| Arthur Schuster. The influence of radiation on the transmission of heat. Philosophical Magazine, 5(26):243--257, February 1903. |
....problems tend to be posed as integral equations, while those of conduction and convection are posed as differential equations [34] This distinction was not always evident. Integral equations began to appear in problems concerning the transfer of radiant energy around the turn of the century [33, 18], but they did not become a mainstay of radiative transfer until much later. Up until 1926 much of the analysis of interreflection was still carried out in a more tedious manner [37] even though a significant theory of integral equations was already in existence [2, 3] Buckley was one of the ....
Arthur Schuster. The influence of radiation on the transmission of heat. Philosophical Magazine, 5(26):243 257, February 1903.
....problems tend to be posed as integral equations, while those of conduction and convection are posed as differential equations [34] This distinction was not always evident. Integral equations began to appear in problems concerning the transfer of radiant energy around the turn of the century [33, 18], but they did not become a mainstay of radiative transfer until much later. Up until 1926 much of the analysis of interreflection was still carried out in a more tedious manner [37] even though a significant theory of integral equations was already in existence [2, 3] Buckley was one of the ....
Arthur Schuster. The influence of radiation on the transmission of heat. Philosophical Magazine, 5(26):243--257, February 1903.
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Arthur Schuster. The influence of radiation on the transmission of heat. Philosophical Magazine, 5(26):243--257, February 1903.
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