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| OPTICKS: |
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| OR, A |
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| TREATISE |
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| OF THE |
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| _Reflections_, _Refractions_, |
| _Inflections_ and _Colours_ |
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| OF |
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| LIGHT. |
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| _The_ FOURTH EDITION, _corrected_. |
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| By Sir _ISAAC NEWTON_, Knt. |
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| LONDON: |
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| Printed for WILLIAM INNYS at the West-End of St. _Paul's_. MDCCXXX. |
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| TITLE PAGE OF THE 1730 EDITION |
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| SIR ISAAC NEWTON'S ADVERTISEMENTS |
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| Advertisement I |
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| _Part of the ensuing Discourse about Light was written at the Desire of |
| some Gentlemen of the_ Royal-Society, _in the Year 1675, and then sent |
| to their Secretary, and read at their Meetings, and the rest was added |
| about twelve Years after to complete the Theory; except the third Book, |
| and the last Proposition of the Second, which were since put together |
| out of scatter'd Papers. To avoid being engaged in Disputes about these |
| Matters, I have hitherto delayed the printing, and should still have |
| delayed it, had not the Importunity of Friends prevailed upon me. If any |
| other Papers writ on this Subject are got out of my Hands they are |
| imperfect, and were perhaps written before I had tried all the |
| Experiments here set down, and fully satisfied my self about the Laws of |
| Refractions and Composition of Colours. I have here publish'd what I |
| think proper to come abroad, wishing that it may not be translated into |
| another Language without my Consent._ |
| |
| _The Crowns of Colours, which sometimes appear about the Sun and Moon, I |
| have endeavoured to give an Account of; but for want of sufficient |
| Observations leave that Matter to be farther examined. The Subject of |
| the Third Book I have also left imperfect, not having tried all the |
| Experiments which I intended when I was about these Matters, nor |
| repeated some of those which I did try, until I had satisfied my self |
| about all their Circumstances. To communicate what I have tried, and |
| leave the rest to others for farther Enquiry, is all my Design in |
| publishing these Papers._ |
| |
| _In a Letter written to Mr._ Leibnitz _in the year 1679, and published |
| by Dr._ Wallis, _I mention'd a Method by which I had found some general |
| Theorems about squaring Curvilinear Figures, or comparing them with the |
| Conic Sections, or other the simplest Figures with which they may be |
| compared. And some Years ago I lent out a Manuscript containing such |
| Theorems, and having since met with some Things copied out of it, I have |
| on this Occasion made it publick, prefixing to it an_ Introduction, _and |
| subjoining a_ Scholium _concerning that Method. And I have joined with |
| it another small Tract concerning the Curvilinear Figures of the Second |
| Kind, which was also written many Years ago, and made known to some |
| Friends, who have solicited the making it publick._ |
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| _I. N._ |
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| April 1, 1704. |
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| Advertisement II |
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| _In this Second Edition of these Opticks I have omitted the Mathematical |
| Tracts publish'd at the End of the former Edition, as not belonging to |
| the Subject. And at the End of the Third Book I have added some |
| Questions. And to shew that I do not take Gravity for an essential |
| Property of Bodies, I have added one Question concerning its Cause, |
| chusing to propose it by way of a Question, because I am not yet |
| satisfied about it for want of Experiments._ |
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| _I. N._ |
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| July 16, 1717. |
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| Advertisement to this Fourth Edition |
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| _This new Edition of Sir_ Isaac Newton's Opticks _is carefully printed |
| from the Third Edition, as it was corrected by the Author's own Hand, |
| and left before his Death with the Bookseller. Since Sir_ Isaac's |
| Lectiones Opticæ, _which he publickly read in the University of_ |
| Cambridge _in the Years 1669, 1670, and 1671, are lately printed, it has |
| been thought proper to make at the bottom of the Pages several Citations |
| from thence, where may be found the Demonstrations, which the Author |
| omitted in these_ Opticks. |
| |
| * * * * * |
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| Transcriber's Note: There are several greek letters used in the |
| descriptions of the illustrations. They are signified by [Greek: |
| letter]. Square roots are noted by the letters sqrt before the equation. |
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| * * * * * |
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| THE FIRST BOOK OF OPTICKS |
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| _PART I._ |
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| My Design in this Book is not to explain the Properties of Light by |
| Hypotheses, but to propose and prove them by Reason and Experiments: In |
| order to which I shall premise the following Definitions and Axioms. |
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| _DEFINITIONS_ |
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| DEFIN. I. |
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| _By the Rays of Light I understand its least Parts, and those as well |
| Successive in the same Lines, as Contemporary in several Lines._ For it |
| is manifest that Light consists of Parts, both Successive and |
| Contemporary; because in the same place you may stop that which comes |
| one moment, and let pass that which comes presently after; and in the |
| same time you may stop it in any one place, and let it pass in any |
| other. For that part of Light which is stopp'd cannot be the same with |
| that which is let pass. The least Light or part of Light, which may be |
| stopp'd alone without the rest of the Light, or propagated alone, or do |
| or suffer any thing alone, which the rest of the Light doth not or |
| suffers not, I call a Ray of Light. |
| |
| |
| DEFIN. II. |
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| _Refrangibility of the Rays of Light, is their Disposition to be |
| refracted or turned out of their Way in passing out of one transparent |
| Body or Medium into another. And a greater or less Refrangibility of |
| Rays, is their Disposition to be turned more or less out of their Way in |
| like Incidences on the same Medium._ Mathematicians usually consider the |
| Rays of Light to be Lines reaching from the luminous Body to the Body |
| illuminated, and the refraction of those Rays to be the bending or |
| breaking of those lines in their passing out of one Medium into another. |
| And thus may Rays and Refractions be considered, if Light be propagated |
| in an instant. But by an Argument taken from the Æquations of the times |
| of the Eclipses of _Jupiter's Satellites_, it seems that Light is |
| propagated in time, spending in its passage from the Sun to us about |
| seven Minutes of time: And therefore I have chosen to define Rays and |
| Refractions in such general terms as may agree to Light in both cases. |
| |
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| DEFIN. III. |
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| _Reflexibility of Rays, is their Disposition to be reflected or turned |
| back into the same Medium from any other Medium upon whose Surface they |
| fall. And Rays are more or less reflexible, which are turned back more |
| or less easily._ As if Light pass out of a Glass into Air, and by being |
| inclined more and more to the common Surface of the Glass and Air, |
| begins at length to be totally reflected by that Surface; those sorts of |
| Rays which at like Incidences are reflected most copiously, or by |
| inclining the Rays begin soonest to be totally reflected, are most |
| reflexible. |
| |
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| DEFIN. IV. |
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| _The Angle of Incidence is that Angle, which the Line described by the |
| incident Ray contains with the Perpendicular to the reflecting or |
| refracting Surface at the Point of Incidence._ |
| |
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| DEFIN. V. |
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| _The Angle of Reflexion or Refraction, is the Angle which the line |
| described by the reflected or refracted Ray containeth with the |
| Perpendicular to the reflecting or refracting Surface at the Point of |
| Incidence._ |
| |
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| DEFIN. VI. |
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| _The Sines of Incidence, Reflexion, and Refraction, are the Sines of the |
| Angles of Incidence, Reflexion, and Refraction._ |
| |
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| DEFIN. VII |
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| _The Light whose Rays are all alike Refrangible, I call Simple, |
| Homogeneal and Similar; and that whose Rays are some more Refrangible |
| than others, I call Compound, Heterogeneal and Dissimilar._ The former |
| Light I call Homogeneal, not because I would affirm it so in all |
| respects, but because the Rays which agree in Refrangibility, agree at |
| least in all those their other Properties which I consider in the |
| following Discourse. |
| |
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| DEFIN. VIII. |
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| _The Colours of Homogeneal Lights, I call Primary, Homogeneal and |
| Simple; and those of Heterogeneal Lights, Heterogeneal and Compound._ |
| For these are always compounded of the colours of Homogeneal Lights; as |
| will appear in the following Discourse. |
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| _AXIOMS._ |
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| AX. I. |
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| _The Angles of Reflexion and Refraction, lie in one and the same Plane |
| with the Angle of Incidence._ |
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| AX. II. |
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| _The Angle of Reflexion is equal to the Angle of Incidence._ |
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| AX. III. |
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| _If the refracted Ray be returned directly back to the Point of |
| Incidence, it shall be refracted into the Line before described by the |
| incident Ray._ |
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| AX. IV. |
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| _Refraction out of the rarer Medium into the denser, is made towards the |
| Perpendicular; that is, so that the Angle of Refraction be less than the |
| Angle of Incidence._ |
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| AX. V. |
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| _The Sine of Incidence is either accurately or very nearly in a given |
| Ratio to the Sine of Refraction._ |
| |
| Whence if that Proportion be known in any one Inclination of the |
| incident Ray, 'tis known in all the Inclinations, and thereby the |
| Refraction in all cases of Incidence on the same refracting Body may be |
| determined. Thus if the Refraction be made out of Air into Water, the |
| Sine of Incidence of the red Light is to the Sine of its Refraction as 4 |
| to 3. If out of Air into Glass, the Sines are as 17 to 11. In Light of |
| other Colours the Sines have other Proportions: but the difference is so |
| little that it need seldom be considered. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 1] |
| |
| Suppose therefore, that RS [in _Fig._ 1.] represents the Surface of |
| stagnating Water, and that C is the point of Incidence in which any Ray |
| coming in the Air from A in the Line AC is reflected or refracted, and I |
| would know whither this Ray shall go after Reflexion or Refraction: I |
| erect upon the Surface of the Water from the point of Incidence the |
| Perpendicular CP and produce it downwards to Q, and conclude by the |
| first Axiom, that the Ray after Reflexion and Refraction, shall be |
| found somewhere in the Plane of the Angle of Incidence ACP produced. I |
| let fall therefore upon the Perpendicular CP the Sine of Incidence AD; |
| and if the reflected Ray be desired, I produce AD to B so that DB be |
| equal to AD, and draw CB. For this Line CB shall be the reflected Ray; |
| the Angle of Reflexion BCP and its Sine BD being equal to the Angle and |
| Sine of Incidence, as they ought to be by the second Axiom, But if the |
| refracted Ray be desired, I produce AD to H, so that DH may be to AD as |
| the Sine of Refraction to the Sine of Incidence, that is, (if the Light |
| be red) as 3 to 4; and about the Center C and in the Plane ACP with the |
| Radius CA describing a Circle ABE, I draw a parallel to the |
| Perpendicular CPQ, the Line HE cutting the Circumference in E, and |
| joining CE, this Line CE shall be the Line of the refracted Ray. For if |
| EF be let fall perpendicularly on the Line PQ, this Line EF shall be the |
| Sine of Refraction of the Ray CE, the Angle of Refraction being ECQ; and |
| this Sine EF is equal to DH, and consequently in Proportion to the Sine |
| of Incidence AD as 3 to 4. |
| |
| In like manner, if there be a Prism of Glass (that is, a Glass bounded |
| with two Equal and Parallel Triangular ends, and three plain and well |
| polished Sides, which meet in three Parallel Lines running from the |
| three Angles of one end to the three Angles of the other end) and if the |
| Refraction of the Light in passing cross this Prism be desired: Let ACB |
| [in _Fig._ 2.] represent a Plane cutting this Prism transversly to its |
| three Parallel lines or edges there where the Light passeth through it, |
