III. On the lines of the solar spectrum

1860 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 339-341

In a paper in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for 1833, Sir David Brewster stated that he had examined the lines of the solar spectrum, and those produced by the intervention of nitrous acid gas, and had delineated them on a scale four times greater, and in some parts twelve times greater than that employed in the beautiful map of Fraunhofer. None of these drawings, however, were published at the time; they were increased by frequent observations continued through succeeding years; and now having been collated, arranged, and added to by Dr. Gladstone, they form the diagrams accompanying this paper.

1860 ◽  
Vol 150 ◽  
pp. 149-160 ◽  

In a paper published in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for 1833, Sir David Brewster stated that by various means he had examined the lines of the solar spectrum, and those produced by the intervention of nitrous acid gas, and had delineated them on a scale four times greater than that employed in the beautiful map of Fraunhofer. Some portions also, which were more particularly studied, had been drawn on a scale twelve times greater. "Fraunhofer,” he continued, "has laid down in his map 354 lines, but in the delineations which I have executed, the spectrum is divided into more than 2000 visible and easily recognized portions, separated from each other by lines more or less marked, according as we use the simple solar spectrum, or the solar and gaseous spectrum combined, or the gaseous spectrum itself, in which any breadth can be given to the dark spaces.” None of these drawings, however, were published at the time. Frequent observations were continued during the years 1837, 1838, and 1841; and now, after a lapse of many years, the various delineations, having been collated and arranged by Dr. Gladstone, form the principal diagrams in the Plate accompanying this paper. Fig. 1 of Plate IV. represents the lines observed when the sun was at a considerable altitude above the horizon, and its light was examined by means of a good prism and telescope. The spectrum is delineated on so large a scale that it was necessary to divide it into two portions, the upper diagram representing the part between the least refrangible end and the line designated F 7, the lower diagram the part between F 7 and the most refrangible end. On a comparison with Fraunhofer’s large map, the principal lines and features will be easily recognized; but it will be seen that every portion of the spectrum contains lines wanting in the earlier drawing, and that parts which Fraunhofer has marked by one line are resolved into groups of bright spaces alternating with dark lines. The figure of the spectrum extends at the more refrangible or violet end to about the same distance as that of the Bavarian philosopher, but it exhibits a considerable extension at the red or less refrangible end. The principal lines are indicated by those letters, A, a , B, C, &c., which were assigned to them by him, and the larger intermediate lines are marked by numbers, 1, 2, 3, &c., beginning afresh on the more refrangible side of each letter; so that any one of these may be expressed by a combination of a letter and numeral; as, for instance, C 6, a remarkable line in the orange, of which much will be said hereafter. The extreme violet is lettered, both in this and in a map to be subsequently described, by that continuation of the alphabet which has been adopted by M. Becquerel. It was necessary to indicate in some similar manner the newly published, though not newly discovered, lines at the red end of the spectrum; and as the alphabet has not been appropriated by M. Becquerel beyond P, and it is not likely that further research will largely extend the spectrum in that direction, it was thought safe to take the end of the alphabet, and denoting the first strongly-marked line before A by Z, to work backwards into those slightly refrangible rays, which have been as yet unresolved by human vision. Some of the dark spaces of the spectrum are of an appreciable breadth, in which case they are represented as bands; and where the observation of a line was indistinct or uncertain, it is marked by an interrupted instead of a continuous line.


1845 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 21-24
Author(s):  
David Brewster

The author was led, in prosecution of his researches on the absorptive action of transparent media of light, which have been partly communicated in previous papers to the Society, to examine the influence of coloured gaseous bodies. Iodine vapour was one of these, and its action was found of a similar character to that of fluids having a similar tint. Nitrous acid gas presented a far more extraordinary phenomenon.


A paper was read, entitled “Note relative to the supposed origin of the deficient rays in the Solar Spectrum; being an account of an experiment made at Edinburgh during the Annular Eclipse of May 15, 1836.” By James D. Forbes, Esq., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh. The observation that some of the rays of light, artificially produced, are absorbed by transmission through nitrous acid gas, had suggested to Sir David Brewster the idea that the dark spaces in the solar pris­matic spectrum may, in like manner, be occasioned by the absorption of the deficient rays during their passage through the sun’s atmosphere. It occurred to the author that the annular eclipse of the sun of the present year would afford him an opportunity of ascertaining whether any difference in the appearance of the spectrum could be detected when the light came from different parts of the solar disc, and had consequently traversed portions of the sun’s atmosphere of very dif­ferent thickness; and that accurate observations of this kind would put the hypothesis in question to a satisfactory test. The result of the experiment was that no such differences could be perceived; thus proving, as the author conceives, that the sun’s atmosphere is in no way concerned with the production of the singular phenomenon of the existence of dark lines in the solar spectrum.


