturated steam and the water in the cylinder
+have the same pressure <i>p</i>, and consequently the
+same temperature, which we may denote by <i>t</i>.
+Again, throughout the second operation the entire
+contents of the cylinder possess a greater amount
+of heat by <i>H</i> units than during the fourth; and,
+therefore, at any instant of the second operation
+there is as much more steam as contains <i>H</i> units
+of latent heat than at the corresponding instant
+of the fourth operation. Hence if <i>k</i> denote the
+latent heat in a unit of saturated steam at the
+temperature <i>t</i>, the volume of the steam at the two
+corresponding instants must differ by <span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>k</i></span></span>. Now, if
+σ denote the ratio of the density of the steam to
+that of the water, the volume <span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>k</i></span></span> of steam will be
+formed from the volume σ <span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>k</i></span></span> of water; and consequently
+we have, for the difference of volumes of
+the entire contents at the corresponding instants,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>ξ =</td>
+ <td class='c022'>(1 - σ)<span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>k</i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hence the expression for the area of the quadrilateral
+figure becomes</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id010'>
+<img src='images/i_150.svg' alt='Mathematical expression showing a definite integral from p3 to p1 of (1 − σ) multiplied by H over k with respect to p.' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>Now, σ, <i>k</i>, and <i>p</i>, being quantities which depend
+upon the temperature, may be considered as functions
+of <i>t</i>; and it will be convenient to modify the
+integral so as to make <i>t</i> the independent variable.
+The limits will be from <i>t</i> = <i>T</i> to <i>t</i> = <i>S</i>, and, if we
+denote by <i>M</i> the value of the integral, we have the
+expression</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id011'>
+<img src='images/i_151.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>for the total amount of mechanical effect gained
+by the operations described above.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>21. If the interval of temperatures be extremely
+small,—so small that (1 − σ)<span class='fraction'><i>dp</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>dt</i>/<i>k</i></span></span> will not sensibly vary
+for values of <i>t</i> between <i>T</i> and <i>S</i>,—the preceding
+expression becomes simply</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id011'>
+<img src='images/i_151b.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This might, of course, have been obtained at once
+by supposing the breadth of the quadrilateral
+figure <i>AA<sub>1</sub>A<sub>2</sub>A</i> to be extremely small compared
+with its length, and then taking for its area, as an
+approximate value, the product of the breadth into
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>the line <i>AA<sub>1</sub></i>, or the line <i>A<sub>3</sub>A<sub>2</sub></i>, or any line of intermediate
+magnitude.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The expression (2) is rigorously correct for any
+interval <i>S</i> − <i>T</i>, if the mean value of (1 − σ)((<i>dp</i>/<i>dt</i>)/<i>k</i>) for
+that interval be employed as the coefficient of
+<i>H</i>(<i>S</i> − <i>T</i>).</p>
+
+<h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>Carnot’s Theory of the Air-engine.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c019'>22. In the ideal air-engine imagined by Carnot
+four operations performed upon a mass of air or
+gas enclosed in a closed vessel of variable volume
+constitute a complete cycle, at the end of which
+the medium is left in its primitive physical condition;
+the construction being the same as that which
+was described above for the steam-engine, a body
+<i>A</i>, permanently retained at the temperature <i>S</i>, and
+<i>B</i> at the temperature <i>T</i>; an impermeable stand <i>K</i>;
+and a cylinder and piston, which in this case contains
+a mass of air at the temperature <i>S</i>, instead
+of water in the liquid state, at the beginning and
+end of a cycle of operations. The four successive
+operations are conducted in the following manner:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The cylinder is laid on the body <i>A</i>, so that
+the air in it is kept at the temperature <i>S</i>; and the
+piston is allowed to rise, performing work.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>(2) The cylinder is placed on the impermeable
+stand <i>K</i>, so that its contents can neither gain nor
+lose heat, and the piston is allowed to rise farther,
+still performing work, till the temperature of the
+air sinks to <i>T</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) The cylinder is placed on <i>B</i>, so that the air
+is retained at the temperature <i>T</i>, and the piston is
+pushed down till the air gives out to the body <i>B</i>
+as much heat as it had taken in from <i>A</i>, during the
+first operation.</p>
+
+<p class='c020'>[Note of Nov. 5, 1881. To eliminate the assumption of
+the materiality of heat, make Professor James Thomson’s
+correction here also; as above in § 15; or take Maxwell’s
+rearrangement of the cycle described in the foot-note to
+§ 15, p. 144.]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The cylinder is placed on <i>K</i>, so that no more
+heat can be taken in or given out, and the piston
+is pushed down to its primitive position.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>23. <i>At the end of the fourth operation the temperature
+must have reached its primitive value S,
+in virtue of</i> <span class='sc'>Carnot’s</span> <i>axiom</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>24. Here, again, as in the former case, we observe
+that work is performed by the piston during the
+first two operations; and during the third and
+fourth work is spent upon it, but to a less amount,
+since the pressure is on the whole less during the
+third and fourth operations than during the first
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>and second, on account of the temperature being
+lower. Thus, at the end of a complete cycle of
+operations, mechanical effect has been obtained;
+and the thermal agency from which it is drawn is
+the taking of a certain quantity of heat from <i>A</i>,
+and <i>letting it down</i>, through the medium of the
+engine, to the body <i>B</i> at a lower temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>25. To estimate the actual amount of effect thus
+obtained, it will be convenient to consider the alterations
+of volume of the mass of air in the several
+operations as extremely small. We may afterwards
+pass by the integral calculus, or, practically, by
+summation to determine the mechanical effect
+whatever be the amplitudes of the different motions
+of the piston.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>26. Let <i>dq</i> be the quantity of heat absorbed
+during the first operation, which is evolved again
+during the third; and let <i>dv</i> be the corresponding
+augmentation of volume which takes place while
+the temperature remains constant, as it does during
+the first operation.<a id='r46'></a><a href='#f46' class='c012'><sup>[46]</sup></a> The diminution of volume
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>in the third operation must be also equal to <i>dv</i>, or
+only differ from it by an infinitely small quantity of
+the second order. During the second operation we
+may suppose the volume to be increased by an infinitely
+small quantity φ; which will occasion a
+diminution of pressure and a diminution of temperature,
+denoted respectively by ω and τ. During
+the fourth operation there will be a diminution of
+volume and an increase of pressure and temperature,
+which can only differ, by infinitely small quantities
+of the second order, from the changes in the other
+direction, which took place in the second operation,
+and they also may, therefore, be denoted by φ, ω,
+and τ, respectively. The alteration of pressure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>during the first and third operations may at once
+be determined by means of Mariotte’s law, since
+in them the temperature remains constant. Thus,
+if, at the commencement of the cycle, the volume
+and pressure be <i>v</i> and <i>p</i>, they will have become
+<i>v</i> + <i>dv</i> and <i>pv</i>/(<i>v</i> + <i>dv</i>) at the end of the first
+operation. Hence the diminution of pressure
+during the first operation is <i>p</i> − <i>pv</i>/(<i>v</i> + <i>dv</i>) or
+<i>pdv</i>/(<i>v</i> + <i>dv</i>) and therefore, if we neglect infinitely
+small quantities of the second order, we have <i>pdv</i>/<i>v</i>
+for the diminution of pressure during the first
+operation; which to the same degree of approximation,
+will be equal to the increase of pressure during
+the third. If <i>t</i> + τ and <i>t</i> be taken to denote the
+superior and inferior limits of temperature, we
+shall thus have for the volume, the temperature,
+and the pressure at the commencements of the
+four successive operations, and at the end of the
+cycle, the following values respectively:</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>(1)</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>v</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>t</i> + τ,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p</i>;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>(2)</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>v</i> + <i>dv</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>t</i> + τ,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p</i>(1 − <span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>);</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>(3)</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>v</i> + <i>dv</i> + φ,</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>t</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p</i>(1 − <span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>) − ω;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>(4)</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>v</i> + φ,</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>t</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p</i> − ω;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>(5)</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>v</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c023'><i>t</i> + τ,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p</i>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Taking the mean of the pressures at the beginning
+and end of each operation, we find</p>
+
+ <dl class='dl_1'>
+ <dt>(1)</dt>
+ <dd><i>p</i>(1 − ½<span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>),
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(2)</dt>
+ <dd><i>p</i>(1 − <span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>) − ½ω,
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(3)</dt>
+ <dd><i>p</i>(1 − ½<span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>)) − ω,
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(4)</dt>
+ <dd><i>p</i> − ½ω,
+ </dd>
+ </dl>
+
+<p class='c013'>which, as we are neglecting infinitely small quantities
+of the second order, will be the expressions
+for the mean pressures during the four successive
+operations. Now, the mechanical effect gained or
+spent, during any of the operations, will be found
+by multiplying the mean pressure by the increase
+or diminution of volume which takes place; and
+we thus find</p>
+
+ <dl class='dl_1'>
+ <dt>(1)</dt>
+ <dd><i>p</i>(1 − ½<span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>)<i>dv</i>,
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(2)</dt>
+ <dd>{<i>p</i>(1 − <span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>) − ½ω}φ,
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(3)</dt>
+ <dd>{<i>p</i>(1 − ½<span class='fraction'><span
+ class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>) − ω}<i>dv</i>,
+ </dd>
+ <dt>(4)</dt>
+ <dd>(<i>p</i> − ½ω)φ.
+ </dd>
+ </dl>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>for the amounts gained during the first and second,
+and spent during the third and fourth operations;
+and hence, by addition and subtraction, we find</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>ω<i>dv</i> − <i>p</i>φ<span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>,</td>
+ <td class='c022'>or (<i>v</i>ω − <i>p</i>φ)<span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>,</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>for the aggregate amount of mechanical effect
+gained during the cycle of operations. It only remains
+for us to express this result in terms of <i>dq</i>
+and τ, on which the given thermal agency depends.
+For this purpose we remark that φ and ω are alterations
+of volume and pressure which take place
+along with a change of temperature τ, and hence,
+by the laws of compressibility and expansion, we
+may establish a relation<a id='r47'></a><a href='#f47' class='c012'><sup>[47]</sup></a> between them in the following
+manner:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let <i>p<sub>0</sub></i> be the pressure of the mass of air when
+reduced to the temperature zero, and confined
+in a volume <i>v<sub>0</sub></i>; then, whatever be <i>v<sub>0</sub></i>, the product
+<i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i> will, by the law of compressibility, remain constant;
+and, if the temperature be elevated from 0
+to <i>t</i> + τ, and the gas be allowed to expand freely
+without any change of pressure, its volume will be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>increased in the ratio of 1 to 1 + <i>E</i>(<i>t</i> + τ), where
+<i>E</i> is very nearly equal to .00366 (the Centigrade
+scale of the air-thermometer being referred to),
+whatever be the gas employed, according to the
+researches of Regnault and of Magnus on the expansion
+of gases by heat. If, now, the volume be
+altered arbitrarily with the temperature continually
+at <i>t</i> + τ, the product of the pressure and volume
+will remain constant; and therefore we have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>pv</i> = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>{1 + <i>E</i>(<i>t</i> + τ)}.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Similarly,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>(<i>p</i> − ω)(<i>v</i> + φ) = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>{1 + <i>Et</i>}.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hence, by subtraction, we have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>v</i>ω − <i>p</i>φ + ωφ = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub>E</i>τ,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>or, neglecting the product ωφ,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>v</i>ω − <i>p</i>φ = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub>E</i>τ.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hence the preceding expression for mechanical
+effect, gained in the cycle of operations, becomes</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>. <i>E</i>τ . <i>dv</i>/<i>v</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Or, as we may otherwise express it,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><span class='fraction'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i><br><span class='vincula'><i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i></span></span>.</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>dq</i>. τ.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hence, if we denote by <i>M</i> the mechanical effect due
+to <i>H</i> units of heat descending through the same
+interval τ, which might be obtained by repeating
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>the cycle of operations described above, <span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>dq</i></span></span> times,
+we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>M</i> = <span class='fraction'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i><br><span class='vincula'><i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i></span></span>.</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>H</i>τ. (3)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>27. If the <i>amplitudes</i> of the operations had been
+finite, so as to give rise to an absorption of <i>H</i> units
+of heat during the first operation, and a lowering
+of temperature from <i>S</i> to <i>T</i> during the second, the
+amount of work obtained would have been found
+to be expressed by means of a double definite integral
+thus:<a id='r48'></a><a href='#f48' class='c012'><sup>[48]</sup></a></p>
+
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td class="brt"><img src="images/i_160a.svg" alt="" class="ig001"></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>or</td>
+<td class="brt"></td>
+<td>.      (4)</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td></td>
+<td class="brt"><img src="images/i_160b.svg" alt="" class="ig001"></td>
+<td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>this second form being sometimes more convenient.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>28. The preceding investigations, being founded
+on the approximate laws of compressibility and expansion
+(known as the law of Mariotte and Boyle,
+and the law of Dalton and Gay-Lussac), would require
+some slight modifications to adapt them to
+cases in which the gaseous medium employed is such
+as to present sensible deviations from those laws.
+Regnault’s very accurate experiments show that
+the deviations are insensible, or very nearly so, for
+the ordinary gases at ordinary pressures; although
+they may be considerable for a medium, such as
+sulphurous acid, or carbonic acid under high pressure,
+which approaches the physical condition of a
+vapor at saturation; and therefore, in general, and
+especially in practical applications to real air-engines,
+it will be unnecessary to make any modification in
+the expressions. In cases where it may be necessary,
+there is no difficulty in making the modifications,
+when the requisite data are supplied by experiment.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>29.<a id='r49'></a><a href='#f49' class='c012'><sup>[49]</sup></a> Either the steam-engine or the air-engine,
+according to the arrangements described above,
+gives all the mechanical effect that can possibly be
+obtained from the thermal agency employed. For
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>it is clear that in either case the operations may
+be performed in the reverse order, with every
+thermal and mechanical effect reversed. Thus, in
+the steam-engine, we may commence by placing
+the cylinder on the impermeable stand, allow the
+piston to rise, performing work, to the position
+<i>E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub></i>; we may then place it on the body <i>B</i>, and
+allow it to rise, performing work, till it reaches
+<i>E<sub>2</sub>F<sub>2</sub></i> after that the cylinder may be placed again
+on the impermeable stand, and the piston may be
+pushed down to <i>E<sub>1</sub>F<sub>1</sub></i>; and, lastly, the cylinder
+being removed to the body <i>A</i>, the piston may be
+pushed down to its primitive position. In this
+inverse cycle of operations a certain amount of
+work has been spent, precisely equal, as we readily
+see, to the amount of mechanical effect gained in
+the direct cycle described above; and heat has been
+abstracted from <i>B</i>, and deposited in the body <i>A</i>,
+at a higher temperature, to an amount precisely
+equal to that which in the direct style was <i>let
+down</i> from <i>A</i> to <i>B</i>. Hence it is impossible to
+have an engine which will derive more mechanical
+effect from the same thermal agency than is obtained
+by the arrangement described above; since,
+if there could be such an engine, it might be employed
+to perform, as a part of its whole work, the
+inverse cycle of operations, upon an engine of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>kind we have considered, and thus to continually
+restore the heat from <i>B</i> to <i>A</i>, which has descended
+from <i>A</i> to <i>B</i> for working itself; so that we should
+have a complex engine, giving a residual amount
+of mechanical effect without any thermal agency,
+or alteration of materials, which is an impossibility
+in nature. The same reasoning is applicable to
+the air-engine; and we conclude, generally, that
+any two engines, constructed on the principles laid
+down above, whether steam-engines with different
+liquids, an air-engine and a steam-engine, or two
+air-engines with different gases, must derive the
+same amount of mechanical effect from the same
+thermal agency.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>30. Hence, by comparing the amounts of mechanical
+effect obtained by the steam-engine and
+the air-engine from the letting down of the <i>H</i>
+units of heat from <i>A</i> at the temperature (<i>t</i> + τ) to
+<i>B</i> at <i>t</i>, according to the expressions (2) and (3),
+we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>M</i> = (1 − σ)<span class='fraction'><i>dp</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>kdt</i></span></span>.</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>H</i>τ = <span class='fraction'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i><br><span class='vincula'><i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i></span></span>. <i>H</i>τ.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (5)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we denote the coefficient of <i>Η</i>τ in these equal
+expressions by μ, which maybe called “Carnot’s
+coefficient,” we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>μ = (1 − σ)<span class='fraction'><i>dp</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>kdt</i></span></span></td>
+ <td class='c022'>= <span class='fraction'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i><br><span class='vincula'><i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i></span></span>,&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (6)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>and we deduce the following very remarkable conclusions:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) For the saturated vapors of all different
+liquids, at the same temperature, the value of
+(1 − σ)(<i>dp</i>/<i>kdt</i>) must be the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) For any different gaseous masses, at the
+same temperature, the value of <i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>/(<i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i>) must be
+the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) The values of these expressions for saturated
+vapors and for gases, at the same temperature,
+must be the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>31. No conclusion can be drawn <i>a priori</i> regarding
+the values of this coefficient μ for different
+temperatures, which can only be determined, or
+compared, by experiment. The results of a great
+variety of experiments, in different branches of
+physical science (Pneumatics and Acoustics), cited
+by Carnot and by Clapeyron, indicate that the
+values of μ for low temperatures exceed the values
+for higher temperatures; a result amply verified
+by the continuous series of experiments performed
+by Regnault on the saturated vapor of water for all
+temperatures from 0° to 230°, which, as we shall
+see later, give values for μ gradually diminishing
+from the inferior limit to the superior limit of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>temperature. When, by observation, μ has been
+determined as a function of the temperature, the
+amount of mechanical effect, <i>M</i>, deducible from
+<i>H</i> units of heat descending from a body at the
+temperature <i>S</i> to a body at the temperature <i>T</i>,
+may be calculated from the expression</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id011'>
+<img src='images/i_165.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>which is, in fact, what either of the equations (1)
+for the steam-engine, or (4) for the air-engine, becomes,
+when the notation μ, for Carnot’s multiplier,
+is introduced.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The values of this integral may be practically
+obtained, in the most convenient manner, by first
+determining, from observation, the mean values of
+μ for the successive degrees of the thermometric
+scale, and then adding the values for all the degrees
+within the limits of the extreme temperatures
+<i>S</i> and <i>T</i>.<a id='r50'></a><a href='#f50' class='c012'><sup>[50]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>32. The complete theoretical investigation of
+the motive power of heat is thus reduced to the
+experimental determination of the coefficient μ;
+and may be considered as perfect, when, by any
+series of experimental researches whatever, we can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>find a value of μ for every temperature within
+practical limits. The special character of the experimental
+researches, whether with reference to
+gases or with reference to vapors, necessary and
+sufficient for this object, is defined and restricted
+in the most precise manner, by the expressions (6)
+for μ, given above.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>33. The object of Regnault’s great work, referred
+to in the title of this paper, is the experimental determination
+of the various physical elements of the
+steam-engine; and when it is complete, it will
+furnish all the <i>data</i> necessary for the calculation
+of μ. The valuable researches already published
+in a first part of that work make known the
+latent heat of a given weight, and the pressure, of
+saturated steam for all temperatures between 0°
+and 230° Cent. of the air-thermometer. Besides
+these data, however, the density of saturated vapor
+must be known, in order that <i>k</i>, the latent
+heat of a unit of volume, may be calculated from
+Regnault’s determination of the latent heat of a
+given weight.<a id='r51'></a><a href='#f51' class='c012'><sup>[51]</sup></a> Between the limits of 0° and 100°,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>it is probable, from various experiments which
+have been made, that the density of vapor follows
+very closely the simple laws which are so accurately
+verified by the ordinary gases;<a id='r52'></a><a href='#f52' class='c012'><sup>[52]</sup></a> and thus it may
+be calculated from Regnault’s table giving the
+pressure at any temperature within those limits.
