meteorology-第22部分
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
takes away and uses up its moisture。 So much for drying。
6
Liquefaction is; first; condensation into water; second; the melting
of a solidified body。 The first; condensation; is due to the cooling
of vapour: what melting is will appear from the account of
solidification。
Whatever solidifies is either water or a mixture of earth and water;
and the agent is either dry heat or cold。 Hence those of the bodies
solidified by heat or cold which are soluble at all are dissolved by
their opposites。 Bodies solidified by the dry…hot are dissolved by
water; which is the moist…cold; while bodies solidified by cold are
dissolved by fire; which is hot。 Some things seem to be solidified
by water; e。g。 boiled honey; but really it is not the water but the
cold in the water which effects the solidification。 Aqueous bodies are
not solidified by fire: for it is fire that dissolves them; and the
same cause in the same relation cannot have opposite effects upon
the same thing。 Again; water solidifies owing to the departure of
heat; so it will clearly be dissolved by the entry into it of heat:
cold; therefore; must be the agent in solidifying it。
Hence aqueous bodies do not thicken when they solidify; for
thickening occurs when the moisture goes off and the dry matter
comes together; but water is the only liquid that does not thicken。
Those bodies that are made up of both earth and water are solidified
both by fire and by cold and in either case are thickened。 The
operation of the two is in a way the same and in a way different。 Heat
acts by drawing off the moisture; and as the moisture goes off in
vapour the dry matter thickens and collects。 Cold acts by driving
out the heat; which is accompanied by the moisture as this goes off in
vapour with it。 Bodies that are soft but not liquid do not thicken but
solidify when the moisture leaves them; e。g。 potter's clay in
process of baking: but those mixed bodies that are liquid thicken
besides solidifying; like milk。 Those bodies which have first been
thickened or hardened by cold often begin by becoming moist: thus
potter's clay at first in the process of baking steams and grows
softer; and is liable to distortion in the ovens for that reason。
Now of the bodies solidified by cold which are made up both of earth
and water but in which the earth preponderates; those which solidify
by the departure of heat melt by heat when it enters into them
again; this is the case with frozen mud。 But those which solidify by
refrigeration; where all the moisture has gone off in vapour with
the heat; like iron and horn; cannot be dissolved except by
excessive heat; but they can be softened…though manufactured iron does
melt; to the point of becoming fluid and then solidifying again。
This is how steel is made。 The dross sinks to the bottom and is
purged away: when this has been done often and the metal is pure we
have steel。 The process is not repeated often because the purification
of the metal involves great waste and loss of weight。 But the iron
that has less dross is the better iron。 The stone pyrimachus; too;
melts and forms into drops and becomes fluid; after having been in a
fluid state it solidifies and becomes hard again。 Millstones; too;
melt and become fluid: when the fluid mass begins to solidify it is
black but its consistency comes to be like that of lime。 and earth;
too
Of the bodies which are solidified by dry heat some are insoluble;
others are dissolved by liquid。 Pottery and some kinds of stone that
are formed out of earth burnt up by fire; such as millstones; cannot
be dissolved。 Natron and salt are soluble by liquid; but not all
liquid but only such as is cold。 Hence water and any of its
varieties melt them; but oil does not。 For the opposite of the dry…hot
is the cold…moist and what the one solidified the other will dissolve;
and so opposites will have opposite effects。
7
If a body contains more water than earth fire only thickens it: if
it contains more earth fire solidifies it。 Hence natron and salt and
stone and potter's clay must contain more earth。
The nature of oil presents the greatest problem。 If water
preponderated in it; cold ought to solidify it; if earth
preponderated; then fire ought to do so。 Actually neither
solidifies; but both thicken it。 The reason is that it is full of
air (hence it floats on the top of water; since air tends to rise)。
Cold thickens it by turning the air in it into water; for any
mixture of oil and water is thicker than either。 Fire and the lapse of
time thicken and whiten it。 The whitening follows on the evaporation
of any water that may have been in it; the is due to the change of the
air into water as the heat in the oil is dissipated。 The effect in
