Page:Scientific Memoirs, Vol. 1 (1837).djvu/379

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M. CLAPEYRON ON THE MOTIVE POWER OF HEAT.
367

such is the quantity of heat consumed in the production of the effect that we have just calculated. The effect produced by a quantity of heat equal to unity will therefore be



It will be shown, as in the case of the gases, that this effect produced, is the largest which it is possible to realize; and as all the substances of nature may be employed, in the manner that has just been indicated, to produce this maximum effect, it is necessarily the same for all.

When this theory has been applied specially to the gases, we have called the coefficient of in the expression of this maximum quantity of action; the equation therefore of all the substances of nature, solid, liquid, or gaseous, will be


in which is a function of the temperature which is the same for all.

For the gases we have


whence we deduce



The preceding equation applied to the gases takes therefore the form


it is the equation at which we have already arrived, and of which the integral is


that of the general equation


is of the form


is an arbitrary function of the temperature, and a particular function satisfying the equation