+Nothing as yet is known with accuracy as to the
+density of saturated steam between 100 and 230°,
+and we must be contented at present to estimate it
+by calculation from Regnault’s table of pressures;
+although, when accurate experimental researches
+on the subject shall have been made, considerable
+deviations from the laws of Boyle and Dalton, on
+which this calculation is founded, may be discovered.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>34. Such are the experimental data on which
+the mean values of μ for the successive degrees of
+the air-thermometer, from 0 to 230°, at present
+laid before the Royal Society, is founded. The
+unit of length adopted is the English foot; the
+unit of weight, the pound; the unit of work, a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>“foot-pound;” and the unit of heat that quantity
+which, when added to a pound of water at 0°, will
+produce an elevation of 1° in temperature. The
+mean value of μ for any degree is found to a sufficient
+degree of approximation by taking, in place
+of σ, <i>dp</i>/<i>dt</i> and <i>k</i>; in the expression</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>(1 − σ).</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>dp</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>kdt</i></span></span>;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>the mean values of those elements; or, what is
+equivalent to the corresponding accuracy of approximation,
+by taking, in place of σ and <i>k</i> respectively,
+the mean of the values of those elements for
+the limits of temperature, and in place of <i>dp</i>/<i>dt</i>,
+the difference of the values of <i>p</i>, at the same limits.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>35. In Regnault’s work (at the end of the eighth
+memoir), a table of the pressures of saturated steam
+for the successive temperatures 0°, 1°, 2°,&#160;... 230°,
+expressed in millimetres of mercury, is given. On
+account of the units adopted in this paper, these
+pressures must be estimated in pounds on the
+square foot, which we may do by multiplying each
+number of millimetres by 2.7896, the weight in
+pounds of a sheet of mercury, one millimetre thick,
+and a square foot in area.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>36. The value of <i>k</i>, the latent heat of a cubic
+foot, for any temperature <i>t</i>, is found from λ, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>latent heat of a pound of saturated steam, by the
+equation</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>k</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>p</i><br><span class='vincula'>760</span></span>. <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>1 + .00366 × 100</span><br>1 + .00366 × <i>t</i></span>. × .036869<a id='r53'></a><a href='#f53' class='c012'><sup>[53]</sup></a> . λ,</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>where <i>p</i> denotes the pressure in millimetres, and λ
+the latent heat of a pound of saturated steam; the
+values of λ being calculated by the empirical formula<a id='r54'></a><a href='#f54' class='c012'><sup>[54]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>λ = (606.5 + 0.305<i>t</i>) − (<i>t</i> + .00002<i>t</i><sup>2</sup> + 0.0000003<i>t</i><sup>3</sup>),</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>given by Regnault as representing, between the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>extreme limits of his observations, the latent heat
+of a unit weight of saturated steam.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>Explanation of Table I.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c019'>37. The mean values of μ for the first, for the
+eleventh, for the twenty-first, and so on, up to the
+231st<a id='r55'></a><a href='#f55' class='c012'><sup>[55]</sup></a> degree of the air-thermometer, have been
+calculated in the manner explained in the preceding
+paragraphs. These, and interpolated results,
+which must agree with what would have been obtained,
+by direct calculation from Regnault’s data,
+to three significant places of figures (and even for
+the temperatures between 0° and 100°, the experimental
+data do not justify us in relying on any of
+the results to a greater degree of accuracy), are
+exhibited in Table I.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>To find the amount of mechanical effect due to a
+unit of heat, descending from a body at a temperature
+S to a body at T, if these numbers be integers,
+we have merely to add the values of μ in
+Table I. corresponding to the successive numbers.</i></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>T</i> + 1, <i>T</i> + 2,&#160;... <i>S</i> − 2, <i>S</i> − 1.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
+ <h3 class='c018'><span class='sc'>Explanation of Table II.</span></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c019'>38. The calculation of the mechanical effect, in
+any case, which might always be effected in the
+manner described in § 37 (with the proper modification
+for fractions of degrees, when necessary), is
+much simplified by the use of Table II., where the
+first number of Table I., the sum of the first and
+second, the sum of the first three, the sum of the
+first four, and so on, are successively exhibited.
+The sums thus tabulated are the values of the integrals</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id006'>
+<img src='images/i_171a.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>and, if we denote
+<img src='images/i_171b.svg' alt='' class="height2">
+by the letter <i>M</i>, Table II.
+may be regarded as a table of the value of <i>M</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>To find the amount of mechanical effect due to a
+unit of heat descending from a body at a temperature
+S to a body at T, if these numbers be integers,
+we have merely to subtract the value of M, for the
+number T, from the value for the number S, given
+in Table II.</i></p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span></td></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'>TABLE I.<a id='r56'></a><a href='#f56' class='c012'><sup>[56]</sup></a></th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Mean Values of μ for the successive Degrees of the Air-Thermometer from 0° to 230°.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'>°</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c014'>μ</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>1</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.960</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>2</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.946</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>3</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.932</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>4</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.918</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>5</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.905</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>6</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.892</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>7</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.878</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>8</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.865</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>9</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.852</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>10</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.839</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>11</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.826</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>12</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.812</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>13</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.799</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>14</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.786</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>15</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.773</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>16</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.760</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>17</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.747</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>18</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.735</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>19</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.722</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>20</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.709</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>21</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.697</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>22</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.684</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>23</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.672</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>24</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.659</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>25</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.646</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>26</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.634</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>27</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.621</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>28</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.609</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>29</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.596</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>30</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.584</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>31</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.572</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>32</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.559</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>33</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.547</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>34</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.535</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>35</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.522</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>36</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.510</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>37</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.498</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>38</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.486</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>39</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.474</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>40</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.462</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>41</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.450</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>42</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.438</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>43</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.426</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>44</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.414</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>45</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.402</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>46</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.390</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>47</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.378</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>48</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.366</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>49</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.355</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>50</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.343</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>51</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.331</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>52</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.319</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>53</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.308</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>54</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.296</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>55</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.285</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>56</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.273</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>57</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.262</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>58</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.250</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>59</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.239</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>60</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.227</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>61</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.216</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>62</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.205</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>63</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.194</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>64</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.183</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>65</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.172</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>66</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.161</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>67</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.150</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>68</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.140</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>69</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.129</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>70</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.119</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>71</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.109</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>72</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.098</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>73</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.088</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>74</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.078</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>75</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.067</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>76</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.057</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>77</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.047</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>78</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.037</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>79</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.028</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>80</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.018</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>81</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>4.009</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>82</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.999</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>83</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.990</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>84</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.980</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>85</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.971</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>86</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.961</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>87</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.952</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>88</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.943</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>89</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.934</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>90</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.925</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>91</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.916</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>92</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.907</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>93</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.898</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>94</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.889</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>95</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.880</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>96</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.871</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>97</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.863</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>98</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.854</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>99</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.845</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>100</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.837</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>101</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.829</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>102</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.820</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>103</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.812</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>104</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.804</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>105</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.796</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>106</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.788</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>107</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.780</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>108</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.772</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>109</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.764</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>110</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.757</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>111</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.749</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>112</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.741</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>113</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.734</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>114</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.726</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>115</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.719</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>116</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.712</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>117</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.704</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>118</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.697</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>119</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.689</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>120</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.682</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>121</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.675</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>122</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.668</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>123</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.661</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>124</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.654</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>125</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.647</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>126</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.640</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>127</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.633</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>128</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.627</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>129</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.620</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>130</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.614</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>131</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.607</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>132</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.601</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>133</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.594</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>134</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.586</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>135</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.579</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>136</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.573</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>137</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.567</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>138</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.561</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>139</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.555</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>140</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.549</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>141</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.543</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>142</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.537</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>143</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.531</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>144</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.525</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>145</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.519</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>146</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.513</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>147</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.507</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>148</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.501</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>149</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.495</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>150</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.490</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>151</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.484</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>152</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.479</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>153</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.473</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>154</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.468</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>155</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.462</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>156</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.457</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>157</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.451</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>158</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.446</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>159</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.440</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>160</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.435</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>161</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.430</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>162</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.424</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>163</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.419</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>164</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.414</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>165</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.409</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>166</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.404</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>167</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.399</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>168</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.394</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>169</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.389</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>170</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.384</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>171</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.380</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>172</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.375</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>173</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.370</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>174</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.365</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>175</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.361</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>176</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.356</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>177</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.351</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>178</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.346</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>179</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.342</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>180</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.337</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>181</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.332</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>182</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.328</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>183</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.323</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>184</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.318</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>185</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.314</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>186</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.309</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>187</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.304</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>188</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.300</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>189</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.295</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>190</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.291</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>191</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.287</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>192</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.282</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>193</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.278</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>194</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.274</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>195</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.269</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>196</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.265</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>197</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.261</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>198</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.257</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>199</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.253</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>200</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.249</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>201</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.245</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>202</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.241</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>203</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.237</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>204</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.233</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>205</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.229</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>206</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.225</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>207</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.221</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>208</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.217</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>209</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.213</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>210</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>211</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.206</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>212</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.202</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>213</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.198</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>214</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.195</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>215</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.191</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>216</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.188</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>217</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.184</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>218</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.180</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>219</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.177</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>220</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.173</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>221</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.169</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>222</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.165</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>223</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.162</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>224</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.158</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>225</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.155</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>226</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.151</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>227</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.148</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>228</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.144</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>229</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.141</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>230</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>3.137</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c024'>231</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c024'>3.134</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span></td></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'>TABLE II.</th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Mechanical Effect in Foot-Pounds due to a Thermic Unit Centigrade, passing from a Body, at any Temperature less than 230° to a Body at 0°.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt brt c014'>Superior Limit of Temperature.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'>Mechanical Effect.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='brt c014'>°</th>
+ <th class='c014'>Ft.-Pounds.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c024'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>1</td>
+ <td class='c024'>4.960</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>2</td>
+ <td class='c024'>9.906</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>3</td>
+ <td class='c024'>14.838</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>4</td>
+ <td class='c024'>19.756</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>5</td>
+ <td class='c024'>24.661</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>6</td>
+ <td class='c024'>29.553</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>7</td>
+ <td class='c024'>34.431</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>8</td>
+ <td class='c024'>39.296</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>9</td>
+ <td class='c024'>44.148</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>10</td>
+ <td class='c024'>48.987</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>11</td>
+ <td class='c024'>53.813</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>12</td>
+ <td class='c024'>58.625</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>13</td>
+ <td class='c024'>63.424</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>14</td>
+ <td class='c024'>68.210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>15</td>
+ <td class='c024'>72.983</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>16</td>
+ <td class='c024'>77.743</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>17</td>
+ <td class='c024'>82.490</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>18</td>
+ <td class='c024'>87.225</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>19</td>
+ <td class='c024'>91.947</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>20</td>
+ <td class='c024'>96.656</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>21</td>
+ <td class='c024'>101.353</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>22</td>
+ <td class='c024'>106.037</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>23</td>
+ <td class='c024'>110.709</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>24</td>
+ <td class='c024'>115.368</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>25</td>
+ <td class='c024'>120.014</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>26</td>
+ <td class='c024'>124.648</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>27</td>
+ <td class='c024'>129.269</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>28</td>
+ <td class='c024'>133.878</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>29</td>
+ <td class='c024'>138.474</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>30</td>
+ <td class='c024'>143.058</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>31</td>
+ <td class='c024'>147.630</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>32</td>
+ <td class='c024'>152.189</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>33</td>
+ <td class='c024'>156.736</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>34</td>
+ <td class='c024'>161.271</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>35</td>
+ <td class='c024'>165.793</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>36</td>
+ <td class='c024'>170.303</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>37</td>
+ <td class='c024'>174.801</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>38</td>
+ <td class='c024'>179.287</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>39</td>
+ <td class='c024'>183.761</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>40</td>
+ <td class='c024'>188.223</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>41</td>
+ <td class='c024'>192.673</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>42</td>
+ <td class='c024'>197.111</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>43</td>
+ <td class='c024'>201.537</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>44</td>
+ <td class='c024'>205.951</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>45</td>
+ <td class='c024'>210.353</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>46</td>
+ <td class='c024'>214.743</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>47</td>
+ <td class='c024'>219.121</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>48</td>
+ <td class='c024'>223.487</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>49</td>
+ <td class='c024'>227.842</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>50</td>
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+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>112</td>
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+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <td class='c024'>824.854</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <td class='c024'>828.052</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <td class='c024'>831.247</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>215</td>
+ <td class='c024'>834.438</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <td class='c024'>837.626</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>217</td>
+ <td class='c024'>840.810</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>218</td>
+ <td class='c024'>843.990</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>219</td>
+ <td class='c024'>847.167</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>220</td>
+ <td class='c024'>850.340</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>221</td>
+ <td class='c024'>853.509</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>222</td>
+ <td class='c024'>856.674</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>223</td>
+ <td class='c024'>859.836</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>224</td>
+ <td class='c024'>862.994</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>225</td>
+ <td class='c024'>866.149</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>226</td>
+ <td class='c024'>869.300</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>227</td>
+ <td class='c024'>872.448</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>228</td>
+ <td class='c024'>875.592</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>229</td>
+ <td class='c024'>878.733</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='brt c024'>230</td>
+ <td class='c024'>881.870</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt brt c024'>231</td>
+ <td class='bbt c024'>885.004</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>
+ <h4 class='c025'><i>Note on the curves described in Clapeyron’s graphical method of exhibiting Carnot’s Theory of the Steam-Engine.</i></h4>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c019'>39. At any instant when the temperature of the
+water and vapor is <i>t</i>, during the fourth operation
+(see above, § 16, and suppose, for the sake of simplicity,
+that at the beginning of the first and at
+the end of the fourth operation the piston is absolutely
+in contact with the surface of the water),
+the latent heat of the vapor must be precisely equal
+to the amount of heat that would be necessary to
+raise the temperature of the whole mass, if in the
+liquid state, from <i>t</i> to <i>S</i>.<a id='r57'></a><a href='#f57' class='c012'><sup>[57]</sup></a> Hence, if <i>v′</i> denote the
+volume of the vapor, <i>c</i> the mean capacity for heat
+of a pound of water between the temperatures <i>S</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>and <i>t</i>, and <i>W</i> the weight of the entire mass, in
+pounds, we have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>kv′</i> = <i>c</i>(<i>S</i> − <i>t</i>)<i>W</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Again, the circumstances during the second operation
+are such that the mass of liquid and vapor
+possesses <i>H</i> units of heat more than during the
+fourth; and consequently, at the instant of the
+second operation, when the temperature is <i>t</i>, the
+volume <i>v</i> of the vapor will exceed <i>v′</i> by an amount
+of which the latent heat is <i>H</i>, so that we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>v</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>v′</i> + <span class='fraction'><i>H</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>k</i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>40. Now, at any instant, the volume between
+the piston and its primitive position is less than
+the actual volume of vapor by the volume of the
+water evaporated. Hence, if <i>x</i> and <i>x′</i> denote the
+abscissæ of the curve at the instants of the second
+and fourth operations respectively, when the temperature
+is <i>t</i>, we have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>x</i> = <i>v</i> − σ<i>v</i>, <i>x′</i> = <i>v′</i> − σ<i>v′</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>and, therefore, by the preceding equations,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>x</i> = <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>1 − σ</span><br><i>k</i></span>{<i>H</i> + <i>c</i>(<i>S</i> − <i>t</i>)<i>W</i>},</td>
+ <td class='c022'>(<i>a</i>)</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>x′</i> = <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>1 − σ</span><br><i>k</i></span><i>c</i>(<i>S</i> − <i>t</i>)<i>W</i>.</td>
+ <td class='c022'>(<i>b</i>)</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>These equations, along with <i>y</i> = <i>y′</i> = <i>p</i>,</td>
+ <td class='c022'>(<i>c</i>)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>enable us to calculate, from the data supplied by
+Regnault, the abscissa and ordinate for each of the
+curves described above (§ 17) corresponding to any
+assumed temperature <i>t</i>. After the explanations of
+§§ 33, 34, 35, 36, it is only necessary to add that <i>c</i>
+is a quantity of which the value is very nearly
+unity, and would be exactly so were the capacity
+of water for heat the same at every temperature
+as it is between 0° and 1°; and that the value of
+<i>c</i>(<i>S</i> − <i>t</i>), for any assigned values of <i>S</i> and <i>t</i>, is
+found, by subtracting the number corresponding
+to <i>t</i> from the number corresponding to <i>s</i>, in the
+column headed “<i><span lang="fr">Nombre des unités de chaleur
+abandonnées par un kilogramme d’eau en descendant
+de T° à 0°</span></i>,” of the last table (at the end of
+the tenth memoir) of Regnault’s work. By
+giving <i>S</i> the value 230°, and by substituting successively
+220, 210, 200, etc., for <i>t</i>, values for <i>x</i>, <i>y</i>,
+<i>x′</i>, <i>y′</i>, have been found, which are exhibited in the
+table opposite.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='4'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt c014'>Temperatures.</th>
+ <th class='btt blt c014'>Volumes to be described by the piston, to complete the fourth operation.</th>
+ <th class='btt blt c014'>Volumes from the primitive position of the piston to those occupied at instants of the second operation.</th>
+ <th class='btt blt c014'>Pressures of saturated steam, in pounds on the square foot.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='bbt c014'><i>t</i></th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c014'><i>x′</i></th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c014'><i>x</i></th>
+ <th class='bbt blt c014'><i>y</i> = <i>y′</i> = <i>p</i></th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>0°</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1269. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + 5.409.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>12.832</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>10</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>639.6. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + 2.847.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>25.567</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>20</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>337.3. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + 1.571.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>48.514</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>30</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>185.5. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .9062.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>88.007</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>40</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>105.9. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .5442.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>153.167</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>50</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>62.62. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .3392.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>256.595</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>60</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>38.19. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .2188.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>415.070</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>70</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>21.94. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .1456.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>650.240</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>80</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>15.38. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .09962.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>989.318</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>90</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>10.09. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .06994.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1465.80</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>100</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>6.744. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .05026.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>2120.11</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>110</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>4.578. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .03688.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>2999.87</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>120</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>3.141. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .02758.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>4160.10</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>130</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>2.176. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .02098.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>5663.70</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>140</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.519. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .01625.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>7581.15</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>150</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>1.058. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .01271.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>9990.26</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>160</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.7369. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .01010.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>12976.2</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>170</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.5085. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .008116.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>16630.7</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>180</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.3454. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .006592.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>21051.5</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>190</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.2267. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .005406.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>26341.5</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>200</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.1409. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .004472.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>32607.7</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>210</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.0784. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .003729.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>39960.7</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>220</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>0.3310. <i>W</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .003130.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>48512.4</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c024'>230</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c014'>0</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c026'><i>x′</i> + .002643.<i>H</i></td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c014'>58376.6</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Appendix.</i></h4>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>(Read April 30, 1849.)</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>41. In p. <a href='#Page_30'>30</a> some conclusions drawn by Carnot
+from his general reasoning were noticed; according
+to which it appears, that if the value of μ for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>any temperature is known, certain information
+may be derived with reference to the saturated
+vapor of any liquid whatever, and, with reference
+to any gaseous mass, without the necessity of experimenting
+upon the specific medium considered.
