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  1. James Watt (5070 bytes)
    2: <div style="float:right">[[image:James Watt small.jpg]]</div>
    3: '''James Watt''' ([[January 19]], [[1736]]&ndash;[[August 19]],...
    14: ...[[Matthew Boulton]] to manufacture his improved [[Watt steam engine]].
    22: Watt adopted the [[centrifugal governor]] to regulate ...
    24: ...am energy in heating the [[piston]] and chamber. Watt developed a separate [[condenser]] chamber which ...
  2. Boulton and Watt (684 bytes)
    1: ... between '''[[Matthew Boulton]]''' and '''[[James Watt]]''', made [[steam engine]]s at their [[Soho Foun...
    3: The oldest working Boulton and Watt engine is the [[Smethwick Engine]].
    5: Another working Boulton and Watt beam engine - dating from 1812 - can be found at ...
    7: ...rking rotative steam engine, built by Boulton and Watt in [[1785]] to grind malt in [[Samuel Whitbread (...
    11: *[[Watt steam engine]]
  3. Watt steam engine (4120 bytes)
    1: [[image:watt7783.png|frame|right|Diagram of the Watt Steam Engine in its most basic form showing the i...
    2: ...ost natural power sources such as wind and water. Watt's design became synonymous with steam engines, du...
    8: Watt's idea was to separate the [[condenser|condensati...
    10: ...ent of a test engine. This proved frustrating and Watt repeatedly almost gave up on the project, only to...
    12: ...en engine. Since the changes were fairly limited, Watt and Boulton licensed the idea to existing Newcome...

