Lyman R. Blake was from Abington, Massachusetts
Common sources include the loading manuals from Speer, Lyman, Hornaday Loading manuals for companies like Speer and Hornady are only going to give you load data for THEIR bullets--not Remington bullets. I haven't checked Lyman yet but the load data published by powder manufacturers are typically going to list loads using bullets manufactured by the major bullet companies. I am looking for a source that publishes loads using Remington bullets myself. No, you can't simply substitute a load using a bullet of the same weight as the Remington bullet you want to use. Bullet composition and design impacts CUP's.
As space is infinite, no one could possibly answer that. We have difficulty seeing objects as large as Jupiter once we go outside our solar system, let alone another galaxy - we have no chance of seeing pebbles. So, if we take a purely mathematical guess and say there is a fairly equal chance that there will be a fairly even graduation from the smallest to the largest, and we take what we consider is the largest item in space (200 million light-years wide giant green jelly fish - actaully its a Lyman alpha blob - and not really a single object but a gas cloud) there has to be more thing between a pebble (say 100g) and 2E8 Light Years than there are between a single molecule of dust and a pebble.
The longest wavelength in the Lyman series is the transition to n=2, which corresponds to the Lyman-alpha line at 121.6 nm. The shortest wavelength in the Balmer series is the transition to n=2, which corresponds to the Balmer-α line at 656.3 nm. Since the Lyman-alpha line has a longer wavelength than the Balmer-α line, they do not overlap.
The Lyman series refers to a series of spectral lines in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum that are emitted by hydrogen atoms when electrons transition to the n=1 energy level. These transitions result in the emission of photons with specific wavelengths that are characteristic of the Lyman series.
The ratio of the first line of the Lyman series to the first line of the Balmer series in the hydrogen spectrum is 1:5.
The wavelength of the photon can be calculated using the Rydberg formula: 1/λ = R(1/4^2 - 1/n^2), where R is the Rydberg constant. Substituting n=4, the calculation gives a wavelength of approximately 97.2 nm.
The ratio of the wavelengths of the last line in the Balmer series to the last line in the Lyman series is 1:5. The Balmer series is associated with transitions to the n=2 energy level, while the Lyman series is associated with transitions to the n=1 energy level in the hydrogen atom.
The lines of the Lyman series are observed in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum. These lines correspond to transitions of an electron in a hydrogen atom from higher energy levels to the n=1 energy level.
No, it was narrated by Will Lyman and Ian Gregory.
The Lyman series consists of transitions to the n=1 state, the Balmer series to the n=2 state, and the Paschen series to the n=3 state in the hydrogen atom. Each series represents a specific range of wavelengths or frequencies of electromagnetic radiation emitted by hydrogen when electrons transition between these energy levels.
Will Lyman's birth name is William Remington Lyman.
The address of the Lyman Branch Library is: 204 E Sage, Lyman, 82937 0839
The address of the Lyman Public Library is: 313 Jeffers Street, Lyman, 69352 0384
The Lyman series in the hydrogen spectrum corresponds to electron transitions from higher energy levels to the n=1 energy level. These transitions result in the emission of photons in the ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum.