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1862. On the Long Spectrum of Electric Light

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

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Summary

The author's researches on fluorescence had led him to perceive that glass was opaque for the more refrangible invisible rays of the solar spectrum, and that electric light contained rays of still higher refrangibility, which were quite intercepted by glass, but that quartz transmitted these rays freely. Accordingly he was led to procure prisms and a lens of quartz, which, when applied to the examination of the voltaic arc, or of the discharge of a Leyden jar, by forming a pure spectrum and receiving it on a highly fluorescent substance, revealed the existence of rays forming a spectrum no less than six or eight times as long as the visible spectrum. This long spectrum, as formed by the voltaic arc with copper electrodes, was exhibited at a lecture given at the Royal Institution in 1853; but. the author, for reasons he mentioned, did not then further pursue the subject. Having subsequently found that the spark of an induction-coil with a Leyden jar in connexion with the secondary terminals yielded a spectrum quite bright enough to work by, he resumed the investigation, and examined the spectra exhibited by a variety of metals as electrodes, as well as the mode of absorption of the rays of high refrangibility by various substances.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1904

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