+Nothing in the whole range of Natural Philosophy
+is more remarkable than the establishment of general
+laws by such a process of reasoning. We have
+seen, however, that doubt may exist with reference
+to the truth of the axiom on which the entire theory
+is founded, and it therefore becomes more than
+a matter of mere curiosity to put the inferences
+deduced from it to the test of experience. The
+importance of doing so was clearly appreciated by
+Carnot; and, with such data as he had from the
+researches of various experimenters, he tried his
+conclusions. Some very remarkable propositions
+which he derives from his theory coincide with
+Dulong and Petit’s subsequently discovered experimental
+laws with reference to the heat developed
+by the compression of a gas; and the experimental
+verification is therefore in this case (so far as
+its accuracy could be depended upon) decisive.
+In other respects, the data from experiment were
+insufficient, although, so far as they were available
+as tests, they were confirmatory of the theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>42. The recent researches of Regnault add immensely
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>to the experimental data available for this
+object, by giving us the means of determining with
+considerable accuracy the values of μ within a very
+wide range of temperature, and so affording a trustworthy
+standard for the comparison of isolated
+results at different temperatures, derived from observations
+in various branches of physical science.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the first section of this Appendix the theory
+is tested, and shown to be confirmed by the comparison
+of the values of μ found above, with those
+obtained by Carnot and Clapeyron from the observations
+of various experimenters on air, and the
+vapors of different liquids. In the second and
+third sections some striking confirmations of the
+theory arising from observations by Dulong, on
+the specific heat of gases, and from Mr. Joule’s
+experiments on the heat developed by the compression
+of air, are pointed out; and in conclusion,
+the actual methods of obtaining mechanical
+effect from heat are briefly examined with reference
+to their economy.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c025'>I. <i>On the values of μ derived by Carnot and Clapeyron from observations on Air, and on the Vapors of various liquids.</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c019'>43. In Carnot’s work, pp. <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>–82, the mean
+value of μ between 0° and 1° is derived from the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>experiments of Delaroche and Bérard on the specific
+heat of gases, by a process approximately
+equivalent to the calculation of the value of
+<span class='fraction'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i><br><span class='vincula'><i>vdq</i>/<i>dv</i></span></span> for the temperature ½°. There are also, in
+the same work, determinations of the values of μ
+from observations on the vapors of alcohol and
+water; but a table given in M. Clapeyron’s paper,
+of the values of μ derived from the data supplied
+by various experiments with reference to the vapors
+of ether, alcohol, water, and oil of turpentine,
+at the respective boiling-points of these
+liquids, affords us the means of comparison through
+a more extensive range of temperature. In the
+cases of alcohol and water, these results ought of
+course to agree with those of Carnot. There are,
+however, slight discrepancies which must be owing
+to the uncertainty of the experimental data.<a id='r58'></a><a href='#f58' class='c012'><sup>[58]</sup></a> In
+the opposite table, Carnot’s results with reference
+to air, and Clapeyron’s results with reference to
+the four different liquids, are exhibited, and compared
+with the values of μ which have been given
+above (Table I.) for the same temperatures, as derived
+from Regnault’s observations on the vapor
+of water.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='5'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c027'>Names of the Media.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c028'>Temperatures.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c028'>Values of μ.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c028'>Values of μ deduced from Regnault’s Observations.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c028'>Differences.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c027'></th>
+ <th class='blt c028'>°</th>
+ <th class='blt c028'>(Carnot)</th>
+ <th class='blt c029'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='blt c029'>&#160;</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c027'>Air</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>0.5</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>4.377</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>4.960</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>.383</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c027'>Sulphuric Ether</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>(Boil. pt.) 35.5</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>(Clapeyron) 4.478</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>4.510</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>.032</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c027'>Alcohol</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>78.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>3.963</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>4.030</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>.071</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c027'>Water</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>100</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>3.658</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>3.837</td>
+ <td class='blt c029'>.179</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c027'>Essence of Turpentine</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c029'>156.8</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c029'>3.530</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c029'>3.449</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c029'>−.081</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>44. It may be observed that the discrepancies
+between the results founded on the experimental
+data supplied by the different observers with reference
+to water at the boiling-point, are greater
+than those which are presented between the results
+deduced from any of the other liquids, and water
+at the other temperatures; and we may therefore
+feel perfectly confident that the verification is
+complete to the extent of accuracy of the observations.<a id='r59'></a><a href='#f59' class='c012'><sup>[59]</sup></a>
+The considerable discrepancy presented
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>by Carnot’s result deduced from experiments on
+air, is not to be wondered at when we consider the
+very uncertain nature of his data.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>45. The fact of the gradual decrease of μ
+through a very extensive range of temperature,
+being indicated both by Regnault’s continuous
+series of experiments and by the very varied experiment
+on different media, and in different
+branches of Physical Science, must be considered
+as a striking verification of the theory.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c025'>II. <i>On the Heat developed by the Compression of Air.</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c019'>46. Let a mass of air, occupying initially a
+given volume <i>V</i>, under a pressure <i>P</i>, at a temperature
+<i>t</i>, be compressed to a less volume <i>V′</i>,
+and allowed to part with heat until it sinks to its
+primitive temperature <i>t</i>. The quantity of heat
+which is evolved may be determined, according to
+Carnot’s theory, when the particular value of μ,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>corresponding to the temperature <i>t</i>, is known.
+For, by § 30, equation (6), we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>v</i><span class='fraction'><i>dq</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>dv</i></span></span></td>
+ <td class='c022'>= <span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i></span><br>μ</span>,</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>where <i>dq</i> is the quantity of heat absorbed, when
+the volume is allowed to increase from <i>v</i> to <i>v</i> + <i>dv</i>;
+or the quantity evolved by the reverse operation.
+Hence we deduce</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>dq</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i></span><br>μ</span> <span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>. (8)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Now, <span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i></span><br>μ</span> is constant, since the temperature
+remains unchanged; and therefore we may at
+once integrate the second number. By taking it
+between the limits <i>V′</i> and <i>V</i>, we thus find</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>Q</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i></span><br>μ</span> log <span class='fraction'><i>V</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>V′</i></span></span><a id='r60'></a><a href='#f60' class='c012'><sup>[60]</sup></a>, (9)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>where <i>Q</i> denotes the required amount of heat
+evolved by the compression from <i>V</i> to <i>P′</i>. This
+expression may be modified by employing the equations
+<i>PV</i> = <i>P′V′</i> = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>(1 + <i>Et</i>); and we thus
+obtain</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>Q</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>EPV</i><br><span class='vincula'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)</span></span> log <span class='fraction'><i>V</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>V′</i></span></span> = <span class='fraction'><i>EP′V′</i><br><span class='vincula'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)</span></span> log <span class='fraction'><i>V</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>V′</i></span></span>. (10)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>From this result we draw the following conclusion:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>47. <i>Equal volumes of all elastic fluids, taken at
+the same temperature and pressure, when compressed
+to smaller equal volumes, disengage equal
+quantities of heat.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This extremely remarkable theorem of Carnot’s
+was independently laid down as a probable experimental
+law by Dulong, in his “<i><span lang="fr">Recherches sur la
+Chaleur Spécifique des Fluides Élastiques</span></i>,” and it
+therefore affords a most powerful confirmation of
+the theory.<a id='r61'></a><a href='#f61' class='c012'><sup>[61]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>48. In some very remarkable researches made
+by Mr. Joule upon the heat developed by the
+compression of air, the quantity of heat produced
+in different experiments has been ascertained with
+reference to the amount of work spent in the
+operation. To compare the results which he has
+obtained with the indications of theory, let us determine
+the amount of work necessary actually to
+produce the compression considered above.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>49. In the first place, to compress the gas from
+the volume <i>v</i> + <i>dv</i> to <i>v</i>, the work required is <i>pdv</i>,
+or, since</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c030'><i>pv</i> = <i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>(1 + <i>Et</i>),</td>
+ <td class='c031'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c030'><i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>(1 + <i>Et</i>)<span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>dv</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>.</td>
+ <td class='c031'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hence, if we denote by <i>W</i> the total amount of
+work necessary to produce the compression from
+<i>V</i> to <i>V′</i>, we obtain, by integration,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>W</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>p<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i>(1 + <i>Et</i>) log <span class='fraction'><i>V</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>V′</i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Comparing this with the expression above, we find</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><span class='fraction'><i>W</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>Q</i></span></span></td>
+ <td class='c022'>= <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)</span><br><i>E</i></span>.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (11)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>50. Hence we infer that—</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The amount of work necessary to produce
+a unit of heat by the compression of a gas is the
+same for all gases at the same temperature;</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>(2) And that the quantity of heat evolved in
+all circumstances, when the temperature of the
+gas is given, is proportional to the amount of work
+spent in the compression.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>51. The expression for the amount of work necessary
+to produce a unit of heat is</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'>μ<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>1 + <i>Et</i></span><br><i>E</i></span>,</td>
+ <td class='c022'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>and therefore Regnault’s experiments on steam
+are available to enable us to calculate its value for
+any temperature. By finding the values of μ at
+0°, 10°, 20°, etc., from Table I., and by substituting
+successively the values 0, 10, 20, etc., for <i>t</i>,
+the following results have been obtained:</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Table of the Values of</span> <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)</span><br><i>E</i></span>.</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'>Work requisite to produce a unit of Heat by the compression of a Gas.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c014'>Temperature of the Gas.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c014'>Ft.-pounds.</th>
+ <th class='blt c014'>°</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1357.1</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>0</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1368.7</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>10</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1379.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>20</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1388.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>30</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1395.7</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>40</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1401.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>50</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1406.7</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>60</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1412.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>70</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1417.6</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>80</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1424.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>90</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1430.6</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>100</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1438.2</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>110</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1446.4</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>120</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1455.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>130</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1465.3</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>140</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1475.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>150</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1489.2</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>160</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1499.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>170</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1511.3</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>180</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1523.5</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>190</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1536.5</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>200</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1550.2</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>210</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>1564.0</td>
+ <td class='blt c024'>220</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c014'>1577.8</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c024'>230</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Mr. Joule’s experiments were all conducted at
+temperatures from 50° to about 60° Fahr., or from
+10° to 16° Cent.; and consequently, although some
+irregular differences in the results, attributable to
+errors of observation inseparable from experiments
+of such a very difficult nature, are presented,
+no regular dependence on the temperature is observable.
+From three separate series of experiments,
+Mr. Joule deduces the following numbers
+for the work, in foot-pounds, necessary to produce
+a thermic unit Fahrenheit by the compression of
+a gas.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>820, 814, 760.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Multiplying these by 1.8, to get the corresponding
+number for a thermic unit Centigrade, we</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>1476, 1465, and 1368.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>The largest of these numbers is most nearly
+conformable with Mr. Joule’s views of the relation
+between such experimental “equivalents,” and
+others which he obtained in his electro-magnetic
+researches; but the smallest agrees almost perfectly
+with the indications of Carnot’s theory; from
+which, as exhibited in the preceding table, we
+should expect, from the temperature in Mr. Joule’s
+experiments, to find a number between 1369 and
+1379 as the result.<a id='r62'></a><a href='#f62' class='c012'><sup>[62]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>
+ <h5 class='c032'>III. <i>On the Specific Heats of Gases.</i></h5>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>52. The following proposition is proved by
+Carnot as a deduction from his general theorem
+regarding the specific heats of gases.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>The excess of specific heat<a id='r63'></a><a href='#f63' class='c012'><sup>[63]</sup></a> under a constant
+pressure above the specific heat at a constant volume,
+is the same for all gases at the same temperature
+and pressure.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>53. To prove this proposition, and to determine
+an expression for the “excess” mentioned in its
+enunciation, let us suppose a unit of volume of a
+gas to be elevated in temperature by a small
+amount, τ. The quantity of heat required to do
+this will be <i>A</i>τ, if <i>A</i> denote the specific heat at a
+constant volume. Let us next allow the gas to
+expand without going down in temperature, until
+its pressure becomes reduced to its primitive value.
+The expansion which will take place will be <span class='fraction'><i>E</i>τ<br><span class='vincula'>1 + <i>Et</i></span></span>,
+if the temperature be denoted by <i>t</i>; and hence,
+by (8), the quantity of heat that must be supplied,
+to prevent any lowering of temperature, will be</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>Ep<sub>0</sub>v<sub>0</sub></i></span><br>μ</span> . <span class='fraction'><i>E</i>τ<br><span class='vincula'>1 + <i>Et</i></span></span>, or</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>E<sup>2</sup>p</i><br><span class='vincula'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)<sup>2</sup></span></span>τ.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>Hence the total quantity added is equal to</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>Α</i>τ +</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>E<sup>2</sup>p</i><br><span class='vincula'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)<sup>2</sup></span></span>τ.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>But, since <i>B</i> denotes the specific heat under constant
+pressure, the quantity of heat requisite to
+bring the gas into this state, from its primitive
+condition, is equal to <i>Β</i>τ, and hence we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>B</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>A</i> + <span class='fraction'><i>E<sup>2</sup>p</i><br><span class='vincula'>μ(1 + <i>Et</i>)<sup>2</sup></span></span>.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (12)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<h5 class='c025'>IV. <i>Comparison of the Relative Advantages of the Air-engine and Steam-engine.</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c019'>54. In the use of water-wheels for motive power,
+the economy of the engine depends not only upon
+the excellence of its adaptation for actually transmitting
+any given quantity of water through it,
+and producing the equivalent of work, but upon
+turning to account the entire available fall; so, as
+we are taught by Carnot, the object of a thermodynamic
+engine is to economize in the best possible
+way the transference of all the heat evolved, from
+bodies at the temperature of the source, to bodies
+at the lowest temperature at which the heat can be
+discharged. With reference, then, to any engine of
+the kind, there will be two points to be considered:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The extent of the <i>fall</i> utilized.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>(2) The economy of the engine, with the fall
+which it actually uses.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>55. In the first respect, the air-engine, as Carnot
+himself points out, has a vast advantage over the
+steam-engine; since the temperature of the hot
+part of the machine may be made very much
+higher in the air-engine than would be possible in
+the steam-engine, on account of the very high
+pressure produced in the boiler, by elevating the
+temperature of the water which it contains to any
+considerable extent above the atmospheric boiling-point.
+On this account a “perfect air-engine”
+would be a much more valuable instrument than a
+“perfect steam-engine.”<a id='r64'></a><a href='#f64' class='c012'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>Neither steam-engines nor air-engines, however,
+are nearly perfect; and we do not know in which
+of the two kinds of machine the nearest approach
+to perfection may be actually attained. The beautiful
+engine invented by Mr. Stirling of Galston
+may be considered as an excellent beginning for
+the air-engine;<a id='r65'></a><a href='#f65' class='c012'><sup>[65]</sup></a> and it is only necessary to compare
+this with Newcomen’s steam-engine, and consider
+what Watt has effected, to give rise to the
+most sanguine anticipations of improvement.</p>
+
+<h5 class='c025'>V. <i>On the Economy of Actual Steam-engines.</i></h5>
+
+<p class='c019'>56. The steam-engine being universally employed
+at present as the means for deriving motive
+power from heat, it is extremely interesting to
+examine, according to Carnot’s theory, the economy
+actually attained in its use. In the first
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>place we remark, that out of the entire “fall”
+from the temperature of the coals to that of the
+atmosphere it is only part—that from the temperature
+of the boiler to the temperature of the
+condenser—that is made available; while the very
+great fall from the temperature of the burning
+coals to that of the boiler, and the comparatively
+small fall from the temperature of the condenser
+to that of the atmosphere, are entirely lost as
+far as regards the mechanical effect which it is
+desired to obtain. We infer from this, that the
+temperature of the boiler ought to be kept as
+high as, according to the strength, is consistent
+with safety, while that of the condenser ought
+to be kept as nearly down at the atmospheric
+temperature as possible. To take the entire benefit
+of the actual fall, Carnot showed that the
+“principle of expansion” must be pushed to the
+utmost.<a id='r66'></a><a href='#f66' class='c012'><sup>[66]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>57. To obtain some notion of the economy which
+has actually been obtained, we may take the alleged
+performances of the best Cornish engines,
+and some other interesting practical cases, as examples.<a id='r67'></a><a href='#f67' class='c012'><sup>[67]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The engine of <i>the Fowey Consols mine</i> was
+reported, in 1845, to have given 125,089,000 foot-pounds
+of effect, for the consumption of one
+bushel or 94 lbs. of coals. Now the average amount
+evaporated from Cornish boilers, by one pound of
+coal, is 8½ lbs. of steam; and hence for each
+pound of steam evaporated 156,556 foot-pounds of
+work are produced.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The pressure of the saturated steam in the boiler
+may be taken as 3½ atmospheres;<a id='r68'></a><a href='#f68' class='c012'><sup>[68]</sup></a> and, consequently,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>the temperature of the water will be 140°.
+Now (Regnault, end of Mémoire X.) the latent
+heat of a pound of saturated steam at 140° is 508,
+and since, to compensate for each pound of steam
+removed from the boiler in the working of the
+engine, a pound of water, at the temperature of
+the condenser, which may be estimated at 30°, is
+introduced from the hot-well; it follows that 618
+units of heat are introduced to the boiler for each
+pound of water evaporated. But the work produced,
+for each pound of water evaporated, was
+found above to be 156,556 foot-pounds. Hence
+¹⁵⁶⁵⁵⁶⁄₆₁₈, or 253 foot-pounds, is the amount of work
+produced for each unit of heat transmitted through
+the Fowey Consols engine. Now in Table II. we
+find 583.0 as the theoretical effect due to a unit descending
+from 140° to 0°, and 143 as the effect due
+to a unit descending from 30° to 0°. The difference
+of these numbers, or 440,<a id='r69'></a><a href='#f69' class='c012'><sup>[69]</sup></a> is the number of foot-pounds
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>of work that a <i>perfect</i> engine with its boiler
+at 140° and its condenser at 30° would produce for
+each unit of heat transmitted. Hence the Fowey
+Consols engine, during the experiments reported
+on, performed ²⁵³⁄₄₄₀ of its theoretical duty, or 57½
+per cent.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The best duty on record, as performed by an
+engine at work (not for merely experimental purposes),
+is that of Taylor’s engine, at the United
+Mines, which in 1840 worked regularly for several
+months at the rate of 98,000,000 foot-pounds
+for each bushel of coals burned. This is ⁹⁸⁄₁₂₅, or
+.784 of the experimental duty reported in the case
+of the Fowey Consols engine. Hence the best
+useful work on record is at the rate of 198.3 foot-pounds
+for each unit of heat transmitted, and is
+<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>198.3</span><br>440</span> or 45 per cent of the theoretical duty, on
+the supposition that the boiler is at 140° and the
+condenser at 30°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) French engineers contract (in Lille, in 1847,
+for example) to make engines for mill-power which
+will produce 30,000 metre-pounds or 98,427 foot-pounds
+of work for each pound of steam used. If
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>we divide this by 618, we find 159 foot-pounds for
+the work produced by each unit of heat. This is
+36.1 per cent of 440, the theoretical duty.<a id='r70'></a><a href='#f70' class='c012'><sup>[70]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) English engineers have contracted to make
+engines and boilers which will require only 3⅓ lbs.