| and let DE be the Ray incident upon the first side of the Prism AC where |
| the Light goes into the Glass; and by putting the Proportion of the Sine |
| of Incidence to the Sine of Refraction as 17 to 11 find EF the first |
| refracted Ray. Then taking this Ray for the Incident Ray upon the second |
| side of the Glass BC where the Light goes out, find the next refracted |
| Ray FG by putting the Proportion of the Sine of Incidence to the Sine of |
| Refraction as 11 to 17. For if the Sine of Incidence out of Air into |
| Glass be to the Sine of Refraction as 17 to 11, the Sine of Incidence |
| out of Glass into Air must on the contrary be to the Sine of Refraction |
| as 11 to 17, by the third Axiom. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 2.] |
| |
| Much after the same manner, if ACBD [in _Fig._ 3.] represent a Glass |
| spherically convex on both sides (usually called a _Lens_, such as is a |
| Burning-glass, or Spectacle-glass, or an Object-glass of a Telescope) |
| and it be required to know how Light falling upon it from any lucid |
| point Q shall be refracted, let QM represent a Ray falling upon any |
| point M of its first spherical Surface ACB, and by erecting a |
| Perpendicular to the Glass at the point M, find the first refracted Ray |
| MN by the Proportion of the Sines 17 to 11. Let that Ray in going out of |
| the Glass be incident upon N, and then find the second refracted Ray |
| N_q_ by the Proportion of the Sines 11 to 17. And after the same manner |
| may the Refraction be found when the Lens is convex on one side and |
| plane or concave on the other, or concave on both sides. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 3.] |
| |
| |
| AX. VI. |
| |
| _Homogeneal Rays which flow from several Points of any Object, and fall |
| perpendicularly or almost perpendicularly on any reflecting or |
| refracting Plane or spherical Surface, shall afterwards diverge from so |
| many other Points, or be parallel to so many other Lines, or converge to |
| so many other Points, either accurately or without any sensible Error. |
| And the same thing will happen, if the Rays be reflected or refracted |
| successively by two or three or more Plane or Spherical Surfaces._ |
| |
| The Point from which Rays diverge or to which they converge may be |
| called their _Focus_. And the Focus of the incident Rays being given, |
| that of the reflected or refracted ones may be found by finding the |
| Refraction of any two Rays, as above; or more readily thus. |
| |
| _Cas._ 1. Let ACB [in _Fig._ 4.] be a reflecting or refracting Plane, |
| and Q the Focus of the incident Rays, and Q_q_C a Perpendicular to that |
| Plane. And if this Perpendicular be produced to _q_, so that _q_C be |
| equal to QC, the Point _q_ shall be the Focus of the reflected Rays: Or |
| if _q_C be taken on the same side of the Plane with QC, and in |
| proportion to QC as the Sine of Incidence to the Sine of Refraction, the |
| Point _q_ shall be the Focus of the refracted Rays. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 4.] |
| |
| _Cas._ 2. Let ACB [in _Fig._ 5.] be the reflecting Surface of any Sphere |
| whose Centre is E. Bisect any Radius thereof, (suppose EC) in T, and if |
| in that Radius on the same side the Point T you take the Points Q and |
| _q_, so that TQ, TE, and T_q_, be continual Proportionals, and the Point |
| Q be the Focus of the incident Rays, the Point _q_ shall be the Focus of |
| the reflected ones. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 5.] |
| |
| _Cas._ 3. Let ACB [in _Fig._ 6.] be the refracting Surface of any Sphere |
| whose Centre is E. In any Radius thereof EC produced both ways take ET |
| and C_t_ equal to one another and severally in such Proportion to that |
| Radius as the lesser of the Sines of Incidence and Refraction hath to |
| the difference of those Sines. And then if in the same Line you find any |
| two Points Q and _q_, so that TQ be to ET as E_t_ to _tq_, taking _tq_ |
| the contrary way from _t_ which TQ lieth from T, and if the Point Q be |
| the Focus of any incident Rays, the Point _q_ shall be the Focus of the |
| refracted ones. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 6.] |
| |
| And by the same means the Focus of the Rays after two or more Reflexions |
| or Refractions may be found. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 7.] |
| |
| _Cas._ 4. Let ACBD [in _Fig._ 7.] be any refracting Lens, spherically |
| Convex or Concave or Plane on either side, and let CD be its Axis (that |
| is, the Line which cuts both its Surfaces perpendicularly, and passes |
| through the Centres of the Spheres,) and in this Axis produced let F and |
| _f_ be the Foci of the refracted Rays found as above, when the incident |
| Rays on both sides the Lens are parallel to the same Axis; and upon the |
| Diameter F_f_ bisected in E, describe a Circle. Suppose now that any |
| Point Q be the Focus of any incident Rays. Draw QE cutting the said |
| Circle in T and _t_, and therein take _tq_ in such proportion to _t_E as |
| _t_E or TE hath to TQ. Let _tq_ lie the contrary way from _t_ which TQ |
| doth from T, and _q_ shall be the Focus of the refracted Rays without |
| any sensible Error, provided the Point Q be not so remote from the Axis, |
| nor the Lens so broad as to make any of the Rays fall too obliquely on |
| the refracting Surfaces.[A] |
| |
| And by the like Operations may the reflecting or refracting Surfaces be |
| found when the two Foci are given, and thereby a Lens be formed, which |
| shall make the Rays flow towards or from what Place you please.[B] |
| |
| So then the Meaning of this Axiom is, that if Rays fall upon any Plane |
| or Spherical Surface or Lens, and before their Incidence flow from or |
| towards any Point Q, they shall after Reflexion or Refraction flow from |
| or towards the Point _q_ found by the foregoing Rules. And if the |
| incident Rays flow from or towards several points Q, the reflected or |
| refracted Rays shall flow from or towards so many other Points _q_ |
| found by the same Rules. Whether the reflected and refracted Rays flow |
| from or towards the Point _q_ is easily known by the situation of that |
| Point. For if that Point be on the same side of the reflecting or |
| refracting Surface or Lens with the Point Q, and the incident Rays flow |
| from the Point Q, the reflected flow towards the Point _q_ and the |
| refracted from it; and if the incident Rays flow towards Q, the |
| reflected flow from _q_, and the refracted towards it. And the contrary |
| happens when _q_ is on the other side of the Surface. |
| |
| |
| AX. VII. |
| |
| _Wherever the Rays which come from all the Points of any Object meet |
| again in so many Points after they have been made to converge by |
| Reflection or Refraction, there they will make a Picture of the Object |
| upon any white Body on which they fall._ |
| |
| So if PR [in _Fig._ 3.] represent any Object without Doors, and AB be a |
| Lens placed at a hole in the Window-shut of a dark Chamber, whereby the |
| Rays that come from any Point Q of that Object are made to converge and |
| meet again in the Point _q_; and if a Sheet of white Paper be held at |
| _q_ for the Light there to fall upon it, the Picture of that Object PR |
| will appear upon the Paper in its proper shape and Colours. For as the |
| Light which comes from the Point Q goes to the Point _q_, so the Light |
| which comes from other Points P and R of the Object, will go to so many |
| other correspondent Points _p_ and _r_ (as is manifest by the sixth |
| Axiom;) so that every Point of the Object shall illuminate a |
| correspondent Point of the Picture, and thereby make a Picture like the |
| Object in Shape and Colour, this only excepted, that the Picture shall |
| be inverted. And this is the Reason of that vulgar Experiment of casting |
| the Species of Objects from abroad upon a Wall or Sheet of white Paper |
| in a dark Room. |
| |
| In like manner, when a Man views any Object PQR, [in _Fig._ 8.] the |
| Light which comes from the several Points of the Object is so refracted |
| by the transparent skins and humours of the Eye, (that is, by the |
| outward coat EFG, called the _Tunica Cornea_, and by the crystalline |
| humour AB which is beyond the Pupil _mk_) as to converge and meet again |
| in so many Points in the bottom of the Eye, and there to paint the |
| Picture of the Object upon that skin (called the _Tunica Retina_) with |
| which the bottom of the Eye is covered. For Anatomists, when they have |
| taken off from the bottom of the Eye that outward and most thick Coat |
| called the _Dura Mater_, can then see through the thinner Coats, the |
| Pictures of Objects lively painted thereon. And these Pictures, |
| propagated by Motion along the Fibres of the Optick Nerves into the |
| Brain, are the cause of Vision. For accordingly as these Pictures are |
| perfect or imperfect, the Object is seen perfectly or imperfectly. If |
| the Eye be tinged with any colour (as in the Disease of the _Jaundice_) |
| so as to tinge the Pictures in the bottom of the Eye with that Colour, |
| then all Objects appear tinged with the same Colour. If the Humours of |
| the Eye by old Age decay, so as by shrinking to make the _Cornea_ and |
| Coat of the _Crystalline Humour_ grow flatter than before, the Light |
| will not be refracted enough, and for want of a sufficient Refraction |
| will not converge to the bottom of the Eye but to some place beyond it, |
| and by consequence paint in the bottom of the Eye a confused Picture, |
| and according to the Indistinctness of this Picture the Object will |
| appear confused. This is the reason of the decay of sight in old Men, |
| and shews why their Sight is mended by Spectacles. For those Convex |
| glasses supply the defect of plumpness in the Eye, and by increasing the |
| Refraction make the Rays converge sooner, so as to convene distinctly at |
| the bottom of the Eye if the Glass have a due degree of convexity. And |
| the contrary happens in short-sighted Men whose Eyes are too plump. For |
| the Refraction being now too great, the Rays converge and convene in the |
| Eyes before they come at the bottom; and therefore the Picture made in |
| the bottom and the Vision caused thereby will not be distinct, unless |
| the Object be brought so near the Eye as that the place where the |
| converging Rays convene may be removed to the bottom, or that the |
| plumpness of the Eye be taken off and the Refractions diminished by a |
| Concave-glass of a due degree of Concavity, or lastly that by Age the |
| Eye grow flatter till it come to a due Figure: For short-sighted Men see |
| remote Objects best in Old Age, and therefore they are accounted to have |
| the most lasting Eyes. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 8.] |
| |
| |
| AX. VIII. |
| |
| _An Object seen by Reflexion or Refraction, appears in that place from |
| whence the Rays after their last Reflexion or Refraction diverge in |
| falling on the Spectator's Eye._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 9.] |
| |
| If the Object A [in FIG. 9.] be seen by Reflexion of a Looking-glass |
| _mn_, it shall appear, not in its proper place A, but behind the Glass |
| at _a_, from whence any Rays AB, AC, AD, which flow from one and the |
| same Point of the Object, do after their Reflexion made in the Points B, |
| C, D, diverge in going from the Glass to E, F, G, where they are |
| incident on the Spectator's Eyes. For these Rays do make the same |
| Picture in the bottom of the Eyes as if they had come from the Object |
| really placed at _a_ without the Interposition of the Looking-glass; and |
| all Vision is made according to the place and shape of that Picture. |
| |
| In like manner the Object D [in FIG. 2.] seen through a Prism, appears |
| not in its proper place D, but is thence translated to some other place |
| _d_ situated in the last refracted Ray FG drawn backward from F to _d_. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 10.] |
| |
| And so the Object Q [in FIG. 10.] seen through the Lens AB, appears at |
| the place _q_ from whence the Rays diverge in passing from the Lens to |
| the Eye. Now it is to be noted, that the Image of the Object at _q_ is |
| so much bigger or lesser than the Object it self at Q, as the distance |
| of the Image at _q_ from the Lens AB is bigger or less than the distance |
| of the Object at Q from the same Lens. And if the Object be seen through |
| two or more such Convex or Concave-glasses, every Glass shall make a new |
| Image, and the Object shall appear in the place of the bigness of the |
| last Image. Which consideration unfolds the Theory of Microscopes and |
| Telescopes. For that Theory consists in almost nothing else than the |
| describing such Glasses as shall make the last Image of any Object as |
| distinct and large and luminous as it can conveniently be made. |
| |
| I have now given in Axioms and their Explications the sum of what hath |
| hitherto been treated of in Opticks. For what hath been generally |
| agreed on I content my self to assume under the notion of Principles, in |
| order to what I have farther to write. And this may suffice for an |
| Introduction to Readers of quick Wit and good Understanding not yet |
| versed in Opticks: Although those who are already acquainted with this |
| Science, and have handled Glasses, will more readily apprehend what |
| followeth. |
| |
| FOOTNOTES: |
| |
| [A] In our Author's _Lectiones Opticæ_, Part I. Sect. IV. Prop 29, 30, |
| there is an elegant Method of determining these _Foci_; not only in |
| spherical Surfaces, but likewise in any other curved Figure whatever: |
| And in Prop. 32, 33, the same thing is done for any Ray lying out of the |
| Axis. |
| |
| [B] _Ibid._ Prop. 34. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| _PROPOSITIONS._ |
| |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ I. THEOR. I. |
| |
| _Lights which differ in Colour, differ also in Degrees of |
| Refrangibility._ |
| |
| The PROOF by Experiments. |
| |
| _Exper._ 1. |
| |
| I took a black oblong stiff Paper terminated by Parallel Sides, and with |
| a Perpendicular right Line drawn cross from one Side to the other, |
| distinguished it into two equal Parts. One of these parts I painted with |
| a red colour and the other with a blue. The Paper was very black, and |
| the Colours intense and thickly laid on, that the Phænomenon might be |
| more conspicuous. This Paper I view'd through a Prism of solid Glass, |
| whose two Sides through which the Light passed to the Eye were plane and |
| well polished, and contained an Angle of about sixty degrees; which |
