Abstract
Experimental values are reported for the electrical resistivity from 1.5° to 300° K. and for the thermal resistivity from 2° to 120° K. of high purity cobalt, tungsten, and rhenium. The temperature variation of the components of the electrical and of the thermal resistance due to scattering by thermal vibrations is deduced and the possible evidence for the importance of s–d transitions is discussed briefly. The temperature of the superconducting transition in samples of rhenium is found to be close to 1.70° K., the value reported by Hulm (1954).

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