Abstract
IF the highest reward a teacher can reach is to start a school which will carry on his lines of research, improving his technique, extending his data and enlarging his horizon, I may well claim that my lines have fallen on pleasant and fruitful places. This reflection is not a new one, for I have had many students who have extended and improved on my experiments, but it is brought vividly to mind by the appearance of a memoir by my old pupil and colleague, Prof. W. A. Bone, in conjunction with Dr. R. P. Fraser, on the photographic analysis of carbonic oxide explosion-flames (Phil. Trans., A, 228; 1929).
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DIXON, H. The Movements of Flame in Carbonic Oxide-Oxygen Explosions: Recent Work at South Kensington. Nature 124, 580–584 (1929). https://doi.org/10.1038/124580a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/124580a0