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قراءة كتاب The Ether of Space
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or detector for them. The great though simple discovery by Hertz, in 1888, of an "electric eye," as Lord Kelvin called it, made experiments on these waves for the first time easy or even possible. From that time onward we possessed a sort of artificial sense organ for their appreciation,—an electric arrangement which can virtually "see" these intermediate rates of vibration.
Since then Branly discovered that metallic powder could be used as an extraordinarily sensitive detector; and on the basis of this discovery, the 'coherer' was employed by me for distant signalling by means of electric or etheric waves; until now when many other detectors are available in the various systems of wireless telegraphy.
With these Hertzian waves all manner of optical experiments can be performed. They can be reflected by plain sheets of metal, concentrated by parabolic reflectors, refracted by prisms, and concentrated by lenses. I have made, for instance, a large lens of pitch, weighing over three hundredweight, for concentrating them to a focus.[1] They can be made to show the phenomenon of interference, and thus have their wave-length accurately measured. They are stopped by all conductors, and transmitted by all insulators. Metals are opaque; but even imperfect insulators, such as wood or stone, are strikingly transparent; and waves may be received in one room from a source in another, the door between the two being shut.
The real nature of metallic opacity and of transparency has long been clear in Maxwell's theory of light, and these electrically produced waves only illustrate and bring home the well-known facts. The experiments of Hertz are, in fact, the apotheosis of Maxwell's theory.
Thus, then, in every way, Clerk Maxwell's brilliant perception or mathematical deduction, in 1865, of the real nature of light is abundantly justified; and for the first time we have a true theory of light,—no longer based upon analogy with sound, nor upon the supposed properties of some hypothetical jelly or elastic solid, but capable of being treated upon a substantial basis of its own, in alliance with the sciences of Electricity and of Magnetism.
Light is an electromagnetic disturbance of the ether. Optics is a branch of electricity. Outstanding problems in optics are being rapidly solved, now that we have the means of definitely exciting light with a full perception of what we are doing, and of the precise mode of its vibration.
It remains to find out how to shorten down the waves—to hurry up the vibration until the light becomes visible. Nothing is wanted but quicker modes of vibration. Smaller oscillators must be used—very much smaller—oscillators not much bigger than molecules. In all probability—one may almost say certainly—ordinary light is the result of electric oscillation in the molecules or atoms of hot bodies, or sometimes of bodies not hot—as in the phenomenon of phosphorescence.
The direct generation of visible light by electric means, so soon as we have learnt how to attain the necessary frequency of vibration, will have most important practical consequences; and that matter is initially dealt with in a section on the Manufacture of Light, § 149, in Chapter XIV of Modern Views of Electricity. But here we abandon further consideration of this aspect of our great subject.
CHAPTER II
THE INTERSTELLAR ETHER AS A
CONNECTING MEDIUM
So far I have given a general idea of the present condition of the wave theory of light, both from its theoretical and from its experimental sides. The waves of light are not anything mechanical or material, but are something electrical and magnetic—they are in fact electrical disturbances periodic in space and time, and travelling with a known and tremendous speed through the ether of space. Their very existence depends upon the ether, and their speed of propagation is its best known and most certain quantitative property.
A statement of this kind does not even initially express a tithe of our knowledge on the subject; nor does our knowledge exhaust any large part of the region of discoverable fact; but the statement above made may be regarded as certain, although the absence of mechanics or ordinary dynamics about it removes it, or seems to remove it, from the category of the historically soundest and best worked department of Physical Science, viz. that explored by the Newtonian method. Though in truth there is every reason to suppose that we should have had Newton with us in these modern developments.
There is, I believe, a general tendency to underrate the certainty of some of the convictions to which natural philosophers have gradually, in the course of their study of nature, been impelled; more especially when those convictions have reference to something intangible and occult. The existence of a continuous space-filling medium, for instance, is probably regarded by most educated people as a more or less fanciful hypothesis, a figment of the scientific imagination,—a mode of collating and welding together a certain number of observed facts, but not in any physical sense a reality, as water and air are realities.
I am speaking purely physically. There may be another point of view from which all material reality can be denied, but with those questions physics proper has nothing to do; it accepts the evidence of the senses, regarding them as the tools or instruments wherewith man may hope to understand one definite aspect of the universe; and it leaves to philosophers, equipped from a different armoury, the other aspects which the material universe may—nay, must—possess.
By a physical "explanation" is meant a clear statement of a fact or law in terms of something with which daily life has made us familiar. We are all chiefly familiar, from our youth up, with two apparently simple things, motion and force. We have a direct sense for both these things. We do not understand them in any deep way, probably we do not understand them at all, but we are accustomed to them. Motion and force are our primary objects of experience and consciousness; and in terms of them all other less familiar occurrences may conceivably be stated and grasped. Whenever a thing can be so clearly and definitely stated, it is said to be explained, or understood; we are said to have "a dynamical theory" of it. Anything short of this may be a provisional or partial theory, an explanation of the less known in terms of the more known, but Motion and Force are postulated in physics as the completely known: and no attempt is made to press the terms of an explanation further than that. A dynamical theory is recognised as being at once necessary and sufficient.
Now, it must be admitted at once that of very few things have we at present such a dynamical explanation. We have no such explanation of matter, for instance, or of gravitation, or of electricity, or ether, or light. It is always conceivable that of some such things no purely dynamical explanation will ever be forthcoming, because something more than motion and force may perhaps be essentially involved. Still, physics is bound to push the search for an explanation to its furthest limits; and so long as it does not hoodwink itself by vagueness and mere phrases—a feebleness against which its leaders are mightily and