1834 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 519-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Brewster

In a paper on the Monochromatic Lamp, &c., read before this Society on the 15th April 1822, and published in their Transactions, I recorded some of my earliest experiments on the action of coloured media on the Solar Spectrum. These experiments were continued at irregular intervals, with the view of obtaining distinguishing characters of coloured media, of investigating the cause of the colours of natural bodies, and of examining more correctly the phenomena of the overlapping colours of equal refrangibility, the discovery of which I had announced in the paper already referred to. The results to which I was conducted on the two last of these subjects, have been already communicated to the Society in two papers, one on the Analysis of Solar light, and the other on the Colours of Natural Bodies.


1872 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 89-109

In a paper communicated to the Royal Society in the year 1867, and printed in the Philosophical Transactions for 1868, I attempted the computation of the Lengths of Waves of Light for all the lines which Kirchhoff had observed in the Solar Spectrum, by adopting an algebraical formula of the fifth order, and substituting in it for every spectral line the value of Kirchhoff’s measure for that line, the numerical bases of the formula being derived from Fraunhofer’s and Ditscheiner’s measures of the wave-lengths for six principal lines. Subsequently I obtained the means of comparing many of my computed results with measures of wave-lengths by Ångstrȍm and Ditscheiner, and l found that the discordances were far larger than I had anticipated. I remarked, however, “By means of the comparison........ there is no difficulty in computing for any other line the correction that ought to be applied to the wave-length in the principal Tables, in order to exhibit the true wave-lengths on Ditscheiner’s scale, without appreciable error.” Want of leisure long prevented me from entering upon the examination necessary for preparing, in a form easy for applications, the correction which my numbers required. Lately, however, I have taken it up; and I have constructed a Table of corrections to the numbers of my Table generally, and I have applied them, both to the general Table of wave-lengths and to the values of wave-lengths for the spectral lines of the atmosphere and several metals (the accurate exhibition of which was, in fact, the first object of my computations). I now offer these corrections and corrected numbers for the acceptance of the Royal Society.


1857 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 66-69
Author(s):  
Forbes

On the 7th of January 1839, I communicated to the Royal Society of Edinburgh a pretty detailed account of the singular mineral and gas springs of Kissingen, in Bavaria, then much less known than at present to English travellers. I refer to this paper, printed in the Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, April 1839, for the details of the most curious of these, a saline spring called Kunde-Brunnen, which was at that time regularly periodic; a copious and turbulent discharge of brine, mixed with torrents of carbonic acid gas, recurring six or eight times in the twenty-four hours. This phenomenon, exactly as described in my paper, appears to have continued with slight variation ever since, that is, for a period of twelve years, subject, however, to the variation formerly mentioned, that when the brine is actively withdrawn by pumps, for the manufacture of salt, the periods lengthen.


1894 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 1023-1028

In a communication to the Royal Society in 1887, I gave an account of certain experiments which I had made in connection with the spectra of various meteorites at various temperatures. The spectra were observed at the temperature of the oxyhydrogen flame and the electric spark without jar, and when glowed in vacuum tubes. Some larger specimens of the iron meteorites, Nejed and Obernkirchen, cut so that they were of a size and shape suitable for forming the poles of an arc lamp, having afterwards been kindly placed at my disposal by the Trustees of the British Museum, it became possible to study the arc spectra of these meteorites under very favourable conditions, all impurities introduced by the use of the carbon poles being thus avoided. The region of the spectrum photographed extends from K to D, in the case of each meteorite, and in addition to the solar spectrum, that of electrolytic iron, prepared by Professor Roberts-Austen, referred to in a previous communication, has been used as a comparison spectrum in one case.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 375-384 ◽  

All the bodies in which nitrogen is substituted for hydrogen which I have discovered during the last few years may be divided into two disinctly different classes. The first class comprises those bodies which are obtained when three atoms of hydrogen in two atoms of an amido-com-ound are replaced by one of nitrogen from nitrous acid. The members of the second group are formed by the action of nitrous acid upon one equi-alent of an amido-compound only. The following equations will best how these various reactions:— I have hitherto chiefly examined into the constitution of the bodies that form according to the first equation (diazoamidobenzol, diazoamidobenzoic acid), and have only incidentally explored the field of bodies which equation II. opens up. I have had occasion since to study more closely several representatives of the latter class of compounds, which are derived from aniline (amidobenzol) and analogous organic bases; and since the results which I obtained cannot but excite some interest, I may be permitted to submit them briefly to the Royal Society.


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