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XV.—On the Formation of Small Clear Spaces in Dusty Air

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

Extract

The dust particles floating in our atmosphere are every day demanding more and more attention. As our knowledge of these unseen particles increases, our interest deepens, and I might almost say gives place to anxiety, when we realise the vast importance these dust particles have on life, whether it be those inorganic ones so small as to be beyond the powers of the microscope, or those larger organic ones which float unseen through our atmosphere, and which, though invisible, are yet the messengers of sickness and of death to many—messengers far more real and certain than poet or painter has ever conceived.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1884

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References

page 240 note * Proc. Roy. Inst., vol. vi. p. 3, 1870Google Scholar; also Essays on the Floating Matter in the Air, p. 5, Longmans, Green, & Co., 1881Google Scholar.

page 240 note † Paper read before Royal Society, December 21, 1882; also Nature, vol. xxviii. p. 139Google Scholar.

page 243 note * In the figs, the white surface represents the light-reflecting dusty air, while the black represents the transparent air, free from reflecting particles.

page 243 note † The only reason I can imagine for this difference between Dr Lodge&s results and mine is that he worked with more powerful sources of illumination than I did. He used either the sun's light, an oxyhydrogen lamp, or a Serrin arc-lamp, while I only used gas. Now one result of this difference would evidently be that the illuminating beam used by him would have a much greater heating effect than the one used in my experiments, and would therefore heat the surfaces under examination. I found this effect even with gas. If the body had a small capacity for heat, it was only necessary to keep the light focused on it for a short time to heat it sufficiently to cause a clear space to form over the part where the light acted.

page 258 note * The amount of dust breathed by invalids at the two places will not be greatly different, as most of their time is spent in the house, and the air in the rooms at the two places will be nearly equally dusty. The higher temperature inside will slightly reduce the thermal effect, but will not diminish the rate of evaporation.