Abstract
PERHAPS a part of the phenomena which I am about to discuss is already familiar to you all. I shall not bring forward many hypotheses. So you will perhaps ask why I should speak at all. And, in fact, apart from reference to certain facts not published hitherto, my intention is mainly to invite the interest of men younger and abler than myself in a class of phenomena which seem to constitute a new condition of matter, but on which very few have yet worked.
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By Prof. E Goldstein. A paper read before Section A of the British Association at the Australian meeting, and ordred by the General Committee of the Association to be printed in extenso.
E. Goldstein, Wiedem. Ann., liv., 371; lx., 149 Phys. Zeitschr., iii., 149; Sitzungsber. Ber. Akad. d. Wiss., 1901, 222.
E. Wiedemann and G. C. Schmidt, Wiedem. Ann., liv., 618.
F. Giesel, Ber: D. Chem. Ges., XXX., 156.
J. Elster and H. Geitel, Wiedem. Ann., lix., 487.
E. Goldstein, Verhandl. d. D. Physik., xii.
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On Salts Coloured by Kathode Rays 1 . Nature 94, 494–497 (1914). https://doi.org/10.1038/094494a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/094494a0