Definitionn. electricity produced by chemical action
Last update: July 29, 2015
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Any part, being subjected to a slight shock of galvanism, became almost black: a similar effect, but in a less degree, was produced by scratching the skin with a needle. [Please select]
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Electrical measurements, as you know, are the basis of electrical science, and Fechner's measurements in galvanism, performed with the simplest self-made apparatus, are classic to this day. [Please select]
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The black specks are buoys, called _circuit-closers_, because they contain a delicate contrivance--a compound of mechanism and galvanism--which, when the buoys are bumped, _close_ the electric circuit and cause the mine to explode. [Please select]
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For Joseph Henry's achievements, see his own "Contributions to Electricity and Galvanism" (1835-42) and "On the Application of the Principle of the Galvanic Multiplier to Electromagnetic Apparatus" (1831), and the accounts of others in Henry C. [Please select]
Richardson says that artificial respiration is a much more effective means of restoring the drowned or asphyxiated than galvanism. [Please select]
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Further, I found that if during the performance of mechanical artificial respiration the heart were excited by galvanism, death is all but invariable. [Please select]
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Galvanism forms the transition to living nature, in which through the operation of the "copula" these three dynamical categories are raised to _organic_ categories. [Please select]
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He had also made many experiments in galvanism, and had found silicious earth in the skin of reeds and grass. [Please select]
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