both cases is the same and the cause is the same; but the manner of
its operation is different。 Both heat and cold thicken it; but neither
dries it (neither the sun nor cold dries oil); not only because it
is glutinous but because it contains air。 Its glutinous nature
prevents it from giving off vapour and so fire does not dry it or boil
it off。
Those bodies which are made up of earth and water may be
classified according to the preponderance of either。 There is a kind
of wine; for instance; which both solidifies and thickens by boiling…I
mean; must。 All bodies of this kind lose their water as they That it
is their water may be seen from the fact that the vapour from them
condenses into water when collected。 So wherever some sediment is left
this is of the nature of earth。 Some of these bodies; as we have said;
are also thickened and dried by cold。 For cold not only solidifies but
also dries water; and thickens things by turning air into water。
(Solidifying; as we have said; is a form of drying。) Now those
things that are not thickened by cold; but solidified; belong rather
to water; e。g。。 wine; urine; vinegar; lye; whey。 But those things that
are thickened (not by evaporation due to fire) are made up either of
earth or of water and air: honey of earth; while oil contains air。
Milk and blood; too; are made up of both water and earth; though earth
generally predominates in them。 So; too; are the liquids out of
which natron and salt are formed; and stones are also formed from some
mixtures of this kind。 Hence; if the whey has not been separated; it
burns away if you boil it over a fire。 But the earthy element in
milk can also be coagulated by the help of fig…juice; if you boil it
in a certain way as doctors do when they treat it with fig…juice;
and this is how the whey and the cheese are commonly separated。
Whey; once separated; does not thicken; as the milk did; but boils
away like water。 Sometimes; however; there is little or no cheese in
milk; and such milk is not nutritive and is more like water。 The
case of blood is similar: cold dries and so solidifies it。 Those kinds
of blood that do not solidify; like that of the stag; belong rather to
water and are very cold。 Hence they contain no fibres: for the
fibres are of earth and solid; and blood from which they have been
removed does not solidify。 This is because it cannot dry; for what
remains is water; just as what remains of milk when cheese has been
removed is water。 The fact that diseased blood will not solidify is
evidence of the same thing; for such blood is of the nature of serum
and that is phlegm and water; the nature of the animal having failed
to get the better of it and digest it。
Some of these bodies are soluble; e。g。 natron; some insoluble;
e。g。 pottery: of the latter; some; like horn; can be softened by heat;
others; like pottery and stone; cannot。 The reason is that opposite
causes have opposite effects: consequently; if solidification is due
to two causes; the cold and the dry; solution must be due to the hot
and the moist; that is; to fire and to water (these being
opposites): water dissolving what was solidified by fire alone; fire
what was solidified by cold alone。 Consequently; if any things
happen to be solidified by the action of both; these are least apt
to be soluble。 Such a case we find where things have been heated and
are then solidified by cold。 When the heat in leaving them has
caused most of the moisture to evaporate; the cold so compacts these
bodies together again as to leave no entrance even for moisture。
Therefore heat does not dissolve them (for it only dissolves those
bodies that are solidified by cold alone); nor does water (for it does
not dissolve what cold solidifies; but only what is solidified by
dry heat)。 But iron is melted by heat and solidified by cold。 Wood
consists of earth and air and is therefore combustible but cannot be
melted or softened by heat。 (For the same reason it floats in
water…all except ebony。 This does not; for other kinds of wood contain
a preponderance of air; but in black ebony the air has escaped and
so earth preponderates in it。) Pottery consists of earth alone because
it solidified gradually in the process of drying。 Water cannot get
into it; for the pores were only large enough to admit of vapour
escaping: and seeing that fire solidified it; that cannot dissolve
it either。
So solidification and melting; their causes; and the kinds of
subjects in which they occur have been described。
8
All this makes it clear that bodies are formed by heat and cold
and that these agents operate by thickening and solidifying。 It is
because these qualities fashion bodies that we find heat in all of
them; and in some cold in so far as heat is absent。 Thes