قراءة كتاب Scientific American Supplement, No. 467, December 13, 1884

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 467, December 13, 1884

Scientific American Supplement, No. 467, December 13, 1884

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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is commonly called radiant heat; invisible radiant heat. Perhaps, in this thorny path of logic, with hard words flying in our faces, the least troublesome way of speaking of it is to call it radiant heat. The heat effect you experience when you go near a bright, hot coal fire, or a hot steam boiler; or when you go near, but not over, a set of hot water pipes used for heating a house; the thing we perceive in our face and hands when we go near a boiling pot and hold the hand on a level with it, is radiant heat; the heat of the hands and face caused by a hot fire, or a hot kettle when held under the kettle, is also radiant heat.

You might readily make the experiment with an earthen teapot; it radiates heat better than polished silver. Hold your hands below, and you perceive a sense of heat; above the teapot you get more heat; either way you perceive heat. If held over the teapot, you readily understand that there is a little current of air rising. If you put your hand under the teapot, you get cold air; the upper side of your hand is heated by radiation, while the lower side is fanned and is actually cooled by virtue of the heated kettle above it.

That perception by the sense of heat is the perception of something actually continuous with light. We have knowledge of rays of radiant heat perceptible down to (in round numbers) about four times the wave length, or one-fourth the period of visible or red light. Let us take red light at 400 million million vibrations per second; then the lowest radiant heat, as yet investigated, is about 100 million million per second in the way of frequency of vibration.

I had hoped to be able to give you a lower figure. Prof. Langley has made splendid experiments on the top of Mount Whitney, at the height of 1,500 feet above the sea level, with his "bolometer," and has made actual measurements of the wave lengths of radiant heat down to exceedingly low figures. I will read you one of the figures; I have not got it by heart yet, because I am expecting more from him.5 I learned a year and a half ago that the lowest radiant heat observed by the diffraction method of Prof. Langley corresponded to 28 one-hundred-thousandths of a centimeter for wave length, 28 as compared with red light, which is 7.3, or nearly fourfold. Thus wave lengths of four times the amplitude or one-fourth the frequency per second of red light have been experimented on by Prof. Langley, and recognized as radiant heat.

Photographic or actinic light, as far as our knowledge extends at present, takes us to a little less than one-half the wave length of violet light. You will thus see that while our acquaintance with wave motion below the red extends down to one-quarter of the slowest rate which affects the eye, our knowledge of vibrations at the other end of the scale only comprehends those having twice the frequency of violet light. In round numbers, we have four octaves of light, corresponding to four octaves of sound in music. In music the octave has a range to a note of double frequency. In light we have one octave of visible light, one octave above the visible range, and two octaves below the visible range. We have one hundred per second, two hundred per second, four hundred per second (million million understood) for invisible radiant heat, eight hundred per second for visible light, and one thousand six hundred per second for invisible light.

One thing in common to the whole is the heat effect. It is extremely small in moonlight, so small that nobody until recently knew there was any heat in the moon's rays. Herschel thought it was perceptible in our atmosphere by noticing that it dissolved away very light clouds, an effect which seemed to show in full moonlight more than when we have less than full moon. Herschel, however, pointed this out as doubtful, but now, instead of its being a doubtful question, we have Prof. Langley giving as a fact that the light from the moon drives the indicator of his sensitive instrument clear across the scale, and with a comparatively prodigious heating effect!

I must tell you that if any of you want to experiment with the heat of the moonlight, you must compare the heat with whatever comes within the influence of the moon's rays only. This is a very necessary precaution; if, for instance, you should take your bolometer or other heat detecter from a comparatively warm room into the night air, you would obtain an indication of a fall in temperature owing to this change. You must be sure that your apparatus is in thermal equilibrium with the surrounding air, then take your burning glass, and first point it to the moon and then to space in the sky beside the moon; you thus get a differential measurement in which you compare the radiation of the moon with the radiation of the sky. You will then see that the moon has a distinctly heating effect.

To continue our study of visible light, that is, undulations extending from red to violet in the spectrum (which I am going to show you presently), I would first point out on this chart that in the section from letter A to letter D, we have visual effect and heating effect only; but no ordinary chemical or photographic effect.


The Solar Spectrum.

Photographers can leave their usual sensitive, chemically prepared plates exposed to yellow light and red light without experiencing any sensible effect; but when you get toward the blue end of the spectrum, the photographic effect begins to tell, more and more as you get toward the violet end. When you get beyond the violet, there is the invisible light known chiefly by its chemical action. From yellow to violet we have visual effect, heating effect, and chemical effect, all three; above the violet, only chemical and heating effect, and so little of the heating effect that it is scarcely perceptible.

The prismatic spectrum is Newton's discovery of the composition of white light. White light consists of every variety of color from red to violet. Here, now, we have Newton's prismatic spectrum produced by a prism. I will illustrate a little in regard to the nature of color by putting something before the light which is like colored glass; it is colored gelatin. I will put in a plate of red gelatin which is carefully prepared of chemical materials, and see what that will do. Of all the light passing to it from violet to red, it only lets through the red and orange, giving a mixed reddish color.

Here is another plate of green gelatin. The green absorbs all the red, giving only green. Here is another plate absorbing something from each portion of the spectrum, taking away a great deal of the violet and giving a yellow or orange appearance to the light. Here is another absorbing out the green, leaving red, orange, and a very little faint green, and absorbing out all the violet.

When the spectrum is very carefully produced, far more perfectly than Newton knew how to show it, we have a homogeneous spectrum. It must be noticed that Newton did not understand what we call a homogeneous spectrum; he did not produce it, and does not point out in his writings the conditions for producing it. With an exceedingly fine line of light we can bring it out as in sunlight, like this upper picture, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet according to Newton's nomenclature. Newton never used a narrow beam of light, and so could not have had a homogeneous spectrum.

This is a diagram painted on glass and showing the colors as we know them. It would take two or three hours if I

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