+of the best coal per horse-power per hour. Hence
+in such engines each pound of coal ought to produce
+565,700 foot-pounds of work, and if 7 lbs. of
+water be evaporated by each pound of coal, there
+would result 83,814 foot-pounds of work for each
+pound of water evaporated. If the pressure in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>boiler be 3½ atmospheres (temperature 140°) the
+amount of work for each unit of heat will be
+found, by dividing this by 618, to be 130.7 foot-pounds,
+which is <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>130.7</span><br>440</span> or 29.7 per cent of the theoretical
+duty.<a id='r71'></a><a href='#f71' class='c012'><sup>[71]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(5) The actual average of work performed by
+good Cornish engines and boilers is 55,000,000
+foot-pounds for each bushel of coal, or less than
+half the experimental performance of the Fowey
+Consols engine, more than half the actual duty
+performed by the United Mines engine in 1840;
+in fact, about 25 per cent of the theoretical duty.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(6) The average performances of a number of
+Lancashire engines and boilers have been recently
+found to be such as to require 12 lbs. of Lancashire
+coal per horse-power per hour (i.e., for performing
+60 × 33,000 foot-pounds), and of a number
+of Glasgow engines such as to require 15 lbs.
+(of a somewhat inferior coal) for the same effect.
+There are, however, more than twenty large engines
+in Glasgow at present<a id='r72'></a><a href='#f72' class='c012'><sup>[72]</sup></a> which work with a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>consumption of only 6½ lbs. of dross, equivalent
+to 5 lbs. of the best Scotch or 4 lbs. of the best
+Welsh coal, per horse-power per hour. The
+economy may be estimated from these data, as in
+the other cases, on the assumption which, with
+reference to these, is the most probable we can
+make, that the evaporation produced by a pound
+of best coal is 7 lbs. of steam.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>58. The following tables afford a synoptic view
+of the performances and theoretical duties in the
+various cases discussed above.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In Table A the numbers in the second column
+are found by dividing the numbers in the first by
+8½ in cases (1), (2), and (5), and by 7 in cases (4),
+(6), and (7), the estimated numbers of pounds of
+steam actually produced in the different boilers by
+the burning of 1 lb. of coal.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The numbers in the third column are found
+from those in the second, by dividing by 618 in
+Table A, and 614 in Table B, which are respectively
+the quantities of heat required to convert a
+pound of water taken from the hot-well at 30°,
+into saturated steam, in the boiler, at 140° or at
+121°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>With reference to the cases (3), (4), (6), (7), the
+hypothesis of Table B is probably in general nearer
+the truth than that of Table A. In (4), (6), and
+(7), especially upon hypothesis B, there is much
+uncertainty as to the amount of evaporation that
+will be actually produced by 1 lb. of fuel. The
+assumption on which the numbers in the second
+column in Table B are calculated, is, that each
+pound of coal will send the same number of units
+of heat into the boiler, whether hypothesis A or
+hypothesis B be followed. Hence, except in the
+case of the French contract, in which the <i>evaporation</i>,
+not the fuel, is specified, the numbers in the
+third column are the same as those in the third
+column of Table A.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='6'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span></td></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'>TABLE A.</th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'><span class='sc'>Various Engines in which the Temperature of the Boiler is 140° C. and that of the Condenser 30° C.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'><i>Theoretical Duty for each Unit of Heat transmitted, 440<a id='r73'></a><a href='#f73' class='c012'><sup>[73]</sup></a> foot-pounds.</i></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Cases.</span></th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each lb. of coal consumed.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each lb. of water evaporated.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each unit of heat transmitted.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Percentage of theoretical duty.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c014'></th>
+ <th class='c016'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c034'>&#160;</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(1)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>Fowey Consols experiment, reported in 1845</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>1,330,734</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>156,556</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>253</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>57.5</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(2)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>Taylor’s engine at the United Mines, working in 1840</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>1,042,553</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>122,653</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>198.4</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>45.1</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(3)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>French engines, according to contract</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>98,427</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>159</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>36.1</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(4)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>English engines, according to contract</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>565,700</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>80,814</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>130.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>29.7</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(5)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>Average actual performance of Cornish engines</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>585,106</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>68,836</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>111.3</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>25.3</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(6)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>Common engines, consuming 12 lbs. of best coal per horse-power per hour</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>165,000</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>23,571</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>38.1</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>8.6</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c014'>(7)</td>
+ <td class='bbt c016'>Improved engines with expansion cylinders, consuming an equivalent to 4 lbs. of best coal per horse-power per hour</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>495,000</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>70,710</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>114.4</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>26</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr><td class='c006' colspan='6'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span></td></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'>TABLE B.</th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'><span class='sc'>Various Engines in which the Temperature of the Boiler is 121° C.<a id='r74'></a><a href='#f74' class='c012'><sup>[74]</sup></a> and that of the Condenser 30° C.</span></th></tr>
+ <tr><th class='c006' colspan='6'><i>Theoretical Duty for each Unit of Heat transmitted, 371 foot-pounds.</i></th></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Cases.</span></th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each lb. of coal consumed.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each lb. of water evaporated.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Work produced for each unit of heat transmitted.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>Percentage of theoretical duty.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c014'></th>
+ <th class='c016'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c033'>Ft.-lbs.</th>
+ <th class='blt c034'>&#160;</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(3)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>French engines, according to contract</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>98,427</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>160.3</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>43.2</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(4)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>English engines, according to contract</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>565,700</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×80,814</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>130.8</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>35</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c014'>(6)</td>
+ <td class='c016'>Common engines, consuming 12 lbs. of coal per horse-power per hour</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>165,000</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×23,571</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>38.1</td>
+ <td class='blt c034'>10.3</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c014'>(7)</td>
+ <td class='bbt c016'>Improved engines with expansion cylinders, consuming an equivalent to 4 lbs. best coal per horse-power per hour</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>495,000</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>⁶¹⁴⁄₆₁₈×70,710</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>114.4</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c034'>30.7</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX A.<br> <span class='c011'>EXTRACTS FROM UNPUBLISHED WRITINGS OF CARNOT.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 class='c025'>I. <span class='sc'>Notes.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c019'>Let us first open at the memoranda relating to
+his daily occupations:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Plan in the morning the work of the day, and
+reflect in the evening on what has been done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Carry when walking a book, and a note-book
+to preserve the ideas, and a piece of bread in order
+to prolong the walk if need be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Vary the mental and bodily exercises with
+dancing, horsemanship, swimming, fencing with
+sword and with sabre, shooting with gun and pistol,
+skating, the sling, stilts, tennis, bowls; hop on one
+foot, cross the arms, jump high and far, turn on
+one foot propped against the wall, exercise in shirt
+in the evening to get up a perspiration before going
+to bed; turning, joinery, gardening, reading while
+walking, declamation, singing, violin, versification,
+musical composition; eight hours of sleep; a walk
+on awakening, before and after eating; great sobriety;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>eat slowly, little, and often; avoid idleness
+and useless meditation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Then come more general precepts:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Adopt good habits when I change my method
+of life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Never turn to the past unless to enlighten the
+future. Regrets are useless.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Form resolutions in advance in order not
+to reflect during action. Then obey thyself
+blindly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The promptitude of resolutions most frequently
+accords with their justice.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Yield frequently to the first inspiration. Too
+much meditation on the same subject ends by suggesting
+the worst part, or at least causes loss of
+precious time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Suffer slight disagreeables without seeming to
+perceive them, but repulse decisively any one who
+evidently intends to injure or humiliate you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“One should never feign a character that he
+has not, or affect a character that he cannot sustain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Self-possession without self-sufficiency. Courage
+without effrontery.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Make intimate acquaintances only with much
+circumspection; perfect confidence in those who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>have been thoroughly tested. Nothing to do with
+others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Question thyself to learn what will please
+others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“No useless discourse. All conversation which
+does not serve to enlighten ourselves or others,
+to interest the heart or amuse the mind, is hurtful.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Speak little of what you know, and not at all
+of what you do not know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Why not say more frequently, ‘I do not
+know’?”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Speak to every one of that which he knows
+best. This will put him at his ease, and be profitable
+to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Abstain from all pleasantry which could
+wound.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Employ only expressions of the most perfect
+propriety.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Listen attentively to your interlocutor, and so
+prepare him to listen in the same way to your reply,
+and predispose him in favor of your arguments.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Show neither passion nor weariness in discussion.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Never direct an argument against any one. If
+you know some particulars against your adversary,
+you have a right to make him aware of it to keep
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>him under control, but proceed with discretion,
+and do not wound him before others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“When discussion degenerates into dispute, be
+silent; this is not to declare yourself beaten.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“How much modesty adds to merit! A man of
+talent who conceals his knowledge is like a branch
+bending under a weight of fruit.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Why try to be witty? I would rather be
+thought stupid and modest than witty and pretentious.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Men desire nothing so much as to make themselves
+envied.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Egotism is the most common and most hated
+of all vices. Properly speaking, it is the only one
+which should be hated.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The pleasures of self-love are the only ones
+that can really be turned into ridicule.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“I do not know why these two expressions,
+good sense and common sense, are confounded.
+There is nothing less common than good sense.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The strain of suffering causes the mind to
+decay.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We will quote one of those misanthropic sallies
+the rarity of which we are glad to remark:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“It must be that all honest people are in the
+galleys; only knaves are to be met with elsewhere.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>But serenity of mind returns immediately after
+the above:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“I rejoice for all the misfortunes which might
+have happened to me, and which I have escaped.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Life is a short enough passage. I am half the
+journey. I will complete the remainder as I can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Hope being the greatest of all blessings, it is
+necessary, in order to be happy, to sacrifice the
+present to the future.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Let us not be exacting; perfection is so rare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Indulgence! Indulgence!”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The more nearly an object approaches perfection,
+the more we notice its slightest defects.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“To neglect the opportunity of an innocent
+pleasure is a loss to ourselves. It is to act like a
+spendthrift.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i>Recherché</i> pleasures cause simple pleasures to
+lose all their attractions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“It may sometimes be necessary to yield the
+right, but how is one to recover it when wanted?”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Love is almost the only passion that the good
+man may avow. It is the only one which accords
+with delicacy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Do nothing that all the world may not know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The truly wise man is he who loves virtue for
+its own sake.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>“We say that man is an egotist, and nevertheless
+his sweetest pleasures come to him through
+others. He only tastes them on condition of sharing
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“If one could continually satisfy his desires, he
+would never have time to desire. Happiness then
+is necessarily composed of alternatives. It could
+not exist at a constant level.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>On the subject of nations and conquerors:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“To each conqueror can be said, when he has
+ceased tormenting our poor globe, ‘Would you
+not have been able to tilt equally well against a
+little globe of pasteboard?’”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The laws of war, do they say? As if war
+were not the destruction of all laws.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“War has been represented as necessary to prevent
+the too rapid increase of the population, but
+war mows down the flower of the young men,
+while it spares the men disgraced by nature.
+Hence it tends to the degeneration of the species.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Then the writer turns his shafts against medicine:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“In some respects medicine is directly opposed
+to the will of nature, which tends to perpetuate the
+strongest and best of the species, and to abandon
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>the delicate to a thousand forms of destruction.
+This is what occurs among animals and savage
+men. Only the most robust attain the adult age,
+and these only reproduce the species. Medicine
+and the aids of the social state prolong the lives of
+feeble creatures whose posterity is usually equally
+feeble. Among the Spartans, barbarous regulations
+put an end to the existence of malformed
+infants, that the strength and beauty of the race
+might be preserved. Such regulations are antipathetic
+to our customs; nevertheless it might be
+desirable that we should devote ourselves to the
+preservation of the human race from the causes of
+weakness and degeneracy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The decadence of the Greeks and Romans
+without change of race proves the influence of institutions
+upon customs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We will give here a fragment on political economy,
+to show the variety contained in the pages on
+which we draw:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“According to the system of modern economists,
+it would be desirable that the government should
+interfere as little as possible in the commerce and
+industry of the country. Nevertheless we cannot
+deny that in certain circumstances this intervention
+is very useful.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>“Taxes are regarded by economists as an evil,
+but as a necessary evil, since they provide for public
+expenses. Consequently, economists think that
+if the government possessed sufficient revenues, in
+domains for example, the suppression of all taxes
+would be a desirable measure.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Taxes are a means of influencing production
+and commerce to give to them a direction which
+they would not naturally have taken. Such an
+influence may undoubtedly have disagreeable consequences
+if the taxes are imposed without discrimination
+or exclusively for a fiscal purpose, but
+it is entirely otherwise if wisdom and tact preside
+at their institution.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“A tax on the rent of a farm would be much
+better than a tax on the land itself. Proprietors
+then could only avoid taxes by themselves improving
+their property. As it is, they merely collect
+the rents, and usually employ their surplus in unproductive
+expenditure, while the proprietary
+farmers voluntarily devote theirs to the improvement
+of the land.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“A tax on the farms would then result in the
+proprietors themselves working the lands, and this
+would mean better cultivation, and improvements
+which would yield returns indeed, but at too remote
+a period for the tenant. It would tend to a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>division of landed property, men of small fortune
+uniting in the purchase with capitalists who seek
+only the rent or payment for the land.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Great capitalists could not themselves cultivate
+vast extents of land, and not wanting to diminish
+their revenues by renting them, would be
+induced to sell portions suitable for cultivation by
+their new owners, and would then carry their
+money into new industrial and commercial enterprises.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The competition of the sellers would cause a
+momentary fall in the price of the lands, and would
+enable small farmers to become land-owners. The
+number of vast estates often badly managed would
+then be diminished, and considerable fortunes,
+changing hands more easily, would naturally pass
+into those which would be most likely to increase
+their value.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Proprietors, becoming cultivators to escape the
+taxes, would settle in the country, where their presence
+would disseminate intelligence and comfort;
+their revenues, before spent unprofitably, would
+then pay expenses and improvements on their
+property.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The establishment of such a tax would certainly
+find many opponents among proprietors,
+landed non-cultivators who form in fact the influential
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span><i>personnel</i> in the state, for it is they who
+usually make the laws.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Perhaps it would be necessary to weaken their
+opposition by not subjecting the actual proprietors
+to the new tax, which might take effect only with
+the next change either by sale or by inheritance.
+A restriction of the right of transfer would also
+facilitate the passage from one situation to the
+other. All changes in taxes should, as a general
+thing, be made gradually, in order to avoid sudden
+changes of fortune.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“We may consider the renting of a property
+for several years as a sale of the usufruct during
+the time of the lease. Now nine years’ possession,
+for example, is equal to more than a third of the
+value of the property, supposing the annual product
+to be one twentieth of the capital. It would
+then be reasonable to apply to this sort of sale the
+laws which govern that of landed property, and
+consequently the mutation tax. The person who
+cannot or will not cultivate his soil, instead of
+alienating the property itself, binds himself to
+alienate the usufruct for a time, and the price is
+paid at stated intervals instead of all at once.
+There is farm rent.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Now it is by a fiction that the purchaser pays
+the mutation tax. In fact, it is always the seller
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>who pays it. The buyer compares the money that
+he spends with the advantage that he gains, and
+this comparison determines it. If he did not make
+money out of it he would not buy it. When the
+registration tax did not exist, the purchaser had to
+pay the same sum for the same purpose, and this
+sum went into the pocket of the seller.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“Proprietors of lands, then, after all, have to
+bear the mutation taxes. All increase of these
+taxes is a loss for them, and these taxes are heavier
+on the small proprietors than on the large, because
+their changes are more frequent. The tax
+on the farms, on the contrary, would bear more
+heavily on large estates.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The tax on farms not affecting the owners of
+timber, would be made up by a tax on the felling,
+a very justifiable tax, for standing timber is landed
+property. Standing timber is often worth much
+more than the land on which it stands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Finally, we will give some thoughts which reveal
+the religious sentiments of Sadi Carnot:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>“Men attribute to chance those events of the
+causes of which they are ignorant. If they succeed
+in divining these causes, chance disappears.
+To say that a thing has happened by chance,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>is to say that we have not been able to foresee it.
+I do not myself believe that any other acceptation
+can be given to this word. What to an ignorant
+man is chance, cannot be chance to one better instructed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“If human reason is incapable of discovering
+the mysteries of Divinity, why has not Divinity
+made human reason more clear-sighted?”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“God cannot punish man for not believing
+when he could so easily have enlightened and convinced
+him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“If God is absolutely good, why should
+He punish the sinner for all eternity, since
+He does not lead him to good, or give him an
+example?”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“According to the doctrine of the church, God
+resembles a sphinx proposing enigmas, and devouring
+those who cannot guess them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The church attributes to God all human passions—anger,
+desire for vengeance, curiosity, tyranny,
+partiality, idleness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“If Christianity were pruned of all which is
+not Christ, this religion would be the simplest in
+the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“What motives have influenced the writers who
+have rejected all religious systems? Is it the conviction
+that the ideas which they oppose are all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>injurious to society? Have they not rather included
+in the same proscription religion and the
+abuse of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“The belief in an <i>all-powerful</i> Being, who loves
+us and watches over us, gives to the mind great
+strength to endure misfortune.”</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“A religion suited to the soul and preached by
+men worthy of respect would exercise the most
+salutary influence upon society and customs.”</p>
+
+<h3 class='c018'>II. <span class='sc'>Notes of Sadi Carnot on Mathematics, Physics, and other Subjects.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c019'>Up to the present time the changes caused in
+the temperature of bodies by motion have been
+very little studied. This class of phenomena merits,
+however, the attention of observers. When
+bodies are in motion, especially when that motion
+disappears, or when it produces motive power, remarkable
+changes take place in the distribution of
+heat, and perhaps in its quantity.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We will collect a few facts which exhibit this
+phenomenon most clearly.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>1. <i>The Collision of Bodies.</i>—We know that in
+the collision of bodies there is always expenditure
+of motive power. Perfectly elastic bodies only form
+an exception, and none such are found in nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>We also know that always in the collision of
+bodies there occurs a change of temperature, an
+elevation of temperature. We cannot, as did M.
+Berthollet, attribute the heat set free in this case
+to the reduction of the volume of the body; for
+when this reduction has reached its limit the liberation
+of heat would cease. Now this does not occur.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is sufficient that the body change form by percussion,
+without change of volume, to produce disengagement
+of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If, for example, we take a cube of lead and strike
+it successively on each of its faces, there will always
+be heat liberated, without sensible diminution in
+this disengagement, so long as the blows are continued
+with equal force. This does not occur when
+medals are struck. In this case the metal cannot
+change form after the first blows of the die, and
+the effect of the collision is not conveyed to the
+medal, but to the threads of the screw which are
+strained, and to its supports.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It would seem, then, that heat set free should
+be attributed to the friction of the molecules of
+the metal, which change place relatively to each
+other, that is, the heat is set free just where the
+moving force is expended.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>A similar remark will apply in regard to the collision
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>of two bodies of differing hardness—lead and
+iron for instance. The first of these metals becomes
+very hot, while the second does not vary sensibly
+in temperature. But the motive power is
+almost wholly exhausted in changing the form of
+the first of these metals. We may also cite, as a
+fact of the same nature, the heat produced by the
+extension of a metallic rod just before it breaks.