| Angle I call the refracting Angle of the Prism. And whilst I view'd it, |
| I held it and the Prism before a Window in such manner that the Sides of |
| the Paper were parallel to the Prism, and both those Sides and the Prism |
| were parallel to the Horizon, and the cross Line was also parallel to |
| it: and that the Light which fell from the Window upon the Paper made an |
| Angle with the Paper, equal to that Angle which was made with the same |
| Paper by the Light reflected from it to the Eye. Beyond the Prism was |
| the Wall of the Chamber under the Window covered over with black Cloth, |
| and the Cloth was involved in Darkness that no Light might be reflected |
| from thence, which in passing by the Edges of the Paper to the Eye, |
| might mingle itself with the Light of the Paper, and obscure the |
| Phænomenon thereof. These things being thus ordered, I found that if the |
| refracting Angle of the Prism be turned upwards, so that the Paper may |
| seem to be lifted upwards by the Refraction, its blue half will be |
| lifted higher by the Refraction than its red half. But if the refracting |
| Angle of the Prism be turned downward, so that the Paper may seem to be |
| carried lower by the Refraction, its blue half will be carried something |
| lower thereby than its red half. Wherefore in both Cases the Light which |
| comes from the blue half of the Paper through the Prism to the Eye, does |
| in like Circumstances suffer a greater Refraction than the Light which |
| comes from the red half, and by consequence is more refrangible. |
| |
| _Illustration._ In the eleventh Figure, MN represents the Window, and DE |
| the Paper terminated with parallel Sides DJ and HE, and by the |
| transverse Line FG distinguished into two halfs, the one DG of an |
| intensely blue Colour, the other FE of an intensely red. And BAC_cab_ |
| represents the Prism whose refracting Planes AB_ba_ and AC_ca_ meet in |
| the Edge of the refracting Angle A_a_. This Edge A_a_ being upward, is |
| parallel both to the Horizon, and to the Parallel-Edges of the Paper DJ |
| and HE, and the transverse Line FG is perpendicular to the Plane of the |
| Window. And _de_ represents the Image of the Paper seen by Refraction |
| upwards in such manner, that the blue half DG is carried higher to _dg_ |
| than the red half FE is to _fe_, and therefore suffers a greater |
| Refraction. If the Edge of the refracting Angle be turned downward, the |
| Image of the Paper will be refracted downward; suppose to [Greek: de], |
| and the blue half will be refracted lower to [Greek: dg] than the red |
| half is to [Greek: pe]. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 11.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 2. About the aforesaid Paper, whose two halfs were painted over |
| with red and blue, and which was stiff like thin Pasteboard, I lapped |
| several times a slender Thred of very black Silk, in such manner that |
| the several parts of the Thred might appear upon the Colours like so |
| many black Lines drawn over them, or like long and slender dark Shadows |
| cast upon them. I might have drawn black Lines with a Pen, but the |
| Threds were smaller and better defined. This Paper thus coloured and |
| lined I set against a Wall perpendicularly to the Horizon, so that one |
| of the Colours might stand to the Right Hand, and the other to the Left. |
| Close before the Paper, at the Confine of the Colours below, I placed a |
| Candle to illuminate the Paper strongly: For the Experiment was tried in |
| the Night. The Flame of the Candle reached up to the lower edge of the |
| Paper, or a very little higher. Then at the distance of six Feet, and |
| one or two Inches from the Paper upon the Floor I erected a Glass Lens |
| four Inches and a quarter broad, which might collect the Rays coming |
| from the several Points of the Paper, and make them converge towards so |
| many other Points at the same distance of six Feet, and one or two |
| Inches on the other side of the Lens, and so form the Image of the |
| coloured Paper upon a white Paper placed there, after the same manner |
| that a Lens at a Hole in a Window casts the Images of Objects abroad |
| upon a Sheet of white Paper in a dark Room. The aforesaid white Paper, |
| erected perpendicular to the Horizon, and to the Rays which fell upon it |
| from the Lens, I moved sometimes towards the Lens, sometimes from it, to |
| find the Places where the Images of the blue and red Parts of the |
| coloured Paper appeared most distinct. Those Places I easily knew by the |
| Images of the black Lines which I had made by winding the Silk about the |
| Paper. For the Images of those fine and slender Lines (which by reason |
| of their Blackness were like Shadows on the Colours) were confused and |
| scarce visible, unless when the Colours on either side of each Line were |
| terminated most distinctly, Noting therefore, as diligently as I could, |
| the Places where the Images of the red and blue halfs of the coloured |
| Paper appeared most distinct, I found that where the red half of the |
| Paper appeared distinct, the blue half appeared confused, so that the |
| black Lines drawn upon it could scarce be seen; and on the contrary, |
| where the blue half appeared most distinct, the red half appeared |
| confused, so that the black Lines upon it were scarce visible. And |
| between the two Places where these Images appeared distinct there was |
| the distance of an Inch and a half; the distance of the white Paper from |
| the Lens, when the Image of the red half of the coloured Paper appeared |
| most distinct, being greater by an Inch and an half than the distance of |
| the same white Paper from the Lens, when the Image of the blue half |
| appeared most distinct. In like Incidences therefore of the blue and red |
| upon the Lens, the blue was refracted more by the Lens than the red, so |
| as to converge sooner by an Inch and a half, and therefore is more |
| refrangible. |
| |
| _Illustration._ In the twelfth Figure (p. 27), DE signifies the coloured |
| Paper, DG the blue half, FE the red half, MN the Lens, HJ the white |
| Paper in that Place where the red half with its black Lines appeared |
| distinct, and _hi_ the same Paper in that Place where the blue half |
| appeared distinct. The Place _hi_ was nearer to the Lens MN than the |
| Place HJ by an Inch and an half. |
| |
| _Scholium._ The same Things succeed, notwithstanding that some of the |
| Circumstances be varied; as in the first Experiment when the Prism and |
| Paper are any ways inclined to the Horizon, and in both when coloured |
| Lines are drawn upon very black Paper. But in the Description of these |
| Experiments, I have set down such Circumstances, by which either the |
| Phænomenon might be render'd more conspicuous, or a Novice might more |
| easily try them, or by which I did try them only. The same Thing, I have |
| often done in the following Experiments: Concerning all which, this one |
| Admonition may suffice. Now from these Experiments it follows not, that |
| all the Light of the blue is more refrangible than all the Light of the |
| red: For both Lights are mixed of Rays differently refrangible, so that |
| in the red there are some Rays not less refrangible than those of the |
| blue, and in the blue there are some Rays not more refrangible than |
| those of the red: But these Rays, in proportion to the whole Light, are |
| but few, and serve to diminish the Event of the Experiment, but are not |
| able to destroy it. For, if the red and blue Colours were more dilute |
| and weak, the distance of the Images would be less than an Inch and a |
| half; and if they were more intense and full, that distance would be |
| greater, as will appear hereafter. These Experiments may suffice for the |
| Colours of Natural Bodies. For in the Colours made by the Refraction of |
| Prisms, this Proposition will appear by the Experiments which are now to |
| follow in the next Proposition. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ II. THEOR. II. |
| |
| _The Light of the Sun consists of Rays differently Refrangible._ |
| |
| The PROOF by Experiments. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 12.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 13.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 3. |
| |
| In a very dark Chamber, at a round Hole, about one third Part of an Inch |
| broad, made in the Shut of a Window, I placed a Glass Prism, whereby the |
| Beam of the Sun's Light, which came in at that Hole, might be refracted |
| upwards toward the opposite Wall of the Chamber, and there form a |
| colour'd Image of the Sun. The Axis of the Prism (that is, the Line |
| passing through the middle of the Prism from one end of it to the other |
| end parallel to the edge of the Refracting Angle) was in this and the |
| following Experiments perpendicular to the incident Rays. About this |
| Axis I turned the Prism slowly, and saw the refracted Light on the Wall, |
| or coloured Image of the Sun, first to descend, and then to ascend. |
| Between the Descent and Ascent, when the Image seemed Stationary, I |
| stopp'd the Prism, and fix'd it in that Posture, that it should be moved |
| no more. For in that Posture the Refractions of the Light at the two |
| Sides of the refracting Angle, that is, at the Entrance of the Rays into |
| the Prism, and at their going out of it, were equal to one another.[C] |
| So also in other Experiments, as often as I would have the Refractions |
| on both sides the Prism to be equal to one another, I noted the Place |
| where the Image of the Sun formed by the refracted Light stood still |
| between its two contrary Motions, in the common Period of its Progress |
| and Regress; and when the Image fell upon that Place, I made fast the |
| Prism. And in this Posture, as the most convenient, it is to be |
| understood that all the Prisms are placed in the following Experiments, |
| unless where some other Posture is described. The Prism therefore being |
| placed in this Posture, I let the refracted Light fall perpendicularly |
| upon a Sheet of white Paper at the opposite Wall of the Chamber, and |
| observed the Figure and Dimensions of the Solar Image formed on the |
| Paper by that Light. This Image was Oblong and not Oval, but terminated |
| with two Rectilinear and Parallel Sides, and two Semicircular Ends. On |
| its Sides it was bounded pretty distinctly, but on its Ends very |
| confusedly and indistinctly, the Light there decaying and vanishing by |
| degrees. The Breadth of this Image answered to the Sun's Diameter, and |
| was about two Inches and the eighth Part of an Inch, including the |
| Penumbra. For the Image was eighteen Feet and an half distant from the |
| Prism, and at this distance that Breadth, if diminished by the Diameter |
| of the Hole in the Window-shut, that is by a quarter of an Inch, |
| subtended an Angle at the Prism of about half a Degree, which is the |
| Sun's apparent Diameter. But the Length of the Image was about ten |
| Inches and a quarter, and the Length of the Rectilinear Sides about |
| eight Inches; and the refracting Angle of the Prism, whereby so great a |
| Length was made, was 64 degrees. With a less Angle the Length of the |
| Image was less, the Breadth remaining the same. If the Prism was turned |
| about its Axis that way which made the Rays emerge more obliquely out of |
| the second refracting Surface of the Prism, the Image soon became an |
| Inch or two longer, or more; and if the Prism was turned about the |
| contrary way, so as to make the Rays fall more obliquely on the first |
| refracting Surface, the Image soon became an Inch or two shorter. And |
| therefore in trying this Experiment, I was as curious as I could be in |
| placing the Prism by the above-mention'd Rule exactly in such a Posture, |
| that the Refractions of the Rays at their Emergence out of the Prism |
| might be equal to that at their Incidence on it. This Prism had some |
| Veins running along within the Glass from one end to the other, which |
| scattered some of the Sun's Light irregularly, but had no sensible |
| Effect in increasing the Length of the coloured Spectrum. For I tried |
| the same Experiment with other Prisms with the same Success. And |
| particularly with a Prism which seemed free from such Veins, and whose |
| refracting Angle was 62-1/2 Degrees, I found the Length of the Image |
| 9-3/4 or 10 Inches at the distance of 18-1/2 Feet from the Prism, the |
| Breadth of the Hole in the Window-shut being 1/4 of an Inch, as before. |
| And because it is easy to commit a Mistake in placing the Prism in its |
| due Posture, I repeated the Experiment four or five Times, and always |
| found the Length of the Image that which is set down above. With another |
| Prism of clearer Glass and better Polish, which seemed free from Veins, |
| and whose refracting Angle was 63-1/2 Degrees, the Length of this Image |
| at the same distance of 18-1/2 Feet was also about 10 Inches, or 10-1/8. |
| Beyond these Measures for about a 1/4 or 1/3 of an Inch at either end of |
| the Spectrum the Light of the Clouds seemed to be a little tinged with |
| red and violet, but so very faintly, that I suspected that Tincture |
| might either wholly, or in great Measure arise from some Rays of the |
| Spectrum scattered irregularly by some Inequalities in the Substance and |
| Polish of the Glass, and therefore I did not include it in these |
| Measures. Now the different Magnitude of the hole in the Window-shut, |
| and different thickness of the Prism where the Rays passed through it, |
| and different inclinations of the Prism to the Horizon, made no sensible |
| changes in the length of the Image. Neither did the different matter of |
| the Prisms make any: for in a Vessel made of polished Plates of Glass |
| cemented together in the shape of a Prism and filled with Water, there |
| is the like Success of the Experiment according to the quantity of the |
| Refraction. It is farther to be observed, that the Rays went on in right |
| Lines from the Prism to the Image, and therefore at their very going out |
| of the Prism had all that Inclination to one another from which the |
| length of the Image proceeded, that is, the Inclination of more than two |
| degrees and an half. And yet according to the Laws of Opticks vulgarly |
| received, they could not possibly be so much inclined to one another.[D] |
| For let EG [_Fig._ 13. (p. 27)] represent the Window-shut, F the hole |
| made therein through which a beam of the Sun's Light was transmitted |
| into the darkened Chamber, and ABC a Triangular Imaginary Plane whereby |
| the Prism is feigned to be cut transversely through the middle of the |
