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4. On the Elevation of the Earth's Surface Temperature produced by Underground Heat
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
Peclet found, by his own experiments, that a body with any common unpolished non-metallic surface, kept by heat from within at 1° higher temperature than that of the air and other objects round it, loses heat from each square metre of surface at the rate of about nine kilogramme-water thermal units per hour, or, which is the same, of a gramme-water unit from each square centimetre per second. The mean conductivity of the three Edinburgh strata, in which Principal Forbes's underground thermometers were placed, is 2¾ grain-water units per second per square foot per 1° per foot rate of variation of temperature, as I have shown previously.
- Type
- Proceedings 1863-64
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1866
References
page 200 note * Trans. R.S.E., April 1860, “On the Reduction of Observations of Underground Temperature,” § 42.
page 201 note * Trans. R.S.E., April 1862, “On the Secular Cooling of the Earth,” § 18.