+Experiment has proved that, other things being
+equal, the greater the elongation before rupture,
+the more considerable is the elevation of temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>(2) [The remainder is blank.]</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When a hypothesis no longer suffices to explain
+phenomena, it should be abandoned.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This is the case with the hypothesis which regards
+caloric as matter, as a subtile fluid.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The experimental facts tending to destroy this
+theory are as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The development of heat by percussion or
+the friction of bodies (experiments of Rumford,
+friction of wheels on their spindles, on the axles,
+experiments to be made). Here the elevation of
+temperature takes place at the same time in the
+body rubbing and the body rubbed. Moreover,
+they do not change perceptibly in form or nature
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>(to be proved). Thus heat is produced by motion.
+If it is matter, it must be admitted that the matter
+is created by motion.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) When an air-pump is worked, and at the
+same time air is admitted into the receiver, the
+temperature remains constant in the receiver. It
+remains constant on the outside. Consequently,
+the air compressed by the pumps must rise in
+temperature above the air outside, and it is expelled
+at a higher temperature. The air enters
+then at a temperature of 10°, for instance, and
+leaves at another, 10° + 90° or 100°, for example.
+Thus heat has been created by motion.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) If the air in a reservoir is compressed, and at
+the same time allowed to escape through a little
+opening, there is by the compression elevation of
+temperature, by the escape lowering of temperature
+(according to Gay-Lussac and Welter). The
+air then enters at one side at one temperature and
+escapes at the other side at a higher temperature,
+from which follows the same conclusion as in the
+preceding case.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(Experiment to be made: To fit to a high-pressure
+boiler a cock and a tube leading to it and emptying
+into the atmosphere; to open the cock a little
+way, and present a thermometer to the outlet of
+the steam; to see if it remains at 100° or more;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>to see if steam is liquefied in the pipe; to see
+whether it comes out cloudy or transparent.)</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The elevation of temperature which takes
+place at the time of the entrance of the air into the
+vacuum, an elevation that cannot be attributed to
+the compression of the air remaining (air which
+may be replaced by steam), can therefore be attributed
+only to the friction of the air against the
+walls of the opening, or against the interior of the
+receiver, or against itself.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(5) M. Gay-Lussac showed (it is said) that if
+two receivers were put in communication with
+each other, the one a vacuum, the other full of air,
+the temperature would rise in one as much as it
+would fall in the other. If, then, both be compressed
+one half, the first would return to its previous
+temperature and the second to a much higher
+one. Mixing them, the whole mass would be
+heated.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>When the air enters a vacuum, its passage
+through one small opening and the motion imparted
+to it in the interior appear to produce elevation
+of temperature.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>We may be allowed to express here an hypothesis
+in regard to the nature of heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>At present, light is generally regarded as the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>result of a vibratory movement of the ethereal
+fluid. Light produces heat, or at least accompanies
+the radiating heat, and moves with the same
+velocity as heat. Radiating heat is then a vibratory
+movement. It would be ridiculous to suppose that
+it is an emission of matter while the light which
+accompanies it could be only a movement.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Could a motion (that of radiating heat) produce
+matter (caloric)?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>No, undoubtedly; it can only produce a motion.
+Heat is then the result of a motion.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Then it is plain that it could be produced by the
+consumption of motive power, and that it could
+produce this power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>All the other phenomena—composition and decomposition
+of bodies, passage to the gaseous state,
+specific heat, equilibrium of heat, its more or less
+easy transmission, its constancy in experiments
+with the calorimeter—could be explained by this
+hypothesis. But it would be difficult to explain
+why, in the development of motive power by heat,
+a cold body is necessary; why, in consuming the
+heat of a warm body, motion cannot be produced.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>It appears very difficult to penetrate into the
+real essence of bodies. To avoid erroneous reasoning,
+it would be necessary to investigate carefully
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>the source of our knowledge in regard to the nature
+of bodies, their form, their forces; to see what
+the primitive notions are, to see from what impressions
+they are derived; to see how one is raised
+successively to the different degrees of abstraction.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Is heat the result of a vibratory motion of molecules?
+If this is so, quantity of heat is simply
+quantity of motive power. As long as motive
+power is employed to produce vibratory movements,
+the quantity of heat must be unchangeable; which
+seems to follow from experiments with the calorimeter;
+but when it passes into movements of sensible
+extent, the quantity of heat can no longer
+remain constant.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Can examples be found of the production of
+motive power with actual consumption of heat?
+It seems that we may find production of heat with
+consumption of motive power (re-entrance of the
+air into a vacuum, for example).</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>What is the cause of the production of heat in
+combinations of substances? What is radiant
+caloric?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Liquefaction of bodies, solidification of liquids,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>crystallization—are they not forms of combinations
+of integrant molecules?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Supposing heat due to a vibratory movement,
+how can the passage from the solid or the liquid to
+the gaseous state be explained?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>When motive power is produced by the passage
+of heat from the body <i>A</i> to the body <i>B</i>, is the quantity
+of this heat which arrives at <i>B</i> (if it is not the
+same as that which has been taken from <i>A</i>, if a
+portion has really been consumed to produce motive
+power) the same whatever may be the substance
+employed to realize the motive power?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Is there any way of using more heat in the production
+of motive power, and of causing less to
+reach the body <i>B</i>? Could we even utilize it entirely,
+allowing none to go to the body <i>B</i>? If
+this were possible, motive power could be created
+without consumption of combustible, and by mere
+destruction of the heat of bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Is it absolutely certain that steam after having
+operated an engine and produced motive power
+can raise the temperature of the water of condensation
+as if it had been conducted directly into it?</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Reasoning shows us that there cannot be loss of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>living force, or, which is the same thing, of motive
+power, if the bodies act upon each other without
+directly touching each other, without actual collision.
+Now everything leads us to believe that
+the molecules of bodies are always separated from
+each other by some space, that they are never actually
+in contact. If they touched each other,
+they would remain united, and consequently
+change form.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>If the molecules of bodies are never in close contact
+with each other whatever may be the forces
+which separate or attract them, there can never
+be either production or loss of motive power in
+nature. This power must be as unchangeable in
+quantity as matter. Then the direct re-establishment
+of equilibrium of the caloric, and its re-establishment
+with production of motive power, would
+be essentially different from each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Heat is simply motive power, or rather motion
+which has changed form. It is a movement among
+the particles of bodies. Wherever there is destruction
+of motive power there is, at the same time,
+production of heat in quantity exactly proportional
+to the quantity of motive power destroyed. Reciprocally,
+wherever there is destruction of heat,
+there is production of motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>We can then establish the general proposition
+that motive power is, in quantity, invariable in
+nature; that it is, correctly speaking, never either
+produced or destroyed. It is true that it changes
+form, that is, it produces sometimes one sort of
+motion, sometimes another, but it is never annihilated.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>According to some ideas that I have formed
+on the theory of heat, the production of a unit of
+motive power necessitates the destruction of 2.70
+units of heats.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>A machine which would produce 20 units of
+motive power per kilogram of coal ought to destroy
+<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>20 × 2.70</span><br>7000</span> of the heat developed by the combustion.
+<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>20 × 2.70</span><br>7000</span> = <span class='fraction'>8<br><span class='vincula'>1000</span></span> about; that is, less than <span class='fraction'>1<br><span class='vincula'>100</span></span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(Each unit of motive power, or dyname, representing
+the weight of one cubic metre of water
+raised to the height of one metre.)</p>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Experiments to be made on Heat and Motive Power.</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c019'>To repeat Rumford’s experiments in the drilling
+of a metal in water, but to measure the motive
+power consumed at the same time as the heat produced;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>same experiments on several metals and
+on wood.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To strike a piece of lead in various ways, to
+measure the motive power consumed and the heat
+produced. Same experiments on other metals.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To strongly agitate water in a small cask or in
+a double-acting pump having a piston pierced with
+a small opening.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Experiment of the same sort on the agitation of
+mercury, alcohol, air and other gases. To measure
+the motive power consumed and heat produced.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To admit air into a vacuum or into air more or
+less rarefied; <i>id.</i> for other gases or vapors. To
+examine the elevation of temperature by means of
+the manometer and the thermometer of Bréguet.
+Estimation of the error of the thermometer in the
+time required for the air to vary a certain number
+of degrees. These experiments would serve to
+measure the changes which take place in the temperature
+of the gas during its changes of volume.
+They would also furnish means of comparing these
+changes with the quantities of motive power produced
+or consumed.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Expel the air from a large reservoir in which it is
+compressed, and check its velocity in a large pipe in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>which solid bodies have been placed; measure the
+temperature when it has become uniform. See if
+it is the same as in the reservoir. Same experiments
+with other gases and with vapor formed
+under different pressures.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>To repeat Dalton’s experiments and carry them
+on to pressures of thirty or forty atmospheres. To
+measure the constituent heat of the vapor within
+these limits.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>Id.</i> on the vapor of alcohol, of ether, of essence
+of turpentine, of mercury, to prove whether the
+agent employed makes any difference in the production
+of motive power.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>Id.</i> on water charged with a deliquescent salt,
+the calcium chloride, for instance.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Is the law of tensions always the same? To
+measure the specific heat of vapor.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Experiments to be made on the Tension of Vapors.</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c019'>A graduated capillary tube filled with water,
+mercury, or with oil and air. Plunge this tube
+into a bath of oil, of mercury, or of melted lead.
+To measure the temperature by an air-thermometer.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Same experiments with alcohol, ether, sulphide
+of carbon, muriatic ether, essence of turpentine,
+sulphur, phosphorus.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>Experiments on the tension of steam with a
+boiler, and a thermometric tube full of air. A
+thermometer will be placed in a tube immersed in
+the boiler, open outwards and filled with oil or
+mercury.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Experiments by means of a simple capillary
+tube filled with three successive parts—first of air,
+second of mercury, third of water or other liquid
+of which the tension can be measured (of alcohol,
+of ether, of essence of turpentine, of lavender, of
+sulphide of carbon, of muriatic ether, etc.).
+One end of the tube may be immersed in a bath
+of mercury or oil, the temperature of which is to
+be measured. The column of mercury can be made
+long enough to allow of the air being previously
+compressed or rarefied.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id008'>
+<img src='images/i_229.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 6.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>The tube will be bent into a spiral at one end,
+the straight part being graduated (thus permitting
+the tension of mercurial vapor to be measured).</p>
+
+<div class='c002 figleft id005'>
+<img src='images/i_230a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 7.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Experiments on the tension of vapors at low
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>temperature, with a thermometric tube bent
+round, and filled partly with mercury,
+partly with water or alcohol. The mercury
+will operate by its weight. The
+upper part of the tube will be empty and
+sealed, or fully open to the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The bulb will be immersed in water the
+temperature of which is to be measured.
+If the tube is sealed, the upper part
+must be cooled.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The bulb might contain water, ether, or essence
+of turpentine.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the tube is sealed, the tension of mercurial
+vapor could be measured.</p>
+
+<p class='c009'>Experiments on the constituent heat of vapors
+by means of a barometric tube having two enlarged
+bulbs. One of the bulbs may be immersed
+in cold water, and the elevation of temperature
+of this water will indicate the constituent
+heat of the vapor.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_230b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 8.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>The other bulb may be warmed either by boiling
+liquid or by fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Water, alcohol, steam, ether, mercury, acetic
+acid, sulphide of carbon.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The operation may be repeated and add the results.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Experiments to be made on Gases and Vapors.</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c019'>To measure the temperature acquired by the air
+introduced into a vacuum or space containing previously
+rarefied air.</p>
+
+<div class='figright id005'>
+<img src='images/i_231.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 9.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the vacuum is made under the glass receiver
+of an air-pump, and the cock admitting the outer
+air be suddenly opened, the introduction of this
+air will cause a Bréguet thermometer to rise to 50°
+or 60°. To examine the movement of this
+thermometer when the reintroduction
+takes place only by degrees, to compare
+it with the movement of the manometer.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Construction of a manometer which
+may give the pressure almost instantaneously.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Imagine a capillary tube bent into a
+spiral at one end, and having one extremity
+closed, the other open. This
+tube will be perfectly dry and a small
+index of mercury may be introduced
+into it. The diameter of the tube will be small
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>enough for the air enclosed in it to take almost
+instantly the temperature of the glass. We shall
+try to ascertain the time necessary for the establishment
+of this equilibrium of temperature by
+placing the tube under the receiver of the air-pump,
+making a partial vacuum, and admitting
+the air. We shall see whether, some seconds after
+the introduction, the index perceptibly moves.
+The index must be of very light weight to avoid
+oscillation as much as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>For the same reason, the capillary tube should
+be also as narrow as possible. If the straight part
+of the tube is equal to the bent part and the index
+be placed at the beginning of the bent part, for a
+pressure equal to atmospheric pressure, it would
+not be necessary to subject the instrument to a
+less pressure than ½ atmosphere. It is between
+these two limits that it would serve as a measure.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It might end in an open enlargement to prevent
+the projection of the mercury outside the tube.
+Disposed in this way, it could be used as a general
+measure for pressures between <i>p</i> and (½)<i>p</i>; <i>p</i> being
+anything whatever. The apparatus will be fastened
+to a board bearing a graduated scale placed
+against the straight tube. The scale will be, for
+instance, numbered by fives or tens. A corresponding
+table denoting pressures would be required.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Placing the instrument under the receiver and
+forming a partial vacuum, the index will rise into
+the enlargement. Then, admitting the air by degrees
+and very slowly, we may note the correspondence
+between the heights of the ordinary mercury
+manometer and the point which will be reached
+by the lower face of the index of the instrument.
+This will answer to form a comparative table of
+the pressures and the numbers of the scale. The
+pressures would be represented by their relations
+to the observed pressure at the moment of the
+passage of the index over zero, for any other fixed
+number of the scale.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus, for example, suppose that we observed on
+the manometer 400 or <i>n</i> millimetres of mercury
+when the index is on <i>o</i>, then <i>n′</i> when the index is
+on 1, <i>n″</i> when on 2, and so on. This will give the
+ratios <i>n′</i>/<i>n</i>, <i>n″</i>/<i>n</i>,&#160;... which must be inscribed in the
+table. Then <i>n</i> could be varied at pleasure, and
+the table could still be used.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In fact, according to the law of Mariotte, volumes
+preserving the same ratios, pressures should
+also preserve the same ratios to each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let <i>p</i> be the pressure when the index is on <i>o</i>, <i>v</i>
+the volume of air at the same moment, <i>p′</i> and <i>v′</i>
+the same pressures and volume at the moment
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>when the index is on 1. Whether the air be expelled
+or admitted the pressures would be instead
+of <i>p</i> and <i>p′</i>, <i>q</i> and <i>q′</i>. But there would follow</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>p</i> : <i>p′</i> :: <i>v′</i> : <i>v</i> and <i>q</i> : <i>q′</i> :: <i>v′</i> : <i>v</i>;</div>
+ <div>then <i>p</i> : <i>p′</i> :: <i>q</i> : <i>q′</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>We should moreover work at a uniform temperature
+and note the variations.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the straight part of the tube were perfectly
+calibrated, the volumes, and consequently the pressures,
+would form a geometrical progression, when
+the figures of the scale would be found to be in
+arithmetical progression, and a table of logarithms
+would enable one to be found from the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In order to increase as required the mass of air
+enclosed in the tube the instrument must be
+placed on its side or flat, in the air-pump receivers.
+The mercury index would be placed in the lateral
+part of the enlargement of the tube, and the atmospheric
+air would enter. The instrument
+might also be heated in this position.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Care must be taken to admit only very dry air,
+which could be obtained by placing under the receiver
+calcium chloride or any other substance
+which absorbs moisture greedily.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Instead of bending the tube into a spiral, it
+might be bent in the middle in the form of a ᑌ,
+or it might be better to form three, four or more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>parallel branches. Making the tube very long, the
+index would have a larger range for the same
+changes of pressure, and the results produced
+could then be measured by a slight variation in
+density in the air of the receiver.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Comparison of the Rapidity with which the Air cools in the Receiver and in the Tube.</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c019'>Let us suppose, what I believe to be very near
+the truth, that the heat absorbed is proportional
+to the surface of the bodies in contact. From
+this we can infer without difficulty, that the rapidity
+of the cooling of the air in two cylindrical
+tubes would be inversely as their diameters.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the receiver is considered as a tube of two
+decimetres in diameter, and the manometer as a
+tube of one millimetre diameter, the rapidity of
+the cooling of the air would be in the ratio, very
+nearly, of 1 to 200.</p>
+
+<h4 class='c025'><i>Extent of the Movement of the Index.</i></h4>
+
+<p class='c019'>Suppose the tube turned up on itself five times
+and having a total length of 1 metre; a variation
+of density equal to ⅒ in the air will give a movement
+of 1 decimetre; a variation of heat of 1 degree
+supposed to be equivalent to a variation of
+density of ¹⁄₂₆₆ will give ¹⁄₂₆₆ of a metre, or about
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>3<sup>mm</sup>.70, quite an appreciable quantity. As to the
+time required to move the mercury index, regard
+being had to its mass, if we suppose it 1 centimetre
+long, and the variation of pressure ¹⁄₁₀₀ of an
+atmosphere, it would require about ⅙ of a second
+to make it pass over one decimetre.</p>
+
+<p class='c035'><i>Use of the Instrument in Measuring the Variations
+of the Tensions of the Air under a Pneumatic
+Receiver.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>At each stroke of the piston which expands the
+air under the pneumatic receiver when a vacuum
+is to be created, a lowering of pressure is produced,
+and undoubtedly a change of temperature. It can
+be determined approximately, at least, by observing
+the position of the manometer at the instant after
+the dilatation has taken place, and again after a
+time long enough for the temperature to have returned
+to its original point, that of the surrounding
+bodies. Comparison of the elastic force in the two
+cases will lead to comparison of the temperatures.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The temperature having returned to its original
+point, we will give a second stroke of the piston
+which will rarefy the air more than the former,
+and thus we will make two observations of the
+manometer, before and after the return to the
+former temperature. And so on.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX B.<br> <span class='c011'>CARNOT’S FOOT-NOTES.</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'><span class='sc'>Note A.</span>—The objection may perhaps be raised
+here, that perpetual motion, demonstrated to be
+impossible by mechanical action alone, may possibly
+not be so if the power either of heat or electricity
+be exerted; but is it possible to conceive
+the phenomena of heat and electricity as due to
+anything else than some kind of motion of the
+body, and as such should they not be subjected to
+the general laws of mechanics? Do we not know
+besides, <i><span lang="fr">à posteriori</span></i>, that all the attempts made to
+produce perpetual motion by any means whatever
+have been fruitless?—that we have never succeeded
+in producing a motion veritably perpetual, that
+is, a motion which will continue forever without
+alteration in the bodies set to work to accomplish
+it? The electromotor apparatus (the pile of Volta)
+has sometimes been regarded as capable of producing
+perpetual motion; attempts have been
+made to realize this idea by constructing dry piles
+said to be unchangeable; but however it has been
+done, the apparatus has always exhibited sensible
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>deteriorations when its action has been sustained
+for a time with any energy.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The general and philosophic acceptation of the
+words <i>perpetual motion</i> should include not only a
+motion susceptible of indefinitely continuing itself
+after a first impulse received, but the action of an
+apparatus, of any construction whatever, capable
+of creating motive power in unlimited quantity,
+capable of starting from rest all the bodies of nature
+if they should be found in that condition, of
+overcoming their inertia; capable, finally, of finding
+in itself the forces necessary to move the whole
+universe, to prolong, to accelerate incessantly, its
+motion. Such would be a veritable creation of
+motive power. If this were a possibility, it would
+be useless to seek in currents of air and water or
+in combustibles this motive power. We should
+have at our disposal an inexhaustible source upon
+which we could draw at will.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note B.</span>—The experimental facts which best
+prove the change of temperature of gases by compression
+or dilatation are the following:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(1) The fall of the thermometer placed under
+the receiver of a pneumatic machine in which a
+vacuum has been produced. This fall is very sensible
+on the Bréguet thermometer: it may exceed
+40° or 50°. The mist which forms in this case
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>seems to be due to the condensation of the watery
+vapor caused by the cooling of the air.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(2) The inflammation of German tinder in the
+so-called pneumatic tinder-boxes; which are, as
+we know, little pump-chambers in which the air is
+rapidly compressed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(3) The fall of a thermometer placed in a space
+where the air has been first compressed and then
+allowed to escape by the opening of a cock.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>(4) The results of experiments on the velocity
+of sound. M. de Laplace has shown that, in
+order to secure results accurately by theory and
+computation, it is necessary to assume the heating
+of the air by sudden compression.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The only fact which may be adduced in opposition
+to the above is an experiment of MM. Gay-Lussac
+and Welter, described in the <i>Annales de
+Chimie et de Physique</i>. A small opening having
+been made in a large reservoir of compressed air,
+and the ball of a thermometer having been introduced
+into the current of air which passes out
+through this opening, no sensible fall of the temperature
+denoted by the thermometer has been
+observed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Two explanations of this fact may be given:
+(1) The striking of the air against the walls of the
+opening by which it escapes may develop heat in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>observable quantity. (2) The air which has just
+touched the bowl of the thermometer possibly
+takes again by its collision with this bowl, or
+rather by the effect of the <i>détour</i> which it is
+forced to make by its rencounter, a density equal
+to that which it had in the receiver,—much as the
+water of a current rises against a fixed obstacle,
+above its level.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The change of temperature occasioned in the
+gas by the change of volume may be regarded as
+one of the most important facts of Physics, because
+of the numerous consequences which it
+entails, and at the same time as one of the most
+difficult to illustrate, and to measure by decisive
+experiments. It seems to present in some respects
+singular anomalies.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Is it not to the cooling of the air by dilatation
+that the cold of the higher regions of the atmosphere
+must be attributed? The reasons given
+heretofore as an explanation of this cold are entirely
+insufficient; it has been said that the air of
+the elevated regions receiving little reflected heat
+from the earth, and radiating towards celestial
+space, would lose caloric, and that this is the cause
+of its cooling; but this explanation is refuted by
+the fact that, at an equal height, cold reigns with
+equal and even more intensity on the elevated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>plains than on the summit of the mountains, or in
+those portions of the atmosphere distant from the
+sun.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note C.</span>—We see no reason for admitting, <i><span lang="fr">à
+priori</span></i>, the constancy of the specific heat of bodies
+at different temperatures, that is, to admit that
+equal quantities of heat will produce equal increments
+of temperature, when this body changes
+neither its state nor its density; when, for example,
+it is an elastic fluid enclosed in a fixed space.