| Light. Or if you please, let ABC represent the Prism it self, looking |
| directly towards the Spectator's Eye with its nearer end: And let XY be |
| the Sun, MN the Paper upon which the Solar Image or Spectrum is cast, |
| and PT the Image it self whose sides towards _v_ and _w_ are Rectilinear |
| and Parallel, and ends towards P and T Semicircular. YKHP and XLJT are |
| two Rays, the first of which comes from the lower part of the Sun to the |
| higher part of the Image, and is refracted in the Prism at K and H, and |
| the latter comes from the higher part of the Sun to the lower part of |
| the Image, and is refracted at L and J. Since the Refractions on both |
| sides the Prism are equal to one another, that is, the Refraction at K |
| equal to the Refraction at J, and the Refraction at L equal to the |
| Refraction at H, so that the Refractions of the incident Rays at K and L |
| taken together, are equal to the Refractions of the emergent Rays at H |
| and J taken together: it follows by adding equal things to equal things, |
| that the Refractions at K and H taken together, are equal to the |
| Refractions at J and L taken together, and therefore the two Rays being |
| equally refracted, have the same Inclination to one another after |
| Refraction which they had before; that is, the Inclination of half a |
| Degree answering to the Sun's Diameter. For so great was the inclination |
| of the Rays to one another before Refraction. So then, the length of the |
| Image PT would by the Rules of Vulgar Opticks subtend an Angle of half a |
| Degree at the Prism, and by Consequence be equal to the breadth _vw_; |
| and therefore the Image would be round. Thus it would be were the two |
| Rays XLJT and YKHP, and all the rest which form the Image P_w_T_v_, |
| alike refrangible. And therefore seeing by Experience it is found that |
| the Image is not round, but about five times longer than broad, the Rays |
| which going to the upper end P of the Image suffer the greatest |
| Refraction, must be more refrangible than those which go to the lower |
| end T, unless the Inequality of Refraction be casual. |
| |
| This Image or Spectrum PT was coloured, being red at its least refracted |
| end T, and violet at its most refracted end P, and yellow green and |
| blue in the intermediate Spaces. Which agrees with the first |
| Proposition, that Lights which differ in Colour, do also differ in |
| Refrangibility. The length of the Image in the foregoing Experiments, I |
| measured from the faintest and outmost red at one end, to the faintest |
| and outmost blue at the other end, excepting only a little Penumbra, |
| whose breadth scarce exceeded a quarter of an Inch, as was said above. |
| |
| _Exper._ 4. In the Sun's Beam which was propagated into the Room through |
| the hole in the Window-shut, at the distance of some Feet from the hole, |
| I held the Prism in such a Posture, that its Axis might be perpendicular |
| to that Beam. Then I looked through the Prism upon the hole, and turning |
| the Prism to and fro about its Axis, to make the Image of the Hole |
| ascend and descend, when between its two contrary Motions it seemed |
| Stationary, I stopp'd the Prism, that the Refractions of both sides of |
| the refracting Angle might be equal to each other, as in the former |
| Experiment. In this situation of the Prism viewing through it the said |
| Hole, I observed the length of its refracted Image to be many times |
| greater than its breadth, and that the most refracted part thereof |
| appeared violet, the least refracted red, the middle parts blue, green |
| and yellow in order. The same thing happen'd when I removed the Prism |
| out of the Sun's Light, and looked through it upon the hole shining by |
| the Light of the Clouds beyond it. And yet if the Refraction were done |
| regularly according to one certain Proportion of the Sines of Incidence |
| and Refraction as is vulgarly supposed, the refracted Image ought to |
| have appeared round. |
| |
| So then, by these two Experiments it appears, that in Equal Incidences |
| there is a considerable inequality of Refractions. But whence this |
| inequality arises, whether it be that some of the incident Rays are |
| refracted more, and others less, constantly, or by chance, or that one |
| and the same Ray is by Refraction disturbed, shatter'd, dilated, and as |
| it were split and spread into many diverging Rays, as _Grimaldo_ |
| supposes, does not yet appear by these Experiments, but will appear by |
| those that follow. |
| |
| _Exper._ 5. Considering therefore, that if in the third Experiment the |
| Image of the Sun should be drawn out into an oblong Form, either by a |
| Dilatation of every Ray, or by any other casual inequality of the |
| Refractions, the same oblong Image would by a second Refraction made |
| sideways be drawn out as much in breadth by the like Dilatation of the |
| Rays, or other casual inequality of the Refractions sideways, I tried |
| what would be the Effects of such a second Refraction. For this end I |
| ordered all things as in the third Experiment, and then placed a second |
| Prism immediately after the first in a cross Position to it, that it |
| might again refract the beam of the Sun's Light which came to it through |
| the first Prism. In the first Prism this beam was refracted upwards, and |
| in the second sideways. And I found that by the Refraction of the second |
| Prism, the breadth of the Image was not increased, but its superior |
| part, which in the first Prism suffered the greater Refraction, and |
| appeared violet and blue, did again in the second Prism suffer a greater |
| Refraction than its inferior part, which appeared red and yellow, and |
| this without any Dilatation of the Image in breadth. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 14] |
| |
| _Illustration._ Let S [_Fig._ 14, 15.] represent the Sun, F the hole in |
| the Window, ABC the first Prism, DH the second Prism, Y the round Image |
| of the Sun made by a direct beam of Light when the Prisms are taken |
| away, PT the oblong Image of the Sun made by that beam passing through |
| the first Prism alone, when the second Prism is taken away, and _pt_ the |
| Image made by the cross Refractions of both Prisms together. Now if the |
| Rays which tend towards the several Points of the round Image Y were |
| dilated and spread by the Refraction of the first Prism, so that they |
| should not any longer go in single Lines to single Points, but that |
| every Ray being split, shattered, and changed from a Linear Ray to a |
| Superficies of Rays diverging from the Point of Refraction, and lying in |
| the Plane of the Angles of Incidence and Refraction, they should go in |
| those Planes to so many Lines reaching almost from one end of the Image |
| PT to the other, and if that Image should thence become oblong: those |
| Rays and their several parts tending towards the several Points of the |
| Image PT ought to be again dilated and spread sideways by the transverse |
| Refraction of the second Prism, so as to compose a four square Image, |
| such as is represented at [Greek: pt]. For the better understanding of |
| which, let the Image PT be distinguished into five equal parts PQK, |
| KQRL, LRSM, MSVN, NVT. And by the same irregularity that the orbicular |
| Light Y is by the Refraction of the first Prism dilated and drawn out |
| into a long Image PT, the Light PQK which takes up a space of the same |
| length and breadth with the Light Y ought to be by the Refraction of the |
| second Prism dilated and drawn out into the long Image _[Greek: p]qkp_, |
| and the Light KQRL into the long Image _kqrl_, and the Lights LRSM, |
| MSVN, NVT, into so many other long Images _lrsm_, _msvn_, _nvt[Greek: |
| t]_; and all these long Images would compose the four square Images |
| _[Greek: pt]_. Thus it ought to be were every Ray dilated by Refraction, |
| and spread into a triangular Superficies of Rays diverging from the |
| Point of Refraction. For the second Refraction would spread the Rays one |
| way as much as the first doth another, and so dilate the Image in |
| breadth as much as the first doth in length. And the same thing ought to |
| happen, were some rays casually refracted more than others. But the |
| Event is otherwise. The Image PT was not made broader by the Refraction |
| of the second Prism, but only became oblique, as 'tis represented at |
| _pt_, its upper end P being by the Refraction translated to a greater |
| distance than its lower end T. So then the Light which went towards the |
| upper end P of the Image, was (at equal Incidences) more refracted in |
| the second Prism, than the Light which tended towards the lower end T, |
| that is the blue and violet, than the red and yellow; and therefore was |
| more refrangible. The same Light was by the Refraction of the first |
| Prism translated farther from the place Y to which it tended before |
| Refraction; and therefore suffered as well in the first Prism as in the |
| second a greater Refraction than the rest of the Light, and by |
| consequence was more refrangible than the rest, even before its |
| incidence on the first Prism. |
| |
| Sometimes I placed a third Prism after the second, and sometimes also a |
| fourth after the third, by all which the Image might be often refracted |
| sideways: but the Rays which were more refracted than the rest in the |
| first Prism were also more refracted in all the rest, and that without |
| any Dilatation of the Image sideways: and therefore those Rays for their |
| constancy of a greater Refraction are deservedly reputed more |
| refrangible. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 15] |
| |
| But that the meaning of this Experiment may more clearly appear, it is |
| to be considered that the Rays which are equally refrangible do fall |
| upon a Circle answering to the Sun's Disque. For this was proved in the |
| third Experiment. By a Circle I understand not here a perfect |
| geometrical Circle, but any orbicular Figure whose length is equal to |
| its breadth, and which, as to Sense, may seem circular. Let therefore AG |
| [in _Fig._ 15.] represent the Circle which all the most refrangible Rays |
| propagated from the whole Disque of the Sun, would illuminate and paint |
| upon the opposite Wall if they were alone; EL the Circle which all the |
| least refrangible Rays would in like manner illuminate and paint if they |
| were alone; BH, CJ, DK, the Circles which so many intermediate sorts of |
| Rays would successively paint upon the Wall, if they were singly |
| propagated from the Sun in successive order, the rest being always |
| intercepted; and conceive that there are other intermediate Circles |
| without Number, which innumerable other intermediate sorts of Rays would |
| successively paint upon the Wall if the Sun should successively emit |
| every sort apart. And seeing the Sun emits all these sorts at once, they |
| must all together illuminate and paint innumerable equal Circles, of all |
| which, being according to their degrees of Refrangibility placed in |
| order in a continual Series, that oblong Spectrum PT is composed which I |
| described in the third Experiment. Now if the Sun's circular Image Y [in |
| _Fig._ 15.] which is made by an unrefracted beam of Light was by any |
| Dilation of the single Rays, or by any other irregularity in the |
| Refraction of the first Prism, converted into the oblong Spectrum, PT: |
| then ought every Circle AG, BH, CJ, &c. in that Spectrum, by the cross |
| Refraction of the second Prism again dilating or otherwise scattering |
| the Rays as before, to be in like manner drawn out and transformed into |
| an oblong Figure, and thereby the breadth of the Image PT would be now |
| as much augmented as the length of the Image Y was before by the |
| Refraction of the first Prism; and thus by the Refractions of both |
| Prisms together would be formed a four square Figure _p[Greek: |
| p]t[Greek: t]_, as I described above. Wherefore since the breadth of the |
| Spectrum PT is not increased by the Refraction sideways, it is certain |
| that the Rays are not split or dilated, or otherways irregularly |
| scatter'd by that Refraction, but that every Circle is by a regular and |
| uniform Refraction translated entire into another Place, as the Circle |
| AG by the greatest Refraction into the place _ag_, the Circle BH by a |
| less Refraction into the place _bh_, the Circle CJ by a Refraction still |
| less into the place _ci_, and so of the rest; by which means a new |
| Spectrum _pt_ inclined to the former PT is in like manner composed of |
| Circles lying in a right Line; and these Circles must be of the same |
| bigness with the former, because the breadths of all the Spectrums Y, PT |
| and _pt_ at equal distances from the Prisms are equal. |
| |
| I considered farther, that by the breadth of the hole F through which |
| the Light enters into the dark Chamber, there is a Penumbra made in the |
| Circuit of the Spectrum Y, and that Penumbra remains in the rectilinear |
| Sides of the Spectrums PT and _pt_. I placed therefore at that hole a |
| Lens or Object-glass of a Telescope which might cast the Image of the |
| Sun distinctly on Y without any Penumbra at all, and found that the |
| Penumbra of the rectilinear Sides of the oblong Spectrums PT and _pt_ |
| was also thereby taken away, so that those Sides appeared as distinctly |
| defined as did the Circumference of the first Image Y. Thus it happens |
| if the Glass of the Prisms be free from Veins, and their sides be |
| accurately plane and well polished without those numberless Waves or |
| Curles which usually arise from Sand-holes a little smoothed in |
| polishing with Putty. If the Glass be only well polished and free from |
| Veins, and the Sides not accurately plane, but a little Convex or |
| Concave, as it frequently happens; yet may the three Spectrums Y, PT and |
| _pt_ want Penumbras, but not in equal distances from the Prisms. Now |
| from this want of Penumbras, I knew more certainly that every one of the |
| Circles was refracted according to some most regular, uniform and |
| constant Law. For if there were any irregularity in the Refraction, the |
| right Lines AE and GL, which all the Circles in the Spectrum PT do |
| touch, could not by that Refraction be translated into the Lines _ae_ |
| and _gl_ as distinct and straight as they were before, but there would |
| arise in those translated Lines some Penumbra or Crookedness or |
| Undulation, or other sensible Perturbation contrary to what is found by |
| Experience. Whatsoever Penumbra or Perturbation should be made in the |
