Page:Reflections on the Motive Power of Heat.djvu/33

Rh proofs of his clearness of view and of the wonderful powers of mind possessed by him. He opens his treatise by asserting that “C'est à la chaleur que doivent être attribués les grands mouvements qui frappent nos regards sur la terre; c'est à elle que sont dues les agitations de l'atmosphère, l'ascension des nuages, la chute des pluies et ties autres météores, les courants d'eau qui sillonnent la surface du globe et dont l'homme est parvenue à employer pour son usage une faible partie; enfin les tremblements de terre, les éruptions volcaniques reconnaissent aussi pour cause la chaleur.”

Carnot was the first to declare that the maximum of work done by heat, in any given case of application of the heat-energy, is determined solely by the range of temperature through which it fell in the operation, and is entirely independent of the nature of the working substance chosen as the medium of transfer of energy and the vehicle of the heat. His assumption of the materiality of heat led, logically, to the conclusion that the same quantity of heat was finally stored in the refrigerator as had, initially, left the furnace, and that the effect produced was a consequence of a fall of temperature analogous to a fall of water; but, aside from this error—which he himself was