+Direct experiments on solid and liquid bodies have
+proved that between zero and 100°, equal increments
+in the quantities of heat would produce
+nearly equal increments of temperature. But the
+more recent experiments of MM. Dulong and
+Petit (see <i>Annales de Chimie et de Physique</i>, February,
+March, and April, 1818) have shown that this
+correspondence no longer continues at temperatures
+much above 100°, whether these temperatures
+be measured on the mercury thermometer or on
+the air-thermometer.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Not only do the specific heats not remain the
+same at different temperatures, but, also, they do
+not preserve the same ratios among themselves, so
+that no thermometric scale could establish the constancy
+of all the specific heats. It would have been
+interesting to prove whether the same irregularities
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>exist for gaseous substances, but such experiments
+presented almost insurmountable difficulties.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The irregularities of specific heats of solid bodies
+might have been attributed, it would seem, to the
+latent heat employed to produce a beginning of
+fusion—a softening which occurs in most bodies
+long before complete fusion. We might support
+this opinion by the following statement: According
+to the experiments of MM. Dulong and Petit, the
+increase of specific heat with the temperature is
+more rapid in solids than in liquids, although the
+latter possess considerably more dilatability. The
+cause of irregularity just referred to, if it is real,
+would disappear entirely in gases.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note D.</span>—In order to determine the arbitrary
+constants <i>A</i>, <i>B</i>, <i>A′</i>, <i>B′</i>, in accordance with the
+results in M. Dalton’s table, we must begin by computing
+the volume of the vapor as determined by
+its pressure and temperature,—a result which is
+easily accomplished by reference to the laws of
+Mariotte and Gay-Lussac, the weight of the vapor
+being fixed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The volume will be given by the equation</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>v</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>c</i>&#8201;<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>267 + <i>t</i></span><br><i>p</i></span>,</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>in which <i>v</i> is this volume, <i>t</i> the temperature, <i>p</i> the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>pressure, and <i>c</i> a constant quantity depending on
+the weight of the vapor and on the units chosen.
+We give here the table of the volumes occupied by
+a gramme of vapor formed at different temperatures,
+and consequently under different pressures.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='btt bbt c014'><i>t</i><br>or degrees Centigrade.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c014'><i>p</i><br>or tension of the vapor expressed in millimetres of mercury.</th>
+ <th class='btt bbt blt c014'><i>v</i><br>or volume of a gramme of vapor expressed in litres.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c014'>°</th>
+ <th class='blt c014'>mm.</th>
+ <th class='blt c014'>lit.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>0</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>5.060</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>185.0</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>20</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>17.32</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>58.2</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>40</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>53.00</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>20.4</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>60</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>144.6</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>7.96</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c024'>80</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>352.1</td>
+ <td class='blt c014'>3.47</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='bbt c024'>100</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c014'>760.0</td>
+ <td class='bbt blt c014'>1.70</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>The first two columns of this table are taken
+from the <i>Traité de Physique</i> of M. Biot (vol. i., p.
+272 and 531). The third is calculated by means
+of the above formula, and in accordance with the
+result of experiment, indicating that water vaporized
+under atmospheric pressure occupies a space
+1700 times as great as in the liquid state.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>By using three numbers of the first column and
+three corresponding numbers of the third column,
+we can easily determine the constants of our equation</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>t</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>A</i> + <i>B</i> log <i>v</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>A′</i> + <i>B′</i> log <i>v</i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>We will not enter into the details of the calculation
+necessary to determine these quantities. It
+is sufficient to say that the following values,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'><i>A</i> = 2268,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>A′</i> = 19.64,</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'><i>B</i> = −1000,</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>B′</i> = 3.30,</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>satisfy fairly well the prescribed conditions, so that
+the equation</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>t</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'>2268 − 1000 log <i>v</i><br><span class='vincula'>19.64 + 3.30 log <i>v</i></span></span></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>expresses very nearly the relation which exists between
+the volume of the vapor and its temperature.
+We may remark here that the quantity <i>B′</i>
+is positive and very small, which tends to confirm
+this proposition—that the specific heat of an elastic
+fluid increases with the volume, but follows a slow
+progression.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note E.</span>—Were we to admit the constancy of
+the specific heat of a gas when its volume does not
+change, but when its temperature varies, analysis
+would show a relation between the motive power
+and the thermometric degree. We will show how
+this is, and this will also give us occasion to show
+how some of the propositions established above
+should be expressed in algebraic language.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let <i>r</i> be the quantity of motive power produced
+by the expansion of a given quantity of air passing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>from the volume of one litre to the volume of <i>v</i>
+litres under constant temperature. If <i>v</i> increases
+by the infinitely small quantity <i>dv</i>, <i>r</i> will increase
+by the quantity <i>dr</i>, which, according to the nature
+of motive power, will be equal to the increase <i>dv</i>
+of volume multiplied by the expansive force which
+the elastic fluid then possesses; let <i>p</i> be this expansive
+force. We should have the equation</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>dr</i> = <i>pdv</i>. (1)</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let us suppose the constant temperature under
+which the dilatation takes place equal to <i>t</i> degrees
+Centigrade. If we call <i>q</i> the elastic force of the
+air occupying the volume 1 litre at the same temperature
+<i>t</i>, we shall have, according to the law of
+Mariotte,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><span class='fraction'><i>v</i><br><span class='vincula'>1</span></span> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>q</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>p</i></span></span>, whence <i>p</i> = <span class='fraction'><i>q</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>v</i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>If now <i>P</i> is the elastic force of this same air at the
+constant volume 1, but at the temperature zero,
+we shall have, according to the rule of M. Gay-Lussac,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>q</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>P</i> + <i>P</i> <span class='fraction'><i>t</i><br><span class='vincula'>267</span></span> = <span class='fraction'><i>P</i><br><span class='vincula'>267</span></span>(267 + <i>t</i>);</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>whence</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>q</i> = <i>p</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>P</i><br><span class='vincula'>267</span></span>&#8201;<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>267 + <i>t</i></span><br><i>v</i></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>If, to abridge, we call <i>N</i> the quantity <span class='fraction'><i>P</i><br><span class='vincula'><a id='t246'></a>267</span></span>, the
+equation would become</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>p</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>N</i>&#8201;<span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>t</i> + 267</span><br><i>v</i></span>;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>whence we deduce, according to equation (1),</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>dr</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>N</i>&#8201;<span class='fraction'><span class='under'><i>t</i> + 267</span><br><i>v</i></span><i>dv</i>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Regarding <i>t</i> as constant, and taking the integral of
+the two numbers, we shall have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>r</i> = <i>N</i>(<i>t</i> + 267) log <i>v</i> + <i>C</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we suppose <i>r</i> = 0 when <i>v</i> = 1, we shall have
+<i>C</i> = 0; whence</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>r</i> = <i>N</i>(<i>t</i> + 267) log <i>v</i>. (2)</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This is the motive power produced by the expansion
+of the air which, under the temperature <i>t</i>, has
+passed from the volume 1 to the volume <i>v</i>. If instead
+of working at the temperature <i>t</i> we work in
+precisely the same manner at the temperature
+<i>t</i> + <i>dt</i>, the power developed will be</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>r</i> + δ<i>r</i> = <i>N</i>(<i>t</i> + <i>dt</i> + 267) log <i>v</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Subtracting equation (2), we have</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>δ<i>r</i> = <i>N</i> log <i>vdt</i>. (3)</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Let <i>e</i> be the quantity of heat employed to maintain
+the temperature of the gas constant during its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>dilatation. According to the reasoning of page <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>,
+δ<i>r</i> will be the power developed by the fall of the
+quantity <i>e</i> of heat from the degree <i>t</i> + <i>td</i> to the
+degree <i>t</i>. If we call <i>u</i> the motive power developed
+by the fall of unity of heat from the degree <i>t</i> to the
+degree zero, as, according to the general principle
+established page <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, this quantity <i>u</i> ought to depend
+solely on <i>t</i>, it could be represented by the
+function <i>Ft</i>, whence <i>u</i> = <i>Ft</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>When <i>t</i> is increased it becomes <i>t</i> + <i>td</i>, <i>u</i> becomes
+<i>u</i> + <i>du</i>; whence</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>u</i> + <i>du</i> = <i>F</i>(<i>t</i> + <i>dt</i>).</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Subtracting the preceding equation, we have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>du</i> = <i>F</i>(<i>t</i> + <i>dt</i>) − <i>Ft</i> = <i>F′tdt</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>This is evidently the quantity of motive power
+produced by the fall of unity of heat from the
+temperature <i>t</i> + <i>dt</i> to the temperature <i>t</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If the quantity of heat instead of being a unit
+had been <i>e</i>, its motive power produced would have
+had for its value</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>edu</i> = <i>eF′tdt</i>. (4)</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>But <i>edu</i> is the same thing as δ<i>r</i>; both are the
+power developed by the fall of the quantity <i>e</i> of
+heat from the temperature <i>t</i> + <i>dt</i> to the temperature
+<i>t</i>; consequently,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>edu</i> = δ<i>r</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>and from equations (3), (4),</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>eF′tdt</i> = <i>N</i> log <i>vdt</i>;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>or, dividing by <i>F′tdt</i>,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>e</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>N</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>F′t</i></span></span> log <i>v</i> = <i>T</i> log <i>v</i>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Calling <i>T</i> the fraction <span class='fraction'><i>N</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>F′t</i></span></span> which is a function of <i>t</i>
+only, the equation</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>e</i> = <i>T</i> log <i>v</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>is the analytical expression of the law stated pp. <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>,
+81. It is common to all gases, since the laws of
+which we have made use are common to all.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we call <i>s</i> the quantity of heat necessary to
+change the air that we have employed from the
+volume 1 and from the temperature zero to the
+volume <i>v</i> and to the temperature <i>t</i>, the difference
+between <i>s</i> and <i>e</i> will be the quantity of heat required
+to bring the air at the volume 1 from zero
+to <i>t</i>. This quantity depends on <i>t</i> alone; we will
+call it <i>U</i>. It will be any function whatever of <i>t</i>.
+We shall have</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>s</i> = <i>e</i> + <i>U</i> = <i>T</i> log <i>v</i> + <i>U</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we differentiate this equation with relation to <i>t</i>
+alone, and if we represent it by <i>T′</i> and <i>U′</i>, the differential
+coefficients of <i>T</i> and <i>U</i>, we shall get</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><span class='fraction'><i>ds</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>dt</i></span></span> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>T′</i> log <i>v</i> + <i>U′</i>;&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (5)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span><i>ds</i>/<i>dt</i> is simply the specific heat of the gas under
+constant volume, and our equation (1) is the analytical
+expression of the law stated on page <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we suppose the specific heat constant at all
+temperatures (hypothesis discussed above, page <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>),
+the quantity <i>ds</i>/<i>dt</i> will be independent of <i>t</i>; and in
+order to satisfy equation (5) for two particular
+values of <i>v</i>, it will be necessary that <i>T′</i> and <i>U′</i> be
+independent of <i>t</i>; we shall then have <i>T′</i> = <i>C</i>, a
+constant quantity. Multiplying <i>T′</i> and <i>C</i> by <i>dt</i>,
+and taking the integral of both, we find</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>T</i> = <i>Ct</i> + <i>C<sub>1</sub></i>;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>but as <i>T</i> = <i>N</i>/<i>F′t</i>, we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>F′t</i> = <span class='fraction'><i>N</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>T</i></span></span> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>N</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>Ct</i> + <i>C<sub>1</sub></i></span></span>.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>Multiplying both by <i>dt</i> and integrating, we have</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>Ft</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><span class='fraction'><i>N</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>C</i></span></span> log (<i>Ct</i> + <i>C<sub>1</sub></i>) + <i>C<sub>2</sub></i>;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c013'>or changing arbitrary constants, and remarking
+further that <i>Ft</i> is 0 when <i>t</i> = 0°,</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><i>Ft</i> =</td>
+ <td class='c022'><i>A</i> log (1 + <span class='fraction'><i>t</i><br><span class='vincula'><i>B</i></span></span>).&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; (6)</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c010'>The nature of the function <i>Ft</i> would be thus
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>determined, and we would thus be able to estimate
+the motive power developed by any fall of heat.
+But this latter conclusion is founded on the hypothesis
+of the constancy of the specific heat of a
+gas which does not change in volume—an hypothesis
+which has not yet been sufficiently verified by
+experiment. Until there is fresh proof, our equation
+(6) can be admitted only throughout a limited
+portion of the thermometric scale.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In equation (5), the first member represents, as
+we have remarked, the specific heat of the air occupying
+the volume <i>v</i>. Experiment having shown
+that this heat varies little in spite of the quite considerable
+changes of volume, it is necessary that
+the coefficient <i>T′</i> of log <i>v</i> should be a very small
+quantity. If we consider it nothing, and, after
+having multiplied by <i>dt</i> the equation</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>T′</i> = 0,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>we take the integral of it, we find</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>T</i> = <i>C</i>, constant quantity;</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>but</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>T</i> = <i>N</i>/<i>F′t</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>whence</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>F′t</i> = <i>N</i>/<i>T</i> = <i>N</i>/<i>C</i> = <i>A</i>;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>whence we deduce finally, by a second integration,</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>Ft</i> = <i>At</i> + <i>B</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>As <i>Ft</i> = 0 when <i>t</i> = 0, <i>B</i> is 0; thus</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>Ft</i> = <i>At</i>;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>that is, the motive power produced would be found
+to be exactly proportional to the fall of the caloric.
+This is the analytical translation of what was
+stated on page <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note F.</span>—M. Dalton believed that he had discovered
+that the vapors of different liquids at equal
+thermometric distances from the boiling-point
+possess equal tensions; but this law is not precisely
+exact; it is only approximate. It is the
+same with the law of the proportionality of the
+latent heat of vapors with their densities (see Extracts
+from a Mémoire of M. C. Despretz, <i>Annales
+de Chimie et de Physique</i>, t. xvi. p. 105, and t.
+xxiv. p. 323). Questions of this nature are closely
+connected with those of the motive power of heat.
+Quite recently MM. H. Davy and Faraday, after
+having conducted a series of elegant experiments
+on the liquefaction of gases by means of considerable
+pressure, have tried to observe the changes of
+tension of these liquefied gases on account of slight
+changes of temperature. They have in view the
+application of the new liquids to the production
+of motive power (see <i>Annales de Chimie et de
+Physique</i>, January, 1824, p. 80).</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>According to the above-mentioned theory, we
+can foresee that the use of these liquids would
+present no advantages relatively to the economy
+of heat. The advantages would be found only in
+the lower temperature at which it would be possible
+to work, and in the sources whence, for this
+reason, it would become possible to obtain caloric.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note G.</span>—This principle, the real foundation
+of the theory of steam-engines, was very clearly
+developed by M. Clement in a memoir presented
+to the Academy of Sciences several years ago.
+This Memoir has never been printed, and I owe
+the knowledge of it to the kindness of the author.
+Not only is the principle established therein, but
+it is applied to the different systems of steam-engines
+actually in use. The motive power of
+each of them is estimated therein by the aid of
+the law cited page <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, and compared with the results
+of experiment.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The principle in question is so little known or
+so poorly appreciated, that recently Mr. Perkins, a
+celebrated mechanician of London, constructed a
+machine in which steam produced under the pressure
+of 35 atmospheres—a pressure never before
+used—is subjected to very little expansion of volume,
+as any one with the least knowledge of this
+machine can understand. It consists of a single
+cylinder of very small dimensions, which at each
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>stroke is entirely filled with steam, formed under
+the pressure of 35 atmospheres. The steam produces
+no effect by the expansion of its volume, for
+no space is provided in which the expansion can
+take place. It is condensed as soon as it leaves
+the small cylinder. It works therefore only under
+a pressure of 35 atmospheres, and not, as its useful
+employment would require, under progressively
+decreasing pressures. The machine of Mr. Perkins
+seems not to realize the hopes which it at
+first awakened. It has been asserted that the
+economy of coal in this engine was ⁹⁄₁₀ above the
+best engines of Watt, and that it possessed still
+other advantages (see <i>Annales de Chimie et de
+Physique</i>, April, 1823, p. 429). These assertions
+have not been verified. The engine of Mr. Perkins
+is nevertheless a valuable invention, in that
+it has proved the possibility of making use of
+steam under much higher pressure than previously,
+and because, being easily modified, it may lead to
+very useful results.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Watt, to whom we owe almost all the great improvements
+in steam-engines, and who brought
+these engines to a state of perfection difficult
+even now to surpass, was also the first who employed
+steam under progressively decreasing pressures.