Page text matches

  1. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    10: ...Image:Maquina vapor Watt ETSIIM.jpg|thumb|300px|A Watt steam engine in [[Madrid]]. The development of th...
    22: ...dn’t worry about law and order, and set their minds into manufacturing. People earned a lot of money ...
    94: ...ir that had passed through a water wheel. [[James Watt]]'s invention of rotary motion in the 1780s enabl...
    108: ...ar was used for the movement of goods to the Midlands which had been imported into [[Bristol]] from abr...
    124: ... link the major manufacturing centres in the midlands with seaports and with London, at that time the l...
  2. Actinium (7046 bytes)
    82: | 12 [[watt per metre-kelvin|W/(m*K)]]
    149: ...ron capture]]. It has a half-life of 69 [[nanoseconds|ns]]. Actinium also has 2 [[meta state]]s.
  3. James Watt (5070 bytes)
    2: <div style="float:right">[[image:James Watt small.jpg]]</div>
    3: '''James Watt''' ([[January 19]], [[1736]]&ndash;[[August 19]],...
    14: ...[[Matthew Boulton]] to manufacture his improved [[Watt steam engine]].
    22: Watt adopted the [[centrifugal governor]] to regulate ...
    24: ...am energy in heating the [[piston]] and chamber. Watt developed a separate [[condenser]] chamber which ...
  4. Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
    143: * [[1769]]: [[Steam engine]]: [[James Watt]]
    411: * [[1922]]: [[Radar]]: [[Robert Watson-Watt]], [[A. H. Taylor]], [[L. C. Young]], [[Gregory B...
    437: * [[1935]]: microwave [[radar]]: [[Robert Watson-Watt]]
  5. Sun (20830 bytes)
    68: | 3.827&times;10<sup>26</sup> [[watt|W]]
    144: ...million tonnes per second or 383 [[SI prefix|yottawatts]] (9.15&times;10<sup>16</sup> tons of [[Trinitro...
    147: ...sphere, before it escapes to space. The core extends from the center to about 0.2 solar radius.
    183: ...high resolution spectrum of the Sun showing thousands of elemental absorption lines ([[fraunhofer lines...
    213: ...the Sun with the naked eye delivers about 4 milliwatts of sunlight to the retina that is in the solar i...
  6. List of inventors (14020 bytes)
    225: *[[Robert Watson-Watt]], (1892-1973) &mdash; microwave [[radar]]
    226: *[[James Watt]], (1736-1819), [[Scotland]] &mdash; practical [[...
  7. Pioneer 11 (5118 bytes)
    5: ...ectric generator]]s (RTGs), which generated 144 [[Watt|W]] at Jupiter, but had decreased to 100 W by the...
  8. Morse code (33777 bytes)
    25: ..., but the term is used specifically for the two kinds of Morse code used for the [[English language|Eng...
    31: ...ode when it receives an SMS text message. These kinds of innovations could lead to a Morse code revival...
    38: ...e countries, certain parts of the amateur radio bands are still reserved for transmission of Morse code...
    44: ...or the privilege to use the [[High frequency|HF bands]]. Until 2000, proficiency at the 20 WPM level wa...
    84: ... read ''written'' Morse as above, rather the ''sounds'' of all of the letters and symbols need to be le...
  9. Lightning (33113 bytes)
    6: ...ough the discharge channels rapidly heats and expands the air, producing lightning's characteristic [[t...
    40: light a 100 [[watt]] lightbulb for 2 months), and lasts a few [[mill...
    48: ...ric_Lightning|upper atmospheric lightning]]. It tends to occur more frequently in winter storms and at ...
    51: dissipates enough energy to light a 100 [[watt]] lightbulb for up to 95 years,
    52: and lasts for tens or hundreds of milliseconds.
  10. Baltimore Orioles (15758 bytes)
    117: *44 [[Image:Us virgin islands flag_large.png|20px]] [[Elrod Hendricks]] (bullpe...
    162: *[[Jeffrey Hammonds]]
    210: *[[Eddie Watt]]
  11. Alexander Graham Bell (18688 bytes)
    23: ...and apparatus for, transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically ... by causing electrical undulat...
    70: ...ritish subject to pilot a public flight in [[Hammondsport, New York]]; J.A.D. McCurdy; and Lieutenant [...
    81: ...itted him to obtain two 350 [[horsepower]] (260 [[Watt|kW]]) engines in July [[1919]]. On [[September 9]...
  12. Windmill (7108 bytes)
    8: ... famous for their windmills include the [[Netherlands]] and [[La Mancha]], [[Spain]]. The windmills of ...
    14: ...que in low winds and be self regulating in high winds. A tower-top [[gearbox]] and [[crankshaft]] conv...
    65: ...ut: 10 mi/h: 1 Watt; 20 mi/h: 6 Watt; 30 mi/h: 21 Watt. Propeller design: ''Scrapyard Windmill Realities...
  13. Ronald Reagan (52721 bytes)
    31: ...earning mediocre grades, he made many lasting friendships. Reagan developed an early gift for [[storyte...
    62: ...e]] in the Senate from Democratic to Republican hands, giving the Republicans a majority in the Senate ...
    64: ...lls taken throughout much of the race. Reagan's landslide win in the 1984 presidential election is ofte...
    126: ...urney and waved good-bye and 'slipped the surly bonds of earth' to 'touch the face of God.'" [http://ww...
    178: ...e Interior|Interior]]||align="left"|'''[[James G. Watt]]'''||align="left"|1981&ndash;1983
  14. History of rail transport (7056 bytes)
    11: [[James Watt]], a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer, w...
    27: ...8, [[Richmond, Virginia]] served as a proving grounds for [[streetcar|electric railways]] as [[Frank J....
  15. Steamboat (11603 bytes)
    17: ...of Lancaster, [[Pennsylvania]], having learned of Watt's engine on a visit to England, made his own engi...
    25: ...es]] he ordered a [[Watt steam engine|Boulton and Watt steam engine]], and on return built the ''North R...
    42: ...cottish canals and to serve the Highlands and Islands. They were immortalised by the tales of [[Para Ha...
  16. Quran (41479 bytes)
    81: ...ding of the Qur'anic text available today corresponds exactly to that revealed to [[Muhammad]] himself:...
    127: ...led upon a "paper grave" containing tens of thousands of fragments of parchment on which verses of the ...
    139: ...c history and law. Scholars sifted the many thousands of hadith, trying to discover which were true and...
    224: * W. M. Watt and R. Bell, ''Introduction to the Qur'an'', Edin...
    299: *[http://www.truthnet.org/Islam/Watt/ W. M. Watt?s "Bell?s Introduction to the Qur'an" (online ver...
  17. Ice age (15810 bytes)
    41: ... calculated to vary by as much as 25% (from 400 [[watt|W]]/m<sup>2</sup> to 500 W/m<sup>2</sup>, see gra...
    43: ...lation has been 100 thousand years, which corresponds to changes in Earth's [[eccentricity (orbit)|ecce...
    46: ...on, as the earth moves in and out of known dust bands in the solar system. Although this is a different...
    89: The end of the last glacial also corresponds quite closely to the development of permanent hum...
    93: .... As the ice retreated and the rock dust dried, winds carried the material hundreds of miles, forming b...
  18. Literature (25676 bytes)
    11: ...ssification "literature", for example, on the grounds of a poor standard of [[grammar]] and [[syntax]],...
    15: ...s into what is real. The 20th century brought demands for [[symbolism]] or [[psychology|psychological]]...
    21: ...he words, rather than to their meaning. Metre depends on [[syllable]]s and on [[rhythm]]s of speech; rh...
    64: ...one richer in precise detail than one typically finds even in narrative poetry. This freedom also allo...
    66: See [[Ian Watt]]'s ''The Rise of the Novel''. [This definition n...
  19. Americium (6956 bytes)
    85: | 10 [[watt per metre-kelvin|W/(m*K)]]
  20. Antimony (9093 bytes)
    82: | 24.3 [[watt per metre-kelvin|W/(m*K)]]
    145: ...oxide is the most important of the antimony compounds and is primarily used in flame-retardant formulat...
    148: ...lennium_BC|3000 BC]] or earlier) in various compounds, and it was prized for its fine [[casting]] quali...
    162: Antimony and many of its compounds are [[toxic]]. Clinically, antimony poisoning is ...

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