Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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Receiver, we afterwards repeated the Ex
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periment, to try what change the exſucti
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on of the external Air would produce in
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the Water, after the internal and latitant
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Air had (as is above recited) in great mea
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ſure got away in bubbles, and whether or
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no the Water would by ſtanding re-admit
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any new particles of Air in the room of
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thoſe that had forſaken it. </
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>But though
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we exhauſted the Receiver very diligent
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ly, yet we ſcarce ſaw a bubble in either
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of the Glaſſes; notwithſtanding which,
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we perceiv'd the Water to riſe about the
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breadth of a Barly-corn, or more, in the
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Neck of that Glaſs wherein the ſolid Cy
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linder had been put; The Liquor in the
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other Glaſs not ſenſibly ſwelling. </
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>And laſtly, upon the letting in of the
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Air, the Water in the ſtraightned Neck
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ſoon ſubſided to the mark above which
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it had ſwollen, which whether it ought
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to be aſcrib'd to the ſame ſmall expanſion
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of the parts of the Water it ſelf, or to
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the rarifaction of ſome yet latitant Air
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broken into ſuch ſmall particles, as to e
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ſcape our obſervation, ſeems not eaſily
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determinable, without ſuch further tryals,
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as would perhaps prove tedious to be re
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cited as well as to be made; though I was </
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