+In many cases he suppressed the introduction
+of the steam into the cylinder at a half, a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>third, or a quarter of the stroke. The piston completes
+its stroke, therefore, under a constantly
+diminishing pressure. The first engines working on
+this principle date from 1778. Watt conceived the
+idea of them in 1769, and took out a patent in 1782.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>We give here the Table appended to Watt’s
+patent. He supposed the steam introduced into
+the cylinder during the first quarter of the stroke of
+the piston; then, dividing this stroke into twenty
+parts, he calculated the mean pressure as follows:</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c036' colspan='3'>Portions of the descent from the top of the cylinder.</th>
+ <th class='c037' colspan='2'>Decreasing pressure of the steam, the entire pressure being 1.</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.05</td>
+ <td class='c038 bbt' rowspan='5'>Steam arriving freely from the boiler.</td>
+ <td class='c039'>1.000</td>
+ <td class='c040 bbt' rowspan='5'>Total pressure.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.10</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>1.000</td>
+
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.15</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>1.000</td>
+
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.20</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>1.000</td>
+
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>Quarter</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.25</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>1.000</td>
+
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.30</td>
+ <td class='c038 bbt' rowspan='15'>The steam being cut off and the descent taking place only by expansion.</td>
+ <td class='c039'>0.830</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.35</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.714</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.40</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.625</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.45</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.555</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>Half</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.50</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.500</td>
+ <td class='c040'>Half original pressure.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.55</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.454</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.60</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.417</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.65</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.385</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.70</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.375</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.75</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.333</td>
+ <td class='c040'>One third.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.80</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.312</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.85</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.294</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.90</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.277</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>0.95</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.262</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>Bottom of cylinder</td>
+ <td class='c036'>1.00</td>
+
+ <td class='c039'>0.025</td>
+ <td class='c040'>Quarter.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c038'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c036'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c039'>Total,</td>
+ <td class='c039'>11.583</td>
+ <td class='c040'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='figcenter id012'>
+<img src='images/i_254.svg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>On which he remarked, that the mean pressure is
+more than half the original pressure; also that in
+employing a quantity of steam equal to a quarter,
+it would produce an effect more than half.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Watt here supposed that steam follows in its expansion
+the law of Mariotte, which should not be
+considered exact, because, in the first place, the
+elastic fluid in dilating falls in temperature, and
+in the second place there is nothing to prove that
+a part of this fluid is not condensed by its expansion.
+Watt should also have taken into consideration
+the force necessary to expel the steam which
+remains after condensation, and which is found in
+quantity as much greater as the expansion of the
+volume has been carried further. Dr. Robinson
+has supplemented the work of Watt by a simple
+formula to calculate the effect of the expansion of
+steam, but this formula is found to have the same
+faults that we have just noticed. It has nevertheless
+been useful to constructors by furnishing them
+approximate data practically quite satisfactory.
+We have considered it useful to recall these facts
+because they are little known, especially in
+France. These engines have been built after the
+models of the inventors, but the ideas by which
+the inventors were originally influenced have been
+but little understood. Ignorance of these ideas
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>has often led to grave errors. Engines originally
+well conceived have deteriorated in the hands of
+unskilful builders, who, wishing to introduce in
+them improvements of little value, have neglected
+the capital considerations which they did not know
+enough to appreciate.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note H.</span>—The advantage in substituting two
+cylinders for one is evident. In a single cylinder
+the impulsion of the piston would be extremely
+variable from the beginning to the end of the
+stroke. It would be necessary for all the parts by
+which the motion is transmitted to be of sufficient
+strength to resist the first impulsion, and perfectly
+fitted to avoid the abrupt movements which would
+greatly injure and soon destroy them. It would
+be especially on the working beam, on the
+supports, on the crank, on the connecting-rod,
+and on the first gear-wheels that the unequal
+effort would be felt, and would produce the
+most injurious effects. It would be necessary
+that the steam-cylinder should be both sufficiently
+strong to sustain the highest pressure, and with
+a large enough capacity to contain the steam
+after its expansion of volume, while in using two
+successive cylinders it is only necessary to have
+the first sufficiently strong and of medium capacity,—which
+is not at all difficult,—and to have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>the second of ample dimensions, with moderate
+strength.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Double-cylinder engines, although founded on
+correct principles, often fail to secure the advantages
+expected from them. This is due principally
+to the fact that the dimensions of the different
+parts of these engines are difficult to adjust, and
+that they are rarely found to be in correct proportion.
+Good models for the construction of double-cylinder
+engines are wanting, while excellent designs
+exist for the construction of engines on the
+plan of Watt. From this arises the diversity that
+we see in the results of the former, and the great
+uniformity that we have observed in the results of
+the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note I.</span>—Among the attempts made to develop
+the motive power of heat by means of atmospheric
+air, we should mention those of MM. Niepce, which
+were made in France several years ago, by means
+of an apparatus called by the inventors a pyréolophore.
+The apparatus was made thus: There
+was a cylinder furnished with a piston, into which
+the atmospheric air was introduced at ordinary
+density. A very combustible material, reduced to
+a condition of extreme tenuity, was thrown into it,
+remained a moment in suspension in the air, and
+then flame was applied. The inflammation produced
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>very nearly the same effect as if the elastic
+fluid had been a mixture of air and combustible
+gas, of air and carburetted hydrogen gas, for example.
+There was a sort of explosion, and a sudden
+dilatation of the elastic fluid—a dilatation that
+was utilized by making it act upon the piston.
+The latter may have a motion of any amplitude
+whatever, and the motive power is thus realized.
+The air is next renewed, and the operation repeated.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>This machine, very ingenious and interesting,
+especially on account of the novelty of its principle,
+fails in an essential point. The material used
+as a combustible (it was the dust of Lycopodium,
+used to produce flame in our theatres) was so expensive,
+that all the advantage was lost through
+that cause; and unfortunately it was difficult to
+employ a combustible of moderate price, since a
+very finely powdered substance was required which
+would burn quickly, spread rapidly, and leave little
+or no ash.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Instead of working as did MM. Niepce, it would
+seem to us preferable to compress the air by means
+of pumps, to make it traverse a perfectly closed
+furnace into which the combustible had been introduced
+in small portions by a mechanism easy of
+conception, to make it develop its action in a cylinder
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>with a piston, or in any other variable space;
+finally, to throw it out again into the atmosphere,
+or even to make it pass under a steam-boiler in
+order to utilize the temperature remaining.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The principal difficulties that we should meet in
+this mode of operation would be to enclose the furnace
+in a sufficiently strong envelope, to keep the
+combustion meanwhile in the requisite state, to
+maintain the different parts of the apparatus at a
+moderate temperature, and to prevent rapid abrasion
+of the cylinder and of the piston. These difficulties
+do not appear to be insurmountable.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>There have been made, it is said, recently in
+England, successful attempts to develop motive
+power through the action of heat on atmospheric
+air. We are entirely ignorant in what these attempts
+have consisted—if indeed they have really
+been made.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>Note J.</span>—The result given here was furnished by
+an engine whose large cylinder was 45 inches in
+diameter and 7 feet stroke. It is used in one of the
+mines of Cornwall called Wheal Abraham. This
+result should be considered as somewhat exceptional,
+for it was only temporary, continuing but a
+single month. Thirty millions of lbs. raised one
+English foot per bushel of coal of 88 lbs. is generally
+regarded as an excellent result for steam-engines.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>It is sometimes attained by engines of the Watt
+type, but very rarely surpassed. This latter product
+amounts, in French measures, to 104,000 kilograms
+raised one metre per kilogram of coal consumed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>According to what is generally understood by
+one horse-power, in estimating the duty of steam-engines,
+an engine of ten horse-power should raise
+per second 10 × 75 kilograms, or 750 kilograms, to
+a height of one metre, or more, per hour; 750 ×
+3600 = 2,700,000 kilograms to one metre. If we
+suppose that each kilogram of coal raised to this
+height 104,000 kilograms, it will be necessary, in
+order to ascertain how much coal is burnt in one
+hour by our ten-horse-power engine, to divide
+2,700,000 by 104,000, which gives ²⁷⁰⁰⁄₁₀₄ = 26 kilograms.
+Now it is seldom that a ten-horse-power
+engine consumes less than 26 kilograms of coal per
+hour.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX C.<br> <span class='c011'><span class='sc'>Note by the Editor.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c009'>All the preceding data are to-day subject to
+modification.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus a duty of 150,000,000 ft.-lbs. per 100 lbs.
+good coal is to-day attainable, and two thirds that
+figure is extremely common. With engines of
+large size the coal-consumption has fallen to one
+half, sometimes even to one fourth, the figure in
+the text.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Hot air-engines are superseded by the gas-engine
+and the oil-vapor engine; which even
+threaten, in the opinion of many engineers, to
+ultimately displace the steam-engine.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Compound and other multiple-cylinder engines,
+with two, three, and even four cylinders in series,
+are now always employed where fuel is costly. The
+reason of their success is, in part, that given in
+Note H; but in only small part. The real cause
+of their general adoption is the fact that the internal
+thermal waste by “cylinder condensation”—which
+in simple engines ordinarily amounts,
+according to size, to from 25 to 50 per cent, or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>more, of all heat supplied by the boiler—is reduced
+nearly in proportion to the number of steam-cylinders
+in series.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>For the applied thermodynamics of the steam-engine,
+following Carnot and Thomson, see the
+pages of Rankine and of Clausius of 1850 to 1860,
+and especially the treatise of Rankine on the
+Steam-engine. The editor has adopted the methods
+of these great successors of Carnot in his “Manual
+of the Steam-engine” (2 vols. 8vo; N. Y., J. Wiley
+&#38; Sons), which may be consulted in this connection,
+and especially for details of the theory and
+the structure of this prime mover.</p>
+
+<hr class='c041'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Tait: Thermodynamics, p. 13.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Account of Carnot’s Theory of the Motive Power of
+Heat; Sir Wm. Thomson; Trans. Roy. Soc. of Edinburgh,
+xvi. 1849; and Math. and Phys. Papers, xli. vol. 1
+(Cambridge, 1882), p. 113. In this paper the corrections due
+to the introduction of the dynamic theory are first applied.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. See the Appendix for these memoranda, and for other
+previously unpublished matter.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Sadi Carnot’s <i>Réflexions sur la puissance motrice du
+feu</i> (Paris, Bachelier 1824) was long ago completely exhausted.
+As but a small number of copies were printed,
+this remarkable work remained long unknown to the
+earlier writers on Thermodynamics. It was therefore for
+the benefit of savants unable to study a work out of print,
+as well as to render honor to the memory of Sadi Carnot,
+that the new publishers of the <i>Annales Scientifique de
+l’École Normale supérieure</i> (ii. series, t. 1, 1872) published a
+new edition, from which this translation is reproduced.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. It may be said that coal-mining has increased tenfold
+in England since the invention of the steam-engine. It is
+almost equally true in regard to the mining of copper, tin,
+and iron. The results produced in a half-century by the
+steam-engine in the mines of England are to-day paralleled
+in the gold and silver mines of the New World—mines
+of which the working declined from day to day, principally
+on account of the insufficiency of the motors employed
+in the draining and the extraction of the minerals.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. We say, to lessen the dangers of journeys. In fact,
+although the use of the steam-engine on ships is attended
+by some danger which has been greatly exaggerated, this
+is more than compensated by the power of following always
+an appointed and well-known route, of resisting the
+force of the winds which would drive the ship towards
+the shore, the shoals, or the rocks.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. We use here the expression motive power to express
+the useful effect that a motor is capable of producing.
+This effect can always be likened to the elevation of a
+weight to a certain height. It has, as we know, as a
+measure, the product of the weight multiplied by the
+height to which it is raised.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. We distinguish here the steam-engine from the heat-engine
+in general. The latter may make use of any agent
+whatever, of the vapor of water or of any other, to develop
+the motive power of heat.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Certain engines at high pressure throw the steam out
+into the atmosphere instead of the condenser. They are
+used specially in places where it would be difficult to
+procure a stream of cold water sufficient to produce
+condensation.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. The existence of water in the liquid state here
+necessarily assumed, since without it the steam-engine
+could not be fed, supposes the existence of a pressure
+capable of preventing this water from vaporizing, consequently
+of a pressure equal or superior to the tension
+of vapor at that temperature. If such a pressure were
+not exerted by the atmospheric air, there would be instantly
+produced a quantity of steam sufficient to give
+rise to that tension, and it would be necessary always
+to overcome this pressure in order to throw out the
+steam from the engines into the new atmosphere. Now
+this is evidently equivalent to overcoming the tension
+which the steam retains after its condensation, as effected
+by ordinary means.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>If a very high temperature existed at the surface of
+our globe, as it seems certain that it exists in its interior,
+all the waters of the ocean would be in a state of vapor
+in the atmosphere, and no portion of it would be found
+in a liquid state.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. It is considered unnecessary to explain here what is
+quantity of caloric or quantity of heat (for we employ
+these two expressions indifferently), or to describe how we
+measure these quantities by the calorimeter. Nor will we
+explain what is meant by latent heat, degree of temperature,
+specific heat, etc. The reader should be familiarized with
+these terms through the study of the elementary treatises
+of physics or of chemistry.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. We may perhaps wonder here that the body <i>B</i> being
+at the same temperature as the steam is able to condense
+it. Doubtless this is not strictly possible, but the slightest
+difference of temperature will determine the condensation,
+which suffices to establish the justice of our reasoning. It
+is thus that, in the differential calculus, it is sufficient that
+we can conceive the neglected quantities indefinitely reducible
+in proportion to the quantities retained in the
+equations, to make certain of the exact result.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The body <i>B</i> condenses the steam without changing its
+own temperature—this results from our supposition. We
+have admitted that this body may be maintained at a constant
+temperature. We take away the caloric as the steam
+furnishes it. This is the condition in which the metal of
+the condenser is found when the liquefaction of the steam
+is accomplished by applying cold water externally, as was
+formerly done in several engines. Similarly, the water of
+a reservoir can be maintained at a constant level if the
+liquid flows out at one side as it flows in at the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>One could even conceive the bodies <i>A</i> and <i>B</i> maintaining
+the same temperature, although they might lose or gain
+certain quantities of heat. If, for example, the body <i>A</i>
+were a mass of steam ready to become liquid, and the body
+<i>B</i> a mass of ice ready to melt, these bodies might, as we
+know, furnish or receive caloric without thermometric
+change.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. Note A, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. We assume here no chemical action between the bodies
+employed to realize the motive power of heat. The chemical
+action which takes place in the furnace is, in some
+sort, a preliminary action,—an operation destined not to
+produce immediately motive power, but to destroy the
+equilibrium of the caloric, to produce a difference of temperature
+which may finally give rise to motion.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. This kind of loss is found in all steam-engines. In
+fact, the water destined to feed the boiler is always cooler
+than the water which it already contains. There occurs
+between them a useless re-establishment of equilibrium of
+caloric. We are easily convinced, <i><span lang="fr">à posteriori</span></i>, that this re-establishment
+of equilibrium causes a loss of motive power
+if we reflect that it would have been possible to previously
+heat the feed-water by using it as condensing water in a
+small accessory engine, when the steam drawn from the
+large boiler might have been used, and where the condensation
+might be produced at a temperature intermediate
+between that of the boiler and that of the principal condenser.
+The power produced by the small engine would
+have cost no loss of heat, since all that which had been
+used would have returned into the boiler with the water of
+condensation.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. The matter here dealt with being entirely new, we are
+obliged to employ expressions not in use as yet, and which
+perhaps are less clear than is desirable.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. Note 13, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. We tacitly assume in our demonstration, that when a
+body has experienced any changes, and when after a certain
+number of transformations it returns to precisely its
+original state, that is, to that state considered in respect to
+density, to temperature, to mode of aggregation—let us
+suppose, I say, that this body is found to contain the same
+quantity of heat that it contained at first, or else that the
+quantities of heat absorbed or set free in these different
+transformations are exactly compensated. This fact has
+never been called in question. It was first admitted without
+reflection, and verified afterwards in many cases by
+experiments with the calorimeter. To deny it would be
+to overthrow the whole theory of heat to which it serves
+as a basis. For the rest, we may say in passing, the main
+principles on which the theory of heat rests require the
+most careful examination. Many experimental facts appear
+almost inexplicable in the present state of this theory.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. We will suppose, in what follows, the reader to be <i>au
+courant</i> with the later progress of modern Physics in regard
+to gaseous substances and heat.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. M. Poisson, to whom this figure is due, has shown
+that it accords very well with the result of an experiment
+of MM. Clement and Desormes on the return of air into a
+vacuum, or rather, into air slightly rarefied. It also accords
+very nearly with results found by MM. Gay-Lussac
+and Welter. (See note, p. <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.)</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. The law of Mariotte, which is here made the foundation
+upon which to establish our demonstration, is one of
+the best authenticated physical laws. It has served as a
+basis to many theories verified by experience, and which
+in turn verify all the laws on which they are founded.
+We can cite also, as a valuable verification of Mariotte’s
+law and also of that of MM. Gay-Lussac and Dalton, for a
+great difference of temperature, the experiments of MM.
+Dulong and Petit. (See <i>Annales de Chimie et de Physique</i>,
+Feb. 1818, t. vii. p. 122.)</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The more recent experiments of Davy and Faraday can
+also be cited.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The theories that we deduce here would not perhaps be
+exact if applied outside of certain limits either of density
+or temperature. They should be regarded as true only
+within the limits in which the laws of Mariotte and of
+MM. Gay-Lussac and Dalton are themselves proven.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. When the volume is reduced ¹⁄₁₁₆, that is, when it
+becomes ¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆ of what it was at first, the temperature rises
+one degree. Another reduction of ¹⁄₁₁₆ carries the volume
+to (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)<sup>2</sup>, and the temperature should rise another degree.
+After <i>x</i> similar reductions the volume becomes (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)<sup><i>x</i></sup>, and
+the temperature should be raised <i>x</i> degrees. If we suppose
+(¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)<sup><i>x</i></sup> = ¹⁄₁₄, and if we take the logarithms of both, we find</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>x</i> = about 300°.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>If we suppose (¹¹⁵⁄₁₁₆)<sup><i>x</i></sup> = ½, we find</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>x</i> = 80°;</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c013'>which shows that air compressed one half rises 80°.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>All this is subject to the hypothesis that the specific heat
+of air does not change, although the volume diminishes.
+But if, for the reasons hereafter given (pp. <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>), we regard
+the specific heat of air compressed one half as
+reduced in the relation of 700 to 616, the number 80° must
+be multiplied by ⁷⁰⁰⁄₆₁₆, which raises it to 90°.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. MM. Gay-Lussac and Welter have found by direct
+experiments, cited in the <i>Mécanique Céleste</i> and in the
+<i>Annales de Chimie et de Physique</i>, July, 1822, p. 267, that
+the ratio between the specific heat at constant pressure and
+the specific heat at constant volume varies very little with
+the density of the gas. According to what we have just
+seen, the difference should remain constant, and not the
+ratio. As, further, the specific heat of gases for a given
+weight varies very little with the density, it is evident that
+the ratio itself experiences but slight changes.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The ratio between the specific heat of atmospheric air at
+constant pressure and at constant volume is, according
+to MM. Gay-Lussac and Welter, 1.3748, a number almost
+constant for all pressures, and even for all temperatures.