| Circles by the cross Refraction of the second Prism, all that Penumbra |
| or Perturbation would be conspicuous in the right Lines _ae_ and _gl_ |
| which touch those Circles. And therefore since there is no such Penumbra |
| or Perturbation in those right Lines, there must be none in the |
| Circles. Since the distance between those Tangents or breadth of the |
| Spectrum is not increased by the Refractions, the Diameters of the |
| Circles are not increased thereby. Since those Tangents continue to be |
| right Lines, every Circle which in the first Prism is more or less |
| refracted, is exactly in the same proportion more or less refracted in |
| the second. And seeing all these things continue to succeed after the |
| same manner when the Rays are again in a third Prism, and again in a |
| fourth refracted sideways, it is evident that the Rays of one and the |
| same Circle, as to their degree of Refrangibility, continue always |
| uniform and homogeneal to one another, and that those of several Circles |
| do differ in degree of Refrangibility, and that in some certain and |
| constant Proportion. Which is the thing I was to prove. |
| |
| There is yet another Circumstance or two of this Experiment by which it |
| becomes still more plain and convincing. Let the second Prism DH [in |
| _Fig._ 16.] be placed not immediately after the first, but at some |
| distance from it; suppose in the mid-way between it and the Wall on |
| which the oblong Spectrum PT is cast, so that the Light from the first |
| Prism may fall upon it in the form of an oblong Spectrum [Greek: pt] |
| parallel to this second Prism, and be refracted sideways to form the |
| oblong Spectrum _pt_ upon the Wall. And you will find as before, that |
| this Spectrum _pt_ is inclined to that Spectrum PT, which the first |
| Prism forms alone without the second; the blue ends P and _p_ being |
| farther distant from one another than the red ones T and _t_, and by |
| consequence that the Rays which go to the blue end [Greek: p] of the |
| Image [Greek: pt], and which therefore suffer the greatest Refraction in |
| the first Prism, are again in the second Prism more refracted than the |
| rest. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 16.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 17.] |
| |
| The same thing I try'd also by letting the Sun's Light into a dark Room |
| through two little round holes F and [Greek: ph] [in _Fig._ 17.] made in |
| the Window, and with two parallel Prisms ABC and [Greek: abg] placed at |
| those holes (one at each) refracting those two beams of Light to the |
| opposite Wall of the Chamber, in such manner that the two colour'd |
| Images PT and MN which they there painted were joined end to end and lay |
| in one straight Line, the red end T of the one touching the blue end M |
| of the other. For if these two refracted Beams were again by a third |
| Prism DH placed cross to the two first, refracted sideways, and the |
| Spectrums thereby translated to some other part of the Wall of the |
| Chamber, suppose the Spectrum PT to _pt_ and the Spectrum MN to _mn_, |
| these translated Spectrums _pt_ and _mn_ would not lie in one straight |
| Line with their ends contiguous as before, but be broken off from one |
| another and become parallel, the blue end _m_ of the Image _mn_ being by |
| a greater Refraction translated farther from its former place MT, than |
| the red end _t_ of the other Image _pt_ from the same place MT; which |
| puts the Proposition past Dispute. And this happens whether the third |
| Prism DH be placed immediately after the two first, or at a great |
| distance from them, so that the Light refracted in the two first Prisms |
| be either white and circular, or coloured and oblong when it falls on |
| the third. |
| |
| _Exper._ 6. In the middle of two thin Boards I made round holes a third |
| part of an Inch in diameter, and in the Window-shut a much broader hole |
| being made to let into my darkned Chamber a large Beam of the Sun's |
| Light; I placed a Prism behind the Shut in that beam to refract it |
| towards the opposite Wall, and close behind the Prism I fixed one of the |
| Boards, in such manner that the middle of the refracted Light might pass |
| through the hole made in it, and the rest be intercepted by the Board. |
| Then at the distance of about twelve Feet from the first Board I fixed |
| the other Board in such manner that the middle of the refracted Light |
| which came through the hole in the first Board, and fell upon the |
| opposite Wall, might pass through the hole in this other Board, and the |
| rest being intercepted by the Board might paint upon it the coloured |
| Spectrum of the Sun. And close behind this Board I fixed another Prism |
| to refract the Light which came through the hole. Then I returned |
| speedily to the first Prism, and by turning it slowly to and fro about |
| its Axis, I caused the Image which fell upon the second Board to move up |
| and down upon that Board, that all its parts might successively pass |
| through the hole in that Board and fall upon the Prism behind it. And in |
| the mean time, I noted the places on the opposite Wall to which that |
| Light after its Refraction in the second Prism did pass; and by the |
| difference of the places I found that the Light which being most |
| refracted in the first Prism did go to the blue end of the Image, was |
| again more refracted in the second Prism than the Light which went to |
| the red end of that Image, which proves as well the first Proposition as |
| the second. And this happened whether the Axis of the two Prisms were |
| parallel, or inclined to one another, and to the Horizon in any given |
| Angles. |
| |
| _Illustration._ Let F [in _Fig._ 18.] be the wide hole in the |
| Window-shut, through which the Sun shines upon the first Prism ABC, and |
| let the refracted Light fall upon the middle of the Board DE, and the |
| middle part of that Light upon the hole G made in the middle part of |
| that Board. Let this trajected part of that Light fall again upon the |
| middle of the second Board _de_, and there paint such an oblong coloured |
| Image of the Sun as was described in the third Experiment. By turning |
| the Prism ABC slowly to and fro about its Axis, this Image will be made |
| to move up and down the Board _de_, and by this means all its parts from |
| one end to the other may be made to pass successively through the hole |
| _g_ which is made in the middle of that Board. In the mean while another |
| Prism _abc_ is to be fixed next after that hole _g_, to refract the |
| trajected Light a second time. And these things being thus ordered, I |
| marked the places M and N of the opposite Wall upon which the refracted |
| Light fell, and found that whilst the two Boards and second Prism |
| remained unmoved, those places by turning the first Prism about its Axis |
| were changed perpetually. For when the lower part of the Light which |
| fell upon the second Board _de_ was cast through the hole _g_, it went |
| to a lower place M on the Wall and when the higher part of that Light |
| was cast through the same hole _g_, it went to a higher place N on the |
| Wall, and when any intermediate part of the Light was cast through that |
| hole, it went to some place on the Wall between M and N. The unchanged |
| Position of the holes in the Boards, made the Incidence of the Rays upon |
| the second Prism to be the same in all cases. And yet in that common |
| Incidence some of the Rays were more refracted, and others less. And |
| those were more refracted in this Prism, which by a greater Refraction |
| in the first Prism were more turned out of the way, and therefore for |
| their Constancy of being more refracted are deservedly called more |
| refrangible. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 18.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 20.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 7. At two holes made near one another in my Window-shut I |
| placed two Prisms, one at each, which might cast upon the opposite Wall |
| (after the manner of the third Experiment) two oblong coloured Images of |
| the Sun. And at a little distance from the Wall I placed a long slender |
| Paper with straight and parallel edges, and ordered the Prisms and Paper |
| so, that the red Colour of one Image might fall directly upon one half |
| of the Paper, and the violet Colour of the other Image upon the other |
| half of the same Paper; so that the Paper appeared of two Colours, red |
| and violet, much after the manner of the painted Paper in the first and |
| second Experiments. Then with a black Cloth I covered the Wall behind |
| the Paper, that no Light might be reflected from it to disturb the |
| Experiment, and viewing the Paper through a third Prism held parallel |
| to it, I saw that half of it which was illuminated by the violet Light |
| to be divided from the other half by a greater Refraction, especially |
| when I went a good way off from the Paper. For when I viewed it too near |
| at hand, the two halfs of the Paper did not appear fully divided from |
| one another, but seemed contiguous at one of their Angles like the |
| painted Paper in the first Experiment. Which also happened when the |
| Paper was too broad. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 19.] |
| |
| Sometimes instead of the Paper I used a white Thred, and this appeared |
| through the Prism divided into two parallel Threds as is represented in |
| the nineteenth Figure, where DG denotes the Thred illuminated with |
| violet Light from D to E and with red Light from F to G, and _defg_ are |
| the parts of the Thred seen by Refraction. If one half of the Thred be |
| constantly illuminated with red, and the other half be illuminated with |
| all the Colours successively, (which may be done by causing one of the |
| Prisms to be turned about its Axis whilst the other remains unmoved) |
| this other half in viewing the Thred through the Prism, will appear in |
| a continual right Line with the first half when illuminated with red, |
| and begin to be a little divided from it when illuminated with Orange, |
| and remove farther from it when illuminated with yellow, and still |
| farther when with green, and farther when with blue, and go yet farther |
| off when illuminated with Indigo, and farthest when with deep violet. |
| Which plainly shews, that the Lights of several Colours are more and |
| more refrangible one than another, in this Order of their Colours, red, |
| orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, deep violet; and so proves as well |
| the first Proposition as the second. |
| |
| I caused also the coloured Spectrums PT [in _Fig._ 17.] and MN made in a |
| dark Chamber by the Refractions of two Prisms to lie in a Right Line end |
| to end, as was described above in the fifth Experiment, and viewing them |
| through a third Prism held parallel to their Length, they appeared no |
| longer in a Right Line, but became broken from one another, as they are |
| represented at _pt_ and _mn_, the violet end _m_ of the Spectrum _mn_ |
| being by a greater Refraction translated farther from its former Place |
| MT than the red end _t_ of the other Spectrum _pt_. |
| |
| I farther caused those two Spectrums PT [in _Fig._ 20.] and MN to become |
| co-incident in an inverted Order of their Colours, the red end of each |
| falling on the violet end of the other, as they are represented in the |
| oblong Figure PTMN; and then viewing them through a Prism DH held |
| parallel to their Length, they appeared not co-incident, as when view'd |
| with the naked Eye, but in the form of two distinct Spectrums _pt_ and |
| _mn_ crossing one another in the middle after the manner of the Letter |
| X. Which shews that the red of the one Spectrum and violet of the other, |
| which were co-incident at PN and MT, being parted from one another by a |
| greater Refraction of the violet to _p_ and _m_ than of the red to _n_ |
| and _t_, do differ in degrees of Refrangibility. |
| |
| I illuminated also a little Circular Piece of white Paper all over with |
| the Lights of both Prisms intermixed, and when it was illuminated with |
| the red of one Spectrum, and deep violet of the other, so as by the |
| Mixture of those Colours to appear all over purple, I viewed the Paper, |
| first at a less distance, and then at a greater, through a third Prism; |
| and as I went from the Paper, the refracted Image thereof became more |
| and more divided by the unequal Refraction of the two mixed Colours, and |
| at length parted into two distinct Images, a red one and a violet one, |
| whereof the violet was farthest from the Paper, and therefore suffered |
| the greatest Refraction. And when that Prism at the Window, which cast |
| the violet on the Paper was taken away, the violet Image disappeared; |
| but when the other Prism was taken away the red vanished; which shews, |
| that these two Images were nothing else than the Lights of the two |
| Prisms, which had been intermixed on the purple Paper, but were parted |
| again by their unequal Refractions made in the third Prism, through |
| which the Paper was view'd. This also was observable, that if one of the |
| Prisms at the Window, suppose that which cast the violet on the Paper, |
| was turned about its Axis to make all the Colours in this order, |
| violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, red, fall successively on |
| the Paper from that Prism, the violet Image changed Colour accordingly, |
| turning successively to indigo, blue, green, yellow and red, and in |
| changing Colour came nearer and nearer to the red Image made by the |
| other Prism, until when it was also red both Images became fully |
| co-incident. |
| |
| I placed also two Paper Circles very near one another, the one in the |
| red Light of one Prism, and the other in the violet Light of the other. |
| The Circles were each of them an Inch in diameter, and behind them the |
| Wall was dark, that the Experiment might not be disturbed by any Light |
| coming from thence. These Circles thus illuminated, I viewed through a |
| Prism, so held, that the Refraction might be made towards the red |
| Circle, and as I went from them they came nearer and nearer together, |
| and at length became co-incident; and afterwards when I went still |
| farther off, they parted again in a contrary Order, the violet by a |
| greater Refraction being carried beyond the red. |
| |
| _Exper._ 8. In Summer, when the Sun's Light uses to be strongest, I |
| placed a Prism at the Hole of the Window-shut, as in the third |
| Experiment, yet so that its Axis might be parallel to the Axis of the |
| World, and at the opposite Wall in the Sun's refracted Light, I placed |
| an open Book. Then going six Feet and two Inches from the Book, I placed |
| there the above-mentioned Lens, by which the Light reflected from the |
| Book might be made to converge and meet again at the distance of six |
| Feet and two Inches behind the Lens, and there paint the Species of the |
| Book upon a Sheet of white Paper much after the manner of the second |
| Experiment. The Book and Lens being made fast, I noted the Place where |
| the Paper was, when the Letters of the Book, illuminated by the fullest |
| red Light of the Solar Image falling upon it, did cast their Species on |
| that Paper most distinctly: And then I stay'd till by the Motion of the |
| Sun, and consequent Motion of his Image on the Book, all the Colours |
| from that red to the middle of the blue pass'd over those Letters; and |
| when those Letters were illuminated by that blue, I noted again the |
| Place of the Paper when they cast their Species most distinctly upon it: |
| And I found that this last Place of the Paper was nearer to the Lens |
| than its former Place by about two Inches and an half, or two and three |
| quarters. So much sooner therefore did the Light in the violet end of |
| the Image by a greater Refraction converge and meet, than the Light in |
| the red end. But in trying this, the Chamber was as dark as I could make |
| it. For, if these Colours be diluted and weakned by the Mixture of any |
| adventitious Light, the distance between the Places of the Paper will |
| not be so great. This distance in the second Experiment, where the |
| Colours of natural Bodies were made use of, was but an Inch and an half, |
| by reason of the Imperfection of those Colours. Here in the Colours of |
| the Prism, which are manifestly more full, intense, and lively than |
| those of natural Bodies, the distance is two Inches and three quarters. |
| And were the Colours still more full, I question not but that the |
| distance would be considerably greater. For the coloured Light of the |
| Prism, by the interfering of the Circles described in the second Figure |
| of the fifth Experiment, and also by the Light of the very bright Clouds |
| next the Sun's Body intermixing with these Colours, and by the Light |
| scattered by the Inequalities in the Polish of the Prism, was so very |
| much compounded, that the Species which those faint and dark Colours, |
| the indigo and violet, cast upon the Paper were not distinct enough to |
| be well observed. |
| |
| _Exper._ 9. A Prism, whose two Angles at its Base were equal to one |
| another, and half right ones, and the third a right one, I placed in a |
| Beam of the Sun's Light let into a dark Chamber through a Hole in the |
| Window-shut, as in the third Experiment. And turning the Prism slowly |
| about its Axis, until all the Light which went through one of its |
| Angles, and was refracted by it began to be reflected by its Base, at |
| which till then it went out of the Glass, I observed that those Rays |
| which had suffered the greatest Refraction were sooner reflected than |
| the rest. I conceived therefore, that those Rays of the reflected Light, |
| which were most refrangible, did first of all by a total Reflexion |
| become more copious in that Light than the rest, and that afterwards the |
| rest also, by a total Reflexion, became as copious as these. To try |
| this, I made the reflected Light pass through another Prism, and being |
| refracted by it to fall afterwards upon a Sheet of white Paper placed |
| at some distance behind it, and there by that Refraction to paint the |
| usual Colours of the Prism. And then causing the first Prism to be |
| turned about its Axis as above, I observed that when those Rays, which |
| in this Prism had suffered the greatest Refraction, and appeared of a |
| blue and violet Colour began to be totally reflected, the blue and |
| violet Light on the Paper, which was most refracted in the second Prism, |
| received a sensible Increase above that of the red and yellow, which was |
| least refracted; and afterwards, when the rest of the Light which was |
| green, yellow, and red, began to be totally reflected in the first |
| Prism, the Light of those Colours on the Paper received as great an |
| Increase as the violet and blue had done before. Whence 'tis manifest, |
| that the Beam of Light reflected by the Base of the Prism, being |
| augmented first by the more refrangible Rays, and afterwards by the less |
| refrangible ones, is compounded of Rays differently refrangible. And |
| that all such reflected Light is of the same Nature with the Sun's Light |
| before its Incidence on the Base of the Prism, no Man ever doubted; it |
| being generally allowed, that Light by such Reflexions suffers no |
| Alteration in its Modifications and Properties. I do not here take |
| Notice of any Refractions made in the sides of the first Prism, because |
| the Light enters it perpendicularly at the first side, and goes out |
| perpendicularly at the second side, and therefore suffers none. So then, |
| the Sun's incident Light being of the same Temper and Constitution with |
| his emergent Light, and the last being compounded of Rays differently |
| refrangible, the first must be in like manner compounded. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 21.] |
| |
| _Illustration._ In the twenty-first Figure, ABC is the first Prism, BC |
| its Base, B and C its equal Angles at the Base, each of 45 Degrees, A |
| its rectangular Vertex, FM a beam of the Sun's Light let into a dark |
| Room through a hole F one third part of an Inch broad, M its Incidence |
| on the Base of the Prism, MG a less refracted Ray, MH a more refracted |
| Ray, MN the beam of Light reflected from the Base, VXY the second Prism |
| by which this beam in passing through it is refracted, N_t_ the less |
| refracted Light of this beam, and N_p_ the more refracted part thereof. |
| When the first Prism ABC is turned about its Axis according to the order |
| of the Letters ABC, the Rays MH emerge more and more obliquely out of |
| that Prism, and at length after their most oblique Emergence are |
| reflected towards N, and going on to _p_ do increase the Number of the |
| Rays N_p_. Afterwards by continuing the Motion of the first Prism, the |
| Rays MG are also reflected to N and increase the number of the Rays |
| N_t_. And therefore the Light MN admits into its Composition, first the |
| more refrangible Rays, and then the less refrangible Rays, and yet after |
| this Composition is of the same Nature with the Sun's immediate Light |
| FM, the Reflexion of the specular Base BC causing no Alteration therein. |
| |
| _Exper._ 10. Two Prisms, which were alike in Shape, I tied so together, |
| that their Axis and opposite Sides being parallel, they composed a |
| Parallelopiped. And, the Sun shining into my dark Chamber through a |
| little hole in the Window-shut, I placed that Parallelopiped in his beam |
| at some distance from the hole, in such a Posture, that the Axes of the |
| Prisms might be perpendicular to the incident Rays, and that those Rays |
| being incident upon the first Side of one Prism, might go on through the |
| two contiguous Sides of both Prisms, and emerge out of the last Side of |
| the second Prism. This Side being parallel to the first Side of the |
| first Prism, caused the emerging Light to be parallel to the incident. |
| Then, beyond these two Prisms I placed a third, which might refract that |
| emergent Light, and by that Refraction cast the usual Colours of the |
| Prism upon the opposite Wall, or upon a sheet of white Paper held at a |
| convenient Distance behind the Prism for that refracted Light to fall |
| upon it. After this I turned the Parallelopiped about its Axis, and |
| found that when the contiguous Sides of the two Prisms became so oblique |
| to the incident Rays, that those Rays began all of them to be |
| reflected, those Rays which in the third Prism had suffered the greatest |
| Refraction, and painted the Paper with violet and blue, were first of |
| all by a total Reflexion taken out of the transmitted Light, the rest |
| remaining and on the Paper painting their Colours of green, yellow, |
| orange and red, as before; and afterwards by continuing the Motion of |
| the two Prisms, the rest of the Rays also by a total Reflexion vanished |
| in order, according to their degrees of Refrangibility. The Light |
| therefore which emerged out of the two Prisms is compounded of Rays |
| differently refrangible, seeing the more refrangible Rays may be taken |
| out of it, while the less refrangible remain. But this Light being |
| trajected only through the parallel Superficies of the two Prisms, if it |
| suffer'd any change by the Refraction of one Superficies it lost that |
| Impression by the contrary Refraction of the other Superficies, and so |
| being restor'd to its pristine Constitution, became of the same Nature |
| and Condition as at first before its Incidence on those Prisms; and |
| therefore, before its Incidence, was as much compounded of Rays |
| differently refrangible, as afterwards. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 22.] |
| |
| _Illustration._ In the twenty second Figure ABC and BCD are the two |
| Prisms tied together in the form of a Parallelopiped, their Sides BC and |
| CB being contiguous, and their Sides AB and CD parallel. And HJK is the |
| third Prism, by which the Sun's Light propagated through the hole F into |
| the dark Chamber, and there passing through those sides of the Prisms |
| AB, BC, CB and CD, is refracted at O to the white Paper PT, falling |
| there partly upon P by a greater Refraction, partly upon T by a less |
| Refraction, and partly upon R and other intermediate places by |
| intermediate Refractions. By turning the Parallelopiped ACBD about its |
| Axis, according to the order of the Letters A, C, D, B, at length when |
| the contiguous Planes BC and CB become sufficiently oblique to the Rays |
| FM, which are incident upon them at M, there will vanish totally out of |
| the refracted Light OPT, first of all the most refracted Rays OP, (the |
| rest OR and OT remaining as before) then the Rays OR and other |
| intermediate ones, and lastly, the least refracted Rays OT. For when |
| the Plane BC becomes sufficiently oblique to the Rays incident upon it, |
| those Rays will begin to be totally reflected by it towards N; and first |
| the most refrangible Rays will be totally reflected (as was explained in |
| the preceding Experiment) and by Consequence must first disappear at P, |
| and afterwards the rest as they are in order totally reflected to N, |
| they must disappear in the same order at R and T. So then the Rays which |
| at O suffer the greatest Refraction, may be taken out of the Light MO |
| whilst the rest of the Rays remain in it, and therefore that Light MO is |
| compounded of Rays differently refrangible. And because the Planes AB |
| and CD are parallel, and therefore by equal and contrary Refractions |
| destroy one anothers Effects, the incident Light FM must be of the same |
| Kind and Nature with the emergent Light MO, and therefore doth also |
| consist of Rays differently refrangible. These two Lights FM and MO, |
| before the most refrangible Rays are separated out of the emergent Light |
| MO, agree in Colour, and in all other Properties so far as my |
| Observation reaches, and therefore are deservedly reputed of the same |
| Nature and Constitution, and by Consequence the one is compounded as |
| well as the other. But after the most refrangible Rays begin to be |
| totally reflected, and thereby separated out of the emergent Light MO, |
| that Light changes its Colour from white to a dilute and faint yellow, a |
| pretty good orange, a very full red successively, and then totally |
| vanishes. For after the most refrangible Rays which paint the Paper at |
| P with a purple Colour, are by a total Reflexion taken out of the beam |
| of Light MO, the rest of the Colours which appear on the Paper at R and |
| T being mix'd in the Light MO compound there a faint yellow, and after |
| the blue and part of the green which appear on the Paper between P and R |
| are taken away, the rest which appear between R and T (that is the |
| yellow, orange, red and a little green) being mixed in the beam MO |
| compound there an orange; and when all the Rays are by Reflexion taken |
| out of the beam MO, except the least refrangible, which at T appear of a |
| full red, their Colour is the same in that beam MO as afterwards at T, |
| the Refraction of the Prism HJK serving only to separate the differently |
| refrangible Rays, without making any Alteration in their Colours, as |
| shall be more fully proved hereafter. All which confirms as well the |
| first Proposition as the second. |
| |
| _Scholium._ If this Experiment and the former be conjoined and made one |
| by applying a fourth Prism VXY [in _Fig._ 22.] to refract the reflected |
| beam MN towards _tp_, the Conclusion will be clearer. For then the Light |
| N_p_ which in the fourth Prism is more refracted, will become fuller and |
| stronger when the Light OP, which in the third Prism HJK is more |
| refracted, vanishes at P; and afterwards when the less refracted Light |
| OT vanishes at T, the less refracted Light N_t_ will become increased |
| whilst the more refracted Light at _p_ receives no farther increase. And |
| as the trajected beam MO in vanishing is always of such a Colour as |
| ought to result from the mixture of the Colours which fall upon the |
| Paper PT, so is the reflected beam MN always of such a Colour as ought |
| to result from the mixture of the Colours which fall upon the Paper |
| _pt_. For when the most refrangible Rays are by a total Reflexion taken |
| out of the beam MO, and leave that beam of an orange Colour, the Excess |
| of those Rays in the reflected Light, does not only make the violet, |
| indigo and blue at _p_ more full, but also makes the beam MN change from |
| the yellowish Colour of the Sun's Light, to a pale white inclining to |
| blue, and afterward recover its yellowish Colour again, so soon as all |
| the rest of the transmitted Light MOT is reflected. |
| |
| Now seeing that in all this variety of Experiments, whether the Trial be |
| made in Light reflected, and that either from natural Bodies, as in the |
| first and second Experiment, or specular, as in the ninth; or in Light |
| refracted, and that either before the unequally refracted Rays are by |
| diverging separated from one another, and losing their whiteness which |
| they have altogether, appear severally of several Colours, as in the |
| fifth Experiment; or after they are separated from one another, and |
| appear colour'd as in the sixth, seventh, and eighth Experiments; or in |
| Light trajected through parallel Superficies, destroying each others |
| Effects, as in the tenth Experiment; there are always found Rays, which |
| at equal Incidences on the same Medium suffer unequal Refractions, and |
| that without any splitting or dilating of single Rays, or contingence in |
| the inequality of the Refractions, as is proved in the fifth and sixth |
| Experiments. And seeing the Rays which differ in Refrangibility may be |
| parted and sorted from one another, and that either by Refraction as in |
| the third Experiment, or by Reflexion as in the tenth, and then the |
| several sorts apart at equal Incidences suffer unequal Refractions, and |
| those sorts are more refracted than others after Separation, which were |
| more refracted before it, as in the sixth and following Experiments, and |
| if the Sun's Light be trajected through three or more cross Prisms |
| successively, those Rays which in the first Prism are refracted more |
| than others, are in all the following Prisms refracted more than others |
| in the same Rate and Proportion, as appears by the fifth Experiment; |
| it's manifest that the Sun's Light is an heterogeneous Mixture of Rays, |
| some of which are constantly more refrangible than others, as was |
| proposed. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ III. THEOR. III. |
| |
| _The Sun's Light consists of Rays differing in Reflexibility, and those |
| Rays are more reflexible than others which are more refrangible._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the ninth and tenth Experiments: For in the ninth |
| Experiment, by turning the Prism about its Axis, until the Rays within |
| it which in going out into the Air were refracted by its Base, became so |
| oblique to that Base, as to begin to be totally reflected thereby; those |
| Rays became first of all totally reflected, which before at equal |
| Incidences with the rest had suffered the greatest Refraction. And the |
| same thing happens in the Reflexion made by the common Base of the two |
| Prisms in the tenth Experiment. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ IV. PROB. I. |
| |
| _To separate from one another the heterogeneous Rays of compound Light._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 23.] |
| |
| The heterogeneous Rays are in some measure separated from one another by |
| the Refraction of the Prism in the third Experiment, and in the fifth |
| Experiment, by taking away the Penumbra from the rectilinear sides of |
| the coloured Image, that Separation in those very rectilinear sides or |
| straight edges of the Image becomes perfect. But in all places between |
| those rectilinear edges, those innumerable Circles there described, |
| which are severally illuminated by homogeneal Rays, by interfering with |
| one another, and being every where commix'd, do render the Light |
| sufficiently compound. But if these Circles, whilst their Centers keep |
| their Distances and Positions, could be made less in Diameter, their |
| interfering one with another, and by Consequence the Mixture of the |
| heterogeneous Rays would be proportionally diminish'd. In the twenty |
| third Figure let AG, BH, CJ, DK, EL, FM be the Circles which so many |
| sorts of Rays flowing from the same disque of the Sun, do in the third |
| Experiment illuminate; of all which and innumerable other intermediate |
| ones lying in a continual Series between the two rectilinear and |
| parallel edges of the Sun's oblong Image PT, that Image is compos'd, as |
| was explained in the fifth Experiment. And let _ag_, _bh_, _ci_, _dk_, |
| _el_, _fm_ be so many less Circles lying in a like continual Series |
| between two parallel right Lines _af_ and _gm_ with the same distances |
| between their Centers, and illuminated by the same sorts of Rays, that |
| is the Circle _ag_ with the same sort by which the corresponding Circle |
| AG was illuminated, and the Circle _bh_ with the same sort by which the |
| corresponding Circle BH was illuminated, and the rest of the Circles |
| _ci_, _dk_, _el_, _fm_ respectively, with the same sorts of Rays by |
| which the several corresponding Circles CJ, DK, EL, FM were illuminated. |
| In the Figure PT composed of the greater Circles, three of those Circles |
| AG, BH, CJ, are so expanded into one another, that the three sorts of |
| Rays by which those Circles are illuminated, together with other |
| innumerable sorts of intermediate Rays, are mixed at QR in the middle |
| of the Circle BH. And the like Mixture happens throughout almost the |
| whole length of the Figure PT. But in the Figure _pt_ composed of the |
| less Circles, the three less Circles _ag_, _bh_, _ci_, which answer to |
| those three greater, do not extend into one another; nor are there any |
| where mingled so much as any two of the three sorts of Rays by which |
| those Circles are illuminated, and which in the Figure PT are all of |
| them intermingled at BH. |
| |
| Now he that shall thus consider it, will easily understand that the |
| Mixture is diminished in the same Proportion with the Diameters of the |
| Circles. If the Diameters of the Circles whilst their Centers remain the |
| same, be made three times less than before, the Mixture will be also |
| three times less; if ten times less, the Mixture will be ten times less, |
| and so of other Proportions. That is, the Mixture of the Rays in the |
| greater Figure PT will be to their Mixture in the less _pt_, as the |
| Latitude of the greater Figure is to the Latitude of the less. For the |
| Latitudes of these Figures are equal to the Diameters of their Circles. |
| And hence it easily follows, that the Mixture of the Rays in the |
| refracted Spectrum _pt_ is to the Mixture of the Rays in the direct and |
| immediate Light of the Sun, as the breadth of that Spectrum is to the |
| difference between the length and breadth of the same Spectrum. |
| |
| So then, if we would diminish the Mixture of the Rays, we are to |
| diminish the Diameters of the Circles. Now these would be diminished if |
| the Sun's Diameter to which they answer could be made less than it is, |
| or (which comes to the same Purpose) if without Doors, at a great |
| distance from the Prism towards the Sun, some opake Body were placed, |
| with a round hole in the middle of it, to intercept all the Sun's Light, |
| excepting so much as coming from the middle of his Body could pass |
| through that Hole to the Prism. For so the Circles AG, BH, and the rest, |
| would not any longer answer to the whole Disque of the Sun, but only to |
| that Part of it which could be seen from the Prism through that Hole, |
| that it is to the apparent Magnitude of that Hole view'd from the Prism. |
| But that these Circles may answer more distinctly to that Hole, a Lens |
| is to be placed by the Prism to cast the Image of the Hole, (that is, |
| every one of the Circles AG, BH, &c.) distinctly upon the Paper at PT, |
| after such a manner, as by a Lens placed at a Window, the Species of |
| Objects abroad are cast distinctly upon a Paper within the Room, and the |
| rectilinear Sides of the oblong Solar Image in the fifth Experiment |
| became distinct without any Penumbra. If this be done, it will not be |
| necessary to place that Hole very far off, no not beyond the Window. And |
| therefore instead of that Hole, I used the Hole in the Window-shut, as |
| follows. |
| |
| _Exper._ 11. In the Sun's Light let into my darken'd Chamber through a |
| small round Hole in my Window-shut, at about ten or twelve Feet from the |
| Window, I placed a Lens, by which the Image of the Hole might be |
| distinctly cast upon a Sheet of white Paper, placed at the distance of |
| six, eight, ten, or twelve Feet from the Lens. For, according to the |
| difference of the Lenses I used various distances, which I think not |
| worth the while to describe. Then immediately after the Lens I placed a |
| Prism, by which the trajected Light might be refracted either upwards or |
| sideways, and thereby the round Image, which the Lens alone did cast |
| upon the Paper might be drawn out into a long one with Parallel Sides, |
| as in the third Experiment. This oblong Image I let fall upon another |
| Paper at about the same distance from the Prism as before, moving the |
| Paper either towards the Prism or from it, until I found the just |
| distance where the Rectilinear Sides of the Image became most distinct. |
| For in this Case, the Circular Images of the Hole, which compose that |
| Image after the same manner that the Circles _ag_, _bh_, _ci_, &c. do |
| the Figure _pt_ [in _Fig._ 23.] were terminated most distinctly without |
| any Penumbra, and therefore extended into one another the least that |
| they could, and by consequence the Mixture of the heterogeneous Rays was |
| now the least of all. By this means I used to form an oblong Image (such |
| as is _pt_) [in _Fig._ 23, and 24.] of Circular Images of the Hole, |
| (such as are _ag_, _bh_, _ci_, &c.) and by using a greater or less Hole |
| in the Window-shut, I made the Circular Images _ag_, _bh_, _ci_, &c. of |
| which it was formed, to become greater or less at pleasure, and thereby |
| the Mixture of the Rays in the Image _pt_ to be as much, or as little as |
| I desired. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 24.] |
| |
| _Illustration._ In the twenty-fourth Figure, F represents the Circular |
| Hole in the Window-shut, MN the Lens, whereby the Image or Species of |
| that Hole is cast distinctly upon a Paper at J, ABC the Prism, whereby |
| the Rays are at their emerging out of the Lens refracted from J towards |
| another Paper at _pt_, and the round Image at J is turned into an oblong |
| Image _pt_ falling on that other Paper. This Image _pt_ consists of |
| Circles placed one after another in a Rectilinear Order, as was |
| sufficiently explained in the fifth Experiment; and these Circles are |
| equal to the Circle J, and consequently answer in magnitude to the Hole |
| F; and therefore by diminishing that Hole they may be at pleasure |
| diminished, whilst their Centers remain in their Places. By this means I |
| made the Breadth of the Image _pt_ to be forty times, and sometimes |
| sixty or seventy times less than its Length. As for instance, if the |
| Breadth of the Hole F be one tenth of an Inch, and MF the distance of |
| the Lens from the Hole be 12 Feet; and if _p_B or _p_M the distance of |
| the Image _pt_ from the Prism or Lens be 10 Feet, and the refracting |
| Angle of the Prism be 62 Degrees, the Breadth of the Image _pt_ will be |
| one twelfth of an Inch, and the Length about six Inches, and therefore |
| the Length to the Breadth as 72 to 1, and by consequence the Light of |
| this Image 71 times less compound than the Sun's direct Light. And Light |
| thus far simple and homogeneal, is sufficient for trying all the |
| Experiments in this Book about simple Light. For the Composition of |
| heterogeneal Rays is in this Light so little, that it is scarce to be |
| discovered and perceiv'd by Sense, except perhaps in the indigo and |
| violet. For these being dark Colours do easily suffer a sensible Allay |
| by that little scattering Light which uses to be refracted irregularly |
| by the Inequalities of the Prism. |
| |
| Yet instead of the Circular Hole F, 'tis better to substitute an oblong |
| Hole shaped like a long Parallelogram with its Length parallel to the |
| Prism ABC. For if this Hole be an Inch or two long, and but a tenth or |
| twentieth Part of an Inch broad, or narrower; the Light of the Image |
| _pt_ will be as simple as before, or simpler, and the Image will become |
| much broader, and therefore more fit to have Experiments try'd in its |
| Light than before. |
| |
| Instead of this Parallelogram Hole may be substituted a triangular one |
| of equal Sides, whose Base, for instance, is about the tenth Part of an |
| Inch, and its Height an Inch or more. For by this means, if the Axis of |
| the Prism be parallel to the Perpendicular of the Triangle, the Image |
| _pt_ [in _Fig._ 25.] will now be form'd of equicrural Triangles _ag_, |
| _bh_, _ci_, _dk_, _el_, _fm_, &c. and innumerable other intermediate |
| ones answering to the triangular Hole in Shape and Bigness, and lying |
| one after another in a continual Series between two Parallel Lines _af_ |
| and _gm_. These Triangles are a little intermingled at their Bases, but |
| not at their Vertices; and therefore the Light on the brighter Side _af_ |
| of the Image, where the Bases of the Triangles are, is a little |
| compounded, but on the darker Side _gm_ is altogether uncompounded, and |
| in all Places between the Sides the Composition is proportional to the |
| distances of the Places from that obscurer Side _gm_. And having a |
| Spectrum _pt_ of such a Composition, we may try Experiments either in |
| its stronger and less simple Light near the Side _af_, or in its weaker |
| and simpler Light near the other Side _gm_, as it shall seem most |
| convenient. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 25.] |
| |
| But in making Experiments of this kind, the Chamber ought to be made as |
| dark as can be, lest any Foreign Light mingle it self with the Light of |
| the Spectrum _pt_, and render it compound; especially if we would try |
| Experiments in the more simple Light next the Side _gm_ of the Spectrum; |
| which being fainter, will have a less proportion to the Foreign Light; |
| and so by the mixture of that Light be more troubled, and made more |
| compound. The Lens also ought to be good, such as may serve for optical |
| Uses, and the Prism ought to have a large Angle, suppose of 65 or 70 |
| Degrees, and to be well wrought, being made of Glass free from Bubbles |
| and Veins, with its Sides not a little convex or concave, as usually |
| happens, but truly plane, and its Polish elaborate, as in working |
| Optick-glasses, and not such as is usually wrought with Putty, whereby |
| the edges of the Sand-holes being worn away, there are left all over the |
| Glass a numberless Company of very little convex polite Risings like |
| Waves. The edges also of the Prism and Lens, so far as they may make any |
| irregular Refraction, must be covered with a black Paper glewed on. And |
| all the Light of the Sun's Beam let into the Chamber, which is useless |
| and unprofitable to the Experiment, ought to be intercepted with black |
| Paper, or other black Obstacles. For otherwise the useless Light being |
| reflected every way in the Chamber, will mix with the oblong Spectrum, |
| and help to disturb it. In trying these Things, so much diligence is not |
| altogether necessary, but it will promote the Success of the |
| Experiments, and by a very scrupulous Examiner of Things deserves to be |
| apply'd. It's difficult to get Glass Prisms fit for this Purpose, and |
| therefore I used sometimes prismatick Vessels made with pieces of broken |
| Looking-glasses, and filled with Rain Water. And to increase the |
| Refraction, I sometimes impregnated the Water strongly with _Saccharum |
| Saturni_. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ V. THEOR. IV. |
| |
| _Homogeneal Light is refracted regularly without any Dilatation |
| splitting or shattering of the Rays, and the confused Vision of Objects |
| seen through refracting Bodies by heterogeneal Light arises from the |
| different Refrangibility of several sorts of Rays._ |
| |
| The first Part of this Proposition has been already sufficiently proved |
| in the fifth Experiment, and will farther appear by the Experiments |
| which follow. |
| |
| _Exper._ 12. In the middle of a black Paper I made a round Hole about a |
| fifth or sixth Part of an Inch in diameter. Upon this Paper I caused the |
| Spectrum of homogeneal Light described in the former Proposition, so to |
| fall, that some part of the Light might pass through the Hole of the |
| Paper. This transmitted part of the Light I refracted with a Prism |
| placed behind the Paper, and letting this refracted Light fall |
| perpendicularly upon a white Paper two or three Feet distant from the |
| Prism, I found that the Spectrum formed on the Paper by this Light was |
| not oblong, as when 'tis made (in the third Experiment) by refracting |
| the Sun's compound Light, but was (so far as I could judge by my Eye) |
| perfectly circular, the Length being no greater than the Breadth. Which |
| shews, that this Light is refracted regularly without any Dilatation of |
| the Rays. |
| |
| _Exper._ 13. In the homogeneal Light I placed a Paper Circle of a |
| quarter of an Inch in diameter, and in the Sun's unrefracted |
| heterogeneal white Light I placed another Paper Circle of the same |
| Bigness. And going from the Papers to the distance of some Feet, I |
| viewed both Circles through a Prism. The Circle illuminated by the Sun's |
| heterogeneal Light appeared very oblong, as in the fourth Experiment, |
| the Length being many times greater than the Breadth; but the other |
| Circle, illuminated with homogeneal Light, appeared circular and |
| distinctly defined, as when 'tis view'd with the naked Eye. Which proves |
| the whole Proposition. |
| |
| _Exper._ 14. In the homogeneal Light I placed Flies, and such-like |
| minute Objects, and viewing them through a Prism, I saw their Parts as |
| distinctly defined, as if I had viewed them with the naked Eye. The same |
| Objects placed in the Sun's unrefracted heterogeneal Light, which was |
| white, I viewed also through a Prism, and saw them most confusedly |
| defined, so that I could not distinguish their smaller Parts from one |
| another. I placed also the Letters of a small print, one while in the |
| homogeneal Light, and then in the heterogeneal, and viewing them through |
| a Prism, they appeared in the latter Case so confused and indistinct, |
| that I could not read them; but in the former they appeared so distinct, |
| that I could read readily, and thought I saw them as distinct, as when I |
| view'd them with my naked Eye. In both Cases I view'd the same Objects, |
| through the same Prism at the same distance from me, and in the same |
| Situation. There was no difference, but in the Light by which the |
| Objects were illuminated, and which in one Case was simple, and in the |
| other compound; and therefore, the distinct Vision in the former Case, |
| and confused in the latter, could arise from nothing else than from that |
| difference of the Lights. Which proves the whole Proposition. |
| |
| And in these three Experiments it is farther very remarkable, that the |
| Colour of homogeneal Light was never changed by the Refraction. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VI. THEOR. V. |
| |
| _The Sine of Incidence of every Ray considered apart, is to its Sine of |
| Refraction in a given Ratio._ |
| |
| That every Ray consider'd apart, is constant to it self in some degree |
| of Refrangibility, is sufficiently manifest out of what has been said. |
| Those Rays, which in the first Refraction, are at equal Incidences most |
| refracted, are also in the following Refractions at equal Incidences |
| most refracted; and so of the least refrangible, and the rest which have |
| any mean Degree of Refrangibility, as is manifest by the fifth, sixth, |
| seventh, eighth, and ninth Experiments. And those which the first Time |
| at like Incidences are equally refracted, are again at like Incidences |
| equally and uniformly refracted, and that whether they be refracted |
| before they be separated from one another, as in the fifth Experiment, |
| or whether they be refracted apart, as in the twelfth, thirteenth and |
| fourteenth Experiments. The Refraction therefore of every Ray apart is |
| regular, and what Rule that Refraction observes we are now to shew.[E] |
| |
| The late Writers in Opticks teach, that the Sines of Incidence are in a |
| given Proportion to the Sines of Refraction, as was explained in the |
| fifth Axiom, and some by Instruments fitted for measuring of |
| Refractions, or otherwise experimentally examining this Proportion, do |
| acquaint us that they have found it accurate. But whilst they, not |
| understanding the different Refrangibility of several Rays, conceived |
| them all to be refracted according to one and the same Proportion, 'tis |
| to be presumed that they adapted their Measures only to the middle of |
| the refracted Light; so that from their Measures we may conclude only |
| that the Rays which have a mean Degree of Refrangibility, that is, those |
| which when separated from the rest appear green, are refracted according |
| to a given Proportion of their Sines. And therefore we are now to shew, |
| that the like given Proportions obtain in all the rest. That it should |
| be so is very reasonable, Nature being ever conformable to her self; but |
| an experimental Proof is desired. And such a Proof will be had, if we |
| can shew that the Sines of Refraction of Rays differently refrangible |
| are one to another in a given Proportion when their Sines of Incidence |
| are equal. For, if the Sines of Refraction of all the Rays are in given |
| Proportions to the Sine of Refractions of a Ray which has a mean Degree |
| of Refrangibility, and this Sine is in a given Proportion to the equal |
| Sines of Incidence, those other Sines of Refraction will also be in |
| given Proportions to the equal Sines of Incidence. Now, when the Sines |
| of Incidence are equal, it will appear by the following Experiment, that |
| the Sines of Refraction are in a given Proportion to one another. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 26.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 15. The Sun shining into a dark Chamber through a little round |
| Hole in the Window-shut, let S [in _Fig._ 26.] represent his round white |
| Image painted on the opposite Wall by his direct Light, PT his oblong |
| coloured Image made by refracting that Light with a Prism placed at the |
| Window; and _pt_, or _2p 2t_, _3p 3t_, his oblong colour'd Image made by |
| refracting again the same Light sideways with a second Prism placed |
| immediately after the first in a cross Position to it, as was explained |
| in the fifth Experiment; that is to say, _pt_ when the Refraction of the |
| second Prism is small, _2p 2t_ when its Refraction is greater, and _3p |
| 3t_ when it is greatest. For such will be the diversity of the |
| Refractions, if the refracting Angle of the second Prism be of various |
| Magnitudes; suppose of fifteen or twenty Degrees to make the Image _pt_, |
| of thirty or forty to make the Image _2p 2t_, and of sixty to make the |
| Image _3p 3t_. But for want of solid Glass Prisms with Angles of |
| convenient Bignesses, there may be Vessels made of polished Plates of |
| Glass cemented together in the form of Prisms and filled with Water. |
| These things being thus ordered, I observed that all the solar Images or |
| coloured Spectrums PT, _pt_, _2p 2t_, _3p 3t_ did very nearly converge |
| to the place S on which the direct Light of the Sun fell and painted his |
| white round Image when the Prisms were taken away. The Axis of the |
| Spectrum PT, that is the Line drawn through the middle of it parallel to |
| its rectilinear Sides, did when produced pass exactly through the middle |
| of that white round Image S. And when the Refraction of the second Prism |
| was equal to the Refraction of the first, the refracting Angles of them |
| both being about 60 Degrees, the Axis of the Spectrum _3p 3t_ made by |
| that Refraction, did when produced pass also through the middle of the |
| same white round Image S. But when the Refraction of the second Prism |
| was less than that of the first, the produced Axes of the Spectrums _tp_ |
| or _2t 2p_ made by that Refraction did cut the produced Axis of the |
| Spectrum TP in the points _m_ and _n_, a little beyond the Center of |
| that white round Image S. Whence the proportion of the Line 3_t_T to the |
| Line 3_p_P was a little greater than the Proportion of 2_t_T or 2_p_P, |
| and this Proportion a little greater than that of _t_T to _p_P. Now when |
| the Light of the Spectrum PT falls perpendicularly upon the Wall, those |
| Lines 3_t_T, 3_p_P, and 2_t_T, and 2_p_P, and _t_T, _p_P, are the |
| Tangents of the Refractions, and therefore by this Experiment the |
| Proportions of the Tangents of the Refractions are obtained, from whence |
| the Proportions of the Sines being derived, they come out equal, so far |
| as by viewing the Spectrums, and using some mathematical Reasoning I |
| could estimate. For I did not make an accurate Computation. So then the |
| Proposition holds true in every Ray apart, so far as appears by |
| Experiment. And that it is accurately true, may be demonstrated upon |
| this Supposition. _That Bodies refract Light by acting upon its Rays in |
| Lines perpendicular to their Surfaces._ But in order to this |
| Demonstration, I must distinguish the Motion of every Ray into two |
| Motions, the one perpendicular to the refracting Surface, the other |
| parallel to it, and concerning the perpendicular Motion lay down the |
| following Proposition. |
| |
| If any Motion or moving thing whatsoever be incident with any Velocity |
| on any broad and thin space terminated on both sides by two parallel |
| Planes, and in its Passage through that space be urged perpendicularly |
| towards the farther Plane by any force which at given distances from the |
| Plane is of given Quantities; the perpendicular velocity of that Motion |
| or Thing, at its emerging out of that space, shall be always equal to |
| the square Root of the sum of the square of the perpendicular velocity |
| of that Motion or Thing at its Incidence on that space; and of the |
| square of the perpendicular velocity which that Motion or Thing would |
| have at its Emergence, if at its Incidence its perpendicular velocity |
| was infinitely little. |
| |
| And the same Proposition holds true of any Motion or Thing |
| perpendicularly retarded in its passage through that space, if instead |
| of the sum of the two Squares you take their difference. The |
| Demonstration Mathematicians will easily find out, and therefore I shall |
| not trouble the Reader with it. |
| |
| Suppose now that a Ray coming most obliquely in the Line MC [in _Fig._ |
| 1.] be refracted at C by the Plane RS into the Line CN, and if it be |
| required to find the Line CE, into which any other Ray AC shall be |
| refracted; let MC, AD, be the Sines of Incidence of the two Rays, and |
| NG, EF, their Sines of Refraction, and let the equal Motions of the |
| incident Rays be represented by the equal Lines MC and AC, and the |
| Motion MC being considered as parallel to the refracting Plane, let the |
| other Motion AC be distinguished into two Motions AD and DC, one of |
| which AD is parallel, and the other DC perpendicular to the refracting |
| Surface. In like manner, let the Motions of the emerging Rays be |
| distinguish'd into two, whereof the perpendicular ones are MC/NG × CG |
| and AD/EF × CF. And if the force of the refracting Plane begins to act |
| upon the Rays either in that Plane or at a certain distance from it on |
| the one side, and ends at a certain distance from it on the other side, |
| and in all places between those two limits acts upon the Rays in Lines |
| perpendicular to that refracting Plane, and the Actions upon the Rays at |
| equal distances from the refracting Plane be equal, and at unequal ones |
| either equal or unequal according to any rate whatever; that Motion of |
| the Ray which is parallel to the refracting Plane, will suffer no |
| Alteration by that Force; and that Motion which is perpendicular to it |
| will be altered according to the rule of the foregoing Proposition. If |
| therefore for the perpendicular velocity of the emerging Ray CN you |
| write MC/NG × CG as above, then the perpendicular velocity of any other |
| emerging Ray CE which was AD/EF × CF, will be equal to the square Root |
| of CD_q_ + (_MCq/NGq_ × CG_q_). And by squaring these Equals, and adding |
| to them the Equals AD_q_ and MC_q_ - CD_q_, and dividing the Sums by the |
| Equals CF_q_ + EF_q_ and CG_q_ + NG_q_, you will have _MCq/NGq_ equal to |
| _ADq/EFq_. Whence AD, the Sine of Incidence, is to EF the Sine of |
| Refraction, as MC to NG, that is, in a given _ratio_. And this |
| Demonstration being general, without determining what Light is, or by |
| what kind of Force it is refracted, or assuming any thing farther than |
| that the refracting Body acts upon the Rays in Lines perpendicular to |
| its Surface; I take it to be a very convincing Argument of the full |
| truth of this Proposition. |
| |
| So then, if the _ratio_ of the Sines of Incidence and Refraction of any |
| sort of Rays be found in any one case, 'tis given in all cases; and this |
| may be readily found by the Method in the following Proposition. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VII. THEOR. VI. |
| |
| _The Perfection of Telescopes is impeded by the different Refrangibility |
| of the Rays of Light._ |
| |
| The Imperfection of Telescopes is vulgarly attributed to the spherical