Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Thomas Andrews" ¶ 8
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Thomas and Andrews
Shortly after, in 1869, Irish chemist Thomas Andrews studied the phase transition from a liquid to a gas and coined the term critical point to describe the instant at which a gas and a liquid were indistinguishable as phases, and Dutch physicist Johannes van der Waals supplied the theoretical framework which allowed the prediction of critical behavior based on measurements at much higher temperatures.
* 1813 Thomas Andrews, Irish chemist ( d. 1885 )
* 1873 Thomas Andrews, British shipbuilder on the RMS Titanic ( d. 1912 )
* 1885 Thomas Andrews, Irish chemist ( b. 1813 )
He used the term as early as 1871, while in 1869, Thomas Muir, then of the University of St Andrews, vacillated between rad, radial and radian.
Following its release, Barry Andrews left the group ; the group initially sought a new keyboard player and Thomas Dolby was among those who auditioned ) but they eventually selected guitarist and keyboardist Dave Gregory.
** Thomas Andrews, Jr., Irish shipbuilder ( b. 1873 ).
* November 26 Thomas Andrews, Irish chemist ( b. 1813 )
* December 19 Thomas Andrews, Irish chemist ( d. 1885 )
Image: Mr and Mrs Andrews 1748-49. jpg | Thomas Gainsborough, Mr and Mrs Andrews, 1750
In 1996, it was made into a film of the same name by Anthony Minghella, starring Ralph Fiennes, Kristin Scott Thomas, Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe, Colin Firth and Naveen Andrews.
Spoiled heiress Ellen " Ellie " Andrews ( Claudette Colbert ) marries fortune-hunter " King " Westley ( Jameson Thomas ) against the wishes of her extremely wealthy father ( Walter Connolly ) who has the marriage annulled.
In another department of physical chemistry, he investigated the expansion of liquids with heat, and devised a formula similar to Gay-Lussac's law of the uniformity of the expansion of gases, while in 1861 he anticipated Thomas Andrews ' conception of the critical temperature of gases by defining the absolute boiling-point of a substance as the temperature at which cohesion and heat of vaporization become equal to zero and the liquid changes to vapor, irrespective of the pressure and volume.
* Thomas Andrews Drake
Thomas Andrews Hendricks ( September 7, 1819November 25, 1885 ) was an American politician who served as a Representative and a Senator from Indiana, the 16th Governor of Indiana ( 1873 1877 ), and the 21st Vice President of the United States ( 1885 ).
* Thomas S. Andrews ( 1992 )
* Sally Hemings: An American Scandal, a CBS television miniseries ( Air dates: 2 / 13 / 00 and 2 / 16 / 00 ; Writer: Tina Andrews Director: Charles Haid ; With Carmen Ejogo as Hemings and Sam Neill as Thomas Jefferson ) As PBS noted in a Frontline program, " Though many quarrelled with the portrayal of Hemings as unrealistically modern and heroic, no major historian challenged the series ' premise that Hemings and Jefferson had a 38-year relationship that produced children.
Members of the Clementon Borough Council are President Carol Andrews, Eva Busch, Doreen Closs, Dave Cornwell, William Dougherty and Thomas Weaver
* The Reverend Professor Thomas Vincent Tymms DD ( St Andrews ), Professor of Theology and author
In the early days of its existence it was nicknamed " Spohntown " and " Squeelgut ," but was named Independence by Thomas B. Andrews, rather in a spirit of defiance at the attitude of Bellville, which was not a friendly one to the aspiring village.
David Bruce, aged five, became king on 7 June 1329 on the death of his father Robert I. Walter the Steward had died earlier on 9 April 1327 and the orphaned eleven-year-old Robert was placed under the guardianship of his uncle, Sir James Stewart of Durrisdeer who along with Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, and William Lindsey, Archdeacon of St Andrews were appointed as joint Guardians of the kingdom.
Thomas, Mrs. Thelma Sloan, Ralph Hunter, Henry Green, Harold Harrington, and the current mayor at this writing is Don Andrews Jr.
Many of the streets and roads are named after the city's founders, such as Ira Blood, Sewall Andrews, and Thomas Sugden.
Other Anglo-Irish scientists include George Johnstone Stoney, Thomas Romney Robinson, James MacCullagh, Edward Sabine, Thomas Andrews, William Parsons, George Salmon, George FitzGerald, and in the 20th century, John Joly and Ernest Walton.

Thomas and Australian
* 1826 Thomas Alexander Browne, Australian writer ( d. 1915 )
* 1975 Petria Thomas, Australian swimmer
* 1958 Grant Thomas, Australian rules footballer
* 1950 Sir Thomas Blamey becomes the only Australian-born Field Marshal in Australian history.
* 1792 Thomas Mitchell, Australian explorer ( d. 1855 )
* 1971 Irwin Thomas, Australian singer ( Southern Sons, Electric Mary and She Said Yes )
* 1987 Josh Thomas, Australian comedian, actor, and writer
* 1935 Thomas Keneally, Australian author
The Supreme Commander of operations was the United States General Douglas Macarthur, with Australian General Thomas Blamey taking a direct role in planning and operations being essentially directed by staff at New Guinea Force headquarters in Port Moresby.
* Thomas Gerald Room ( 1902-1986 ), Australian mathematician
* 1857 Thomas Groube, Australian cricketer ( d. 1927 )
* May 27 Sir Thomas Albert Blamey, Australian soldier ( b. 1884 )
* April 28 Josiah Thomas, Australian politician ( d. 1933 )
** Thomas Henley, Australian politician ( d. 1935 )
* February 5 Josiah Thomas, Australian politician ( b. 1863 )
Australian geographer Thomas Griffith Taylor proposed a classification of towns based on their age and pattern of land use.
The ranges were named in 1836 by Surveyor General of New South Wales Sir Thomas Mitchell after the Grampian Mountains in his native Scotland, but are also known by the name Gariwerd, from one of the local Australian Aboriginal languages, either the Jardwadjali or Djab Wurrung language.
Thomas Burke won both the 100 metres and 400 metres, a feat not since repeated, while London-based Australian Edwin Flack won the 800 and 1500 metres races.
* Thomas Bath ( 1875 1956 ), Australian politician and trade unionist
* Thomas William Glasgow ( 1876-1955 ), Australian Army Major General
Other prominent persons born and educated in Oamaru include Des Wilson, founder of the UK homelessness charity, Shelter ; Australian Prime Minister Chris Watson ; New Zealand politicians Arnold Nordmeyer and William Steward ; Cardinal Thomas Stafford Williams ; Malcolm Grant, President and Provost of University College London ; and All Blacks rugby union captain Richie McCaw.
The Australian academic Thomas Alured Faunce has developed the case that national comparative cost-effectiveness assessment systems should be viewed as measuring ' health innovation ' as an evidence-based concept distinct from valuing innovation through the operation of competitive markets ( a method which requires strong anti-trust laws to be effective ) on the basis that both methods of assessing innovation in pharmaceuticals are mentioned in annex 2C. 1 of the AUSFTA.
Australian writers who have obtained international renown include the Nobel winning author Patrick White, as well as authors Peter Carey, Thomas Keneally, Colleen McCullough, Nevil Shute and Morris West.
The extraordinary circumstances of the convict foundations of Australian theatre are recounted in Thomas Keneally's novel The Playmaker.
As U. S. Army engineers were few in numbers, Casey worked closely with his Australian Army counterpart at General Sir Thomas Blamey's Allied Land Forces headquarters, Major General Clive Steele.

0.759 seconds.