Part 3 (1/2)
Set a small light near one edge of a mirror; then, by putting the eye near the opposite edge, you see almost as many flames as you please from the multiplied reflections. How can this be accounted for?
Into your beam of sunlight, admitted through a half-inch hole, put the mirror at an oblique angle; you can arrange it so as to throw half a dozen bright spots on the opposite wall.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 10.--Manifold Reflections.]
In Fig. 10 the sunbeam enters at A, and, striking the mirror _m_ at _a_, is partly reflected to 1 on the wall, and partly enters the gla.s.s, pa.s.ses through to the silvered back at B, and is totally reflected to _b_, where it again divides, some of it going to the wall at 2, and the rest, continuing to make the same reflections and divisions, causes spots 3, 4, 5, etc. The brightest spot is at No.2, because the silvered gla.s.s at B is the best reflector and has the most light.
When the discovery of the moons of Mars was announced in 1877, it was also widely published that they could be seen by a mirror.
Of course this is impossible. The point of light mistaken for the moon in this secondary reflection was caused by holding the mirror in an oblique position.
Take a small piece of mirror, say an inch in surface, and putting under it three little pellets of wax, putty, or clay, set it on the wrist, with one of the pellets on the pulse. Hold the mirror steadily in the beam of light, and the frequency and prominence of each pulse-beat will be indicated by the tossing spot of light on the wall. If the operator becomes excited the fact will be evident to all observers.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 11.]
Place a coin in a basin (Fig. 11), and set it so that the rim will conceal the coin from the eye. Pour in water, and the coin will [Page 40] appear to rise into sight. When light pa.s.ses from a medium of one density to a medium of another, its direction is changed.
Thus a stick in water seems bent. s.h.i.+ps below the horizon are sometimes seen above, because of the different density of the layers of air.
Thus light coming from the interstellar s.p.a.ces, and entering our atmosphere, is bent down more and more by its increasing density.
The effect is greatest when the sun or star is near the horizon, none at all in the zenith. This brings the object into view before it is risen. Allowance for this displacement is made in all delicate astronomical observations.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Fig. 12.--Atmospherical Refraction.]
Notice on the floor the shadow of the window-frames. The gla.s.s of almost every window is so bent as to turn the sunlight aside enough to obliterate some of the shadows or increase their thickness.
DECOMPOSITION OF LIGHT.
Admit the sunbeam through a slit one inch long and one-twentieth of an inch wide. Pa.s.s it through a prism. Either purchase one or make it of three plain pieces of gla.s.s one and a half inch wide by six inches long, fastened together in triangular shape--fasten the edges with hot wax and fill it with water; then on a screen or wall you will have the colors of the rainbow, not merely seven but seventy, if your eyes are sharp enough.
Take a bit of red paper that matches the red color of the spectrum.
Move it along the line of colors toward the violet. In the orange it is dark, in the yellow darker, in the green and all beyond, black. That is because there are no more red rays to be reflected by it. So a green object is true to its color only in the green rays, and black elsewhere. All these colors may be recombined by a second prism into white light.
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III.
ASTRONOMICAL INSTRUMENTS.
”The eyes of the Lord are in every place.”--_Proverbs_ xv. 3.
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”Man, having one kind of an eye given him by his Maker, proceeds to construct two other kinds. He makes one that magnifies invisible objects thousands of times, so that a dull razor-edge appears as thick as three fingers, until the amazing beauty of color and form in infinitesimal objects is entrancingly apparent, and he knows that G.o.d's care of least things is infinite. Then he makes the other kind four or six feet in diameter, and penetrates the immensities of s.p.a.ce thousands of times beyond where his natural eye can pierce, until he sees that G.o.d's immensities of worlds are infinite also.”--BISHOP FOSTER.
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III.
_THE TELESCOPE._