+We have come, through other considerations, to the number
+<span class='fraction'><span class='under'>267 + 116</span><br>267</span> = 1.44, which differs from the former <span class='fraction'>1<br><span class='vincula'>20</span></span>, and we
+have used this number to prepare a table of the specific
+heats of gases at constant volume. So we need not regard
+this table as very exact, any more than the table given on
+p. <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>. These tables are mainly intended to demonstrate
+the laws governing specific heats of aeriform fluids.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Note C, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Note D, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. Note E, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. We find (<i>Annales de Chimie et de Physique</i>, July, 1818,
+p. 294) in a memoir of M. Petit an estimate of the motive
+power of heat applied to air and to vapor of water. This
+estimate leads us to attribute a great advantage to atmospheric
+air, but it is derived by a method of considering the
+action of heat which is quite imperfect.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. Note F, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. Those that we need are the expansive force acquired
+by solids and liquids by a given increase of temperature,
+and the quantity of heat absorbed or relinquished in the
+changes of volume of these bodies.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. The recent experiments of M. Oerstedt on the compressibility
+of water have shown that, for a pressure of
+five atmospheres, the temperature of this liquid exhibits
+no appreciable change. (<i>See Annales de <a id='t110'></a>Chimie et de
+Physique</i>, Feb. 1823, p. 192.)</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Note G, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. We find in the work called <i>De la Richesse Minérale</i>, by
+M. Heron de Villefosse, vol. iii. p. 50 and following, a
+good description of the steam-engines actually in use in
+mining. In England the steam-engine has been very fully
+discussed in the <i>Encyclopedia Britannica</i>. Some of the
+data here employed are drawn from the latter work.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. Note I, Appendix B.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. From <i>Transactions of the Edinburgh Royal Society</i>, xiv.
+1849; <i>Annales de Chimie</i>, xxxv. 1852.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. Published in 1824, in a work entitled “<cite><span lang="fr">Réflexions sur
+la Puissance Motrice du Feu, et sur les Machines Propres à
+Developer cette Puissance. Par S. Carnot.</span></cite>” [Note of Nov.
+5, 1881. The original work has now been republished,
+with a biographical notice, Paris, 1878.]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. An account of the first part of a series of researches
+undertaken by Mons. Regnault, by order of the late
+French Government, for ascertaining the various physical
+data of importance in the theory of the steam-engine, has
+been recently published (under the title “<i>Relation des
+Expériences</i>,” etc.) in the <i>Mémoires de l’Institut</i>, of which
+it constitutes the twenty-first volume (1847). The second
+part of these researches has not yet been published. [Note
+of Nov. 5, 1881. The continuation of these researches has
+now been published; thus we have for the whole series,
+vol. i. in 1847; vol. ii. in 1862; and vol. iii. in 1870.]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. Carnot, p. <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. The <i>evolution</i> of heat in a fixed conductor, through
+which a galvanic current is sent from any source whatever,
+has long been known to the scientific world; but it was
+pointed out by Mr. Joule that we cannot infer from any
+previously-published experimental researches, the actual
+<i>generation</i> of heat when the current originates in electro-magnetic
+induction; since the question occurs, <i>is the heat
+which is evolved in one part of the closed conductor merely
+transferred from those parts which are subject to the inducing
+influence?</i> Mr. Joule, after a most careful experimental
+investigation with reference to this question, finds that it
+must be answered in the negative. (See a paper “On the
+Calorific Effects of Magneto-Electricity, and on the Mechanical
+Value of Heat; by J. P. Joule, Esq.” Read before
+the British Association at Cork in 1843, and subsequently
+communicated by the Author to the <i>Philosophical
+Magazine</i>, vol. xxiii., pp. 263, 347, 435.)</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Before we can finally conclude that heat is absolutely
+generated in such operations, it would be necessary to
+prove that the inducing magnet does not become lower in
+temperature, and thus compensate for the heat evolved in
+the conductor. I am not aware that any examination with
+reference to the truth of this conjecture has been instituted;
+but, in the case where the inducing body is a pure electro-magnet
+(without any iron), the experiments actually performed
+by Mr. Joule render the conclusion probable that
+the heat evolved in the wire of the electro-magnet is not
+affected by the inductive action, otherwise than through
+the reflected influence which increases the strength of its
+own current.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. So generally is Carnot’s principle tacitly admitted as an
+axiom, that its application in this case has never, so far as
+I am aware, been questioned by practical engineers. (1849).</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. When “thermal agency” is thus spent in conducting
+heat through a solid, what becomes of the mechanical
+effect which it might produce? Nothing can be lost in
+the operations of nature—no energy can be destroyed.
+What effect, then, is produced in place of the mechanical
+effect which is lost? A perfect theory of heat imperatively
+demands an answer to this question; yet no answer
+can be given in the present state of science. A few years
+ago, a similar confession must have been made with reference
+to the mechanical effect lost in a fluid set in motion in
+the interior of a rigid closed vessel, and allowed to come to
+rest by its own internal friction; but in this case the
+foundation of a solution of the difficulty has been actually
+found in Mr. Joule’s discovery of the generation
+of heat, by the internal friction of a fluid in motion. Encouraged
+by this example, we may hope that the very perplexing
+question in the theory of heat, by which we are
+at present arrested, will before long be cleared up.
+[Note of Sept., 1881. The Theory of the Dissipation of
+Energy completely answers this question and removes the
+difficulty.]</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>It might appear that the difficulty would be entirely
+avoided by abandoning Carnot’s fundamental axiom; a
+view which is strongly urged by Mr. Joule (at the conclusion
+of his paper “On the Changes of Temperature produced
+by the Rarefaction and Condensation of Air.” <i>Phil.
+Mag.</i>, May 1845, vol. xxvi.) If we do so, however, we
+meet with innumerable other difficulties—insuperable
+without farther experimental investigation, and an entire
+reconstruction of the theory of heat from its foundation.
+It is in reality to experiment that we must look—either
+for a verification of Carnot’s axiom, and an explanation of
+the difficulty we have been considering; or for an entirely
+new basis of the Theory of Heat.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. For a demonstration, see § 29.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. A case minutely examined in another paper, to be laid
+before the Society at the present meeting. “Theoretical
+Considerations on the Effect of Pressure in Lowering the
+Freezing-point of Water,” by Prof. James Thomson.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. In all that follows, the pressure of the atmosphere on
+the upper side of the piston will be included in the applied
+forces, which, in the successive operations described, are
+sometimes overcome by the upward motion, and sometimes
+yielded to in the motion downwards. It will be unnecessary,
+in reckoning at the end of a cycle of operations,
+to take into account the work thus spent upon the atmosphere,
+and the restitution which has been made, since
+these precisely compensate for one another.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. Maxwell has simplified the
+correction by beginning the cycle with Carnot’s second
+operation, and completing it through his third, fourth,
+and first operations, with his third operation nearly as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='c009'><i>let the piston be pushed down to any position E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub></i>;</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>then Carnot’s fourth operation altered to the following:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>let the piston be pushed down from E<sub>3</sub>F<sub>3</sub> until the temperature
+reaches its primitive value S</i>;</p>
+
+<p class='c013'>and lastly, Carnot’s first operation altered to the following:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'><i>let the piston rise to its primitive position</i>.]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. In Carnot’s work some perplexity is introduced with
+reference to the temperature of the water, which, in the
+operations he describes, is not brought back exactly to
+what it was at the commencement; but the difficulty
+which arises is explained by the author. No such difficulty
+occurs with reference to the cycle of operation described
+in the text, for which I am indebted to Mons. Clapeyron.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. Thus, <i>dq</i>/<i>dv</i> will be the partial differential coefficient,
+with respect to <i>v</i>, of that function of <i>v</i> and <i>t</i> which expresses
+the quantity of heat that must be added to a mass of air
+when in a “standard” state (such as at the temperature zero,
+and under the atmospheric pressure), to bring it to the
+temperature <i>t</i> and the volume <i>v</i>. That there is such a
+function, of two independent variables <i>v</i> and <i>t</i>, is merely
+an analytical expression of Carnot’s fundamental axiom, as
+applied to a mass of air. The general principle may be
+analytically stated in the following terms:—If <i>Mdv</i> denote
+the accession of heat received by a mass of any kind, not
+possessing a destructible texture, when the volume is increased
+by <i>dv</i>, the temperature being kept constant, and if
+<i>Ndt</i> denote the amount of heat which must be supplied to
+raise the temperature by <i>dt</i>, without any alteration of volume;
+then <i>Mdv</i> + <i>Ndt</i> must be the differential of a function
+of <i>v</i> and <i>t</i>. [Note of Nov. 5, 1881. In the corrected
+theory it is (<i>M</i> − <i>Jp</i>)<i>dv</i> + <i>Ndt</i>, that is a complete differential,
+not <i>Mdv</i> + <i>Ndt</i>. See <i>Dynamical Theory of Heat</i> (Art. <span class='fss'>XLVIII.</span>,
+below), § 20.]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. We might also investigate another relation, to express
+the fact that there is no accession or removal of heat during
+either the second or the fourth operation; but it will be
+seen that this will not affect the result in the text, although
+it would enable us to determine both φ and ω in terms of τ.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. This result might have been obtained by applying the
+usual notation of the integral calculus to express the
+area of the curvilinear quadrilateral, which, according to
+Clapeyron’s graphical construction, would be found to
+represent the entire mechanical effect gained in the cycle
+of operations of the air-engine. It is not necessary, however,
+to enter into the details of this investigation, as the
+formula (3), and the consequences derived from it, include
+the whole theory of the air-engine, in the best practical
+form; and the investigation of it which I have given in the
+text will probably give as clear a view of the reasoning on
+which it is founded as could be obtained by the graphical
+method, which in this case is not so valuable as it is from
+its simplicity in the case of the steam-engine.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. This paragraph is the demonstration, referred to above,
+of the proposition stated in § 13, as it is readily seen that
+it is applicable to any conceivable kind of thermodynamic
+engine.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. The results of these investigations are exhibited in
+Tables I and II.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. It is, comparatively speaking, of little consequence to
+know accurately the value of σ, for the factor (1 − σ) of
+the expression for μ, since it is so small (being less than
+¹⁄₁₇₀₀ for all temperatures between 0° and 100°) that, unless
+all the data are known with more accuracy than we can
+count upon at present, we might neglect it altogether, and
+take <i>dp</i>/<i>kdt</i> simply, as the expression for μ, without committing
+any error of important magnitude.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. This is well established, within the ordinary atmospheric
+limits, in Regnault’s Études Météorologiques, in the
+<i>Annales de Chimie</i>, vol. xv., 1846.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. It appears that the vol. of 1 kilog. must be 1.69076 according
+to the data here assumed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The density of saturated steam at 100° is taken as ¹⁄₁₆₉₃.5
+of that of water at its maximum. Rankine takes it as ¹⁄₁₆₉₆.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. The part of this expression in the first vinculum (see
+Regnault, end of ninth memoir) is what is known as “the
+total heat” of a pound of steam, or the amount of heat
+necessary to convert a pound of water at 0° into a pound
+of saturated steam at <i>t°</i>; which, according to “Watt’s
+law” thus approximately verified, would be constant.
+The second part, which would consist of the single term
+<i>t</i>, if the specific heat of water were constant for all temperatures,
+is the number of thermic units necessary to raise
+the temperature of a pound of water from 0° to <i>t°</i>, and
+expresses empirically the results of Regnault’s experiments
+on the specific heat of water (see end of the tenth
+memoir), described in the work already referred to.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. In strictness, the 230th is the last degree for which the
+experimental data are complete; but the data for the 231st
+may readily be assumed in a sufficiently satisfactory
+manner.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. The numbers here tabulated may also be regarded as
+<i>the actual values of μ for t</i> = ½, <i>t</i> = 1½, <i>t</i> = 2½, <i>t</i> = 3½, etc.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. For at the end of the fourth operation the whole mass
+is liquid, and at the temperature <i>S</i>. Now, this state might
+be arrived at by first compressing the vapor into water at
+the temperature <i>t</i>, and then raising the temperature of the
+liquid to <i>S</i>; and however this state may be arrived at, there
+cannot, on the whole, be any heat added to or subtracted
+from the contents of the cylinder, since, during the fourth
+operation, there is neither gain nor loss of heat. This
+reasoning is, of course, founded on Carnot’s fundamental
+principle, which is tacitly assumed in the commonly-received
+ideas connected with “Watt’s law,” the “latent
+heat of steam,” and “the total heat of steam.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. Thus, from Carnot’s calculations, we find, in the case
+of alcohol 4.035, and in the case of water 3.648, instead
+of 3.963 and 3.658, which are Clapeyron’s results in the
+same cases.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. A still closer agreement must be expected when more
+accurate experimental data are afforded with reference to
+the other media. Mons. Regnault informs me that he is
+engaged in completing some researches, from which we
+may expect, possibly before the end of the present year,
+to be furnished with all the data for five or six different
+liquids which we possess at present for water. It is therefore
+to be hoped that, before long, a most important test of
+the validity of Carnot’s theory will be afforded.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. The <i>Napierian</i> logarithm of <i>V</i>/<i>V′</i> is here understood.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. Carnot varies the statement of his theorem, and illustrates
+it in a passage, pp. <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, 82, of which the following is
+translation:</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“<i>When a gas varies in volume without any change of temperature,
+the quantities of heat absorbed or evolved by this gas
+are in arithmetical progression, if the augmentation or diminutions
+of volume are in geometrical progression.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“When we compress a litre of air maintained at the temperature
+10°, and reduce it to half a litre, it disengages a
+certain quantity of heat. If, again, the volume be reduced
+from half a litre to a quarter of a litre, from a quarter to
+an eighth, and so on the quantities of heat successively
+evolved will be the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>“If, in place of compressing the air, we allow it to expand
+to two litres, four litres, eight litres, etc., it will be
+necessary to supply equal quantities of heat to maintain the
+temperature always at the same degree.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. The best figure (1896) is <i>J</i> = 778 ft.-lbs. = 1 B.T.U., or
+<i>J</i> = 426.8 kgm. = 1 calorie, and probably with great accuracy.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. Or the capacity of a unit of volume for heat.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. Carnot suggests a combination of the two principles,
+with air as the medium for receiving the heat at a very
+high temperature from the furnace; and a second medium,
+alternately in the state of saturated vapor and liquid water,
+to receive the heat, discharged at an intermediate temperature
+from the air, and transmit it to the coldest part of
+the apparatus. It is possible that a complex arrangement
+of this kind might be invented which would enable us to
+take the heat at a higher temperature, and discharge it at a
+lower temperature than would be practicable in any simple
+air-engine or simple steam-engine. If so, it would no
+doubt be equally possible, and perhaps more convenient,
+to employ steam alone, but to use it at a very high temperature
+not in contact with water in the hottest part of
+the apparatus, instead of, as in the steam-engine, always
+in a saturated state.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. It is probably this invention to which Carnot alludes
+in the following passage: “<span lang="fr">Il a été fait, dit-on, tout récemment
+en Angleterre des essais heureux sur le développement
+de la puissance motrice par l’action de la
+chaleur sur l’air atmosphérique. Nous ignorons entièrement
+ne quoi ces essais ont consisté, si toutefois ils sont
+réels.</span>”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. From this point of view, we see very clearly how imperfect
+is the steam-engine, even after all Watt’s improvements.
+For to “push the principle of expansion to the
+utmost,” we must allow the steam, before leaving the cylinder,
+to expand until its pressure is the same as that of
+the vapor in the condenser. According to “Watt’s law,”
+its temperature would then be the same as (actually a little
+above, as Regnault has shown) that of the condenser, and
+hence the steam-engine worked in this most advantageous
+way has in reality the very fault that Watt found in Newcomen’s
+engine. This defect is partially remedied by
+Hornblower’s system of using a separate expansion cylinder,
+an arrangement the advantages of which did not
+escape Carnot’s notice, although they have not been recognized
+extensively among practical engineers, until within
+the last few years.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. I am indebted to the kindness of Professor Gordon of
+Glasgow for the information regarding the various cases
+given in the text.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. In different Cornish engines, the pressure in the boiler
+is from 2½ to 5 atmospheres; and, therefore, as we find
+from Regnault’s table of the pressure of saturated steam,
+the temperature of the water in the boiler must, in all of
+them, lie between 128° and 152°. For the better class of
+engines, the average temperature of the water in the boiler
+may be estimated at 140°, the corresponding pressure of
+steam being 3½ atmospheres.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. This number agrees very closely with the number
+corresponding to the fall from 100° to 0°, given in Table
+II. Hence, the fall from 140° to 30° of the scale of the
+air-thermometer is equivalent, with reference to motive
+power, to the fall from 100° to 0°.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. It being assumed that the temperatures of the boiler
+and condenser are the same as those of the Cornish engines.
+If, however, the pressure be lower, two atmospheres,
+for instance, the numbers would stand thus: The
+temperature in the boiler would be only 121. Consequently,
+for each pound of steam evaporated, only 614
+units of heat would be required; and therefore the work
+performed for each unit of heat transmitted would be
+160.3 foot-pounds, which is <i>more</i> than according to the
+estimate in the text. On the other hand, the range of temperatures,
+or the fall utilized, is only from 131 to 30, instead
+of from 140 to 30°, and consequently (Table II.), the
+theoretical duty for each unit of heat is only 371 foot-pounds.
+Hence, if the engine, to work according to the
+specification, requires a pressure of only 15 lbs. on the
+square inch (i.e., a total steam-pressure of two atmospheres),
+its performance is <span class='fraction'><span class='under'>160.3</span><br>371</span> or 43.2 per cent of its
+theoretical duty.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. If, in this case again, the pressure required in the boiler
+to make the engine work according to the contract were
+only 15 lbs. on the square inch, we should have a different
+estimate of the economy, for which see Table B, at the
+end of this paper.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. These engines are provided with separate expansion
+cylinders, which have been recently added to them by
+Mr. M‘Naught of Glasgow.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. [Note added March 15, 1881. Total work for thermal unit, 1390
+(Joule), 377.1 corrected by the dynamical theory, March 15, 1851.</p>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>377.1</td>
+ <td class='c030'>=</td>
+ <td class='c022'>.2713 × 1390,</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c023'>253</td>
+ <td class='c030'>=</td>
+ <td class='c022'>.1820 × 1390 = <span class='fraction'>1<br><span class='vincula'>5.49</span></span> × 1390.]</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
+<p class='c010'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. Pressure 15 lbs. on the square inch.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c003'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c042'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c030'>Page</th>
+ <th class='c030'>Changed from</th>
+ <th class='c031'>Changed to</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><a href='#t110'>110</a></td>
+ <td class='c023'>no appreciable change. (See Annales de Ohimie et de</td>
+ <td class='c022'>no appreciable change. (See Annales de Chimie et de</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c021'><a href='#t246'>246</a></td>
+ <td class='c023'>If, to abridge, we call <i>N</i> the quantity <span class='fraction'><i>P</i><br><span class='vincula'>726</span></span>, the</td>
+ <td class='c022'>If, to abridge, we call <i>N</i> the quantity <span class='fraction'><i>P</i><br><span class='vincula'>267</span></span>, the</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1'>
+ <li>Fixed typos; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Renumbered footnotes and moved them all to the end of the final chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78610 ***</div>
+</body>
+<!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57i (with regex) on 2026-05-05 15:17:44 GMT -->
+</html>
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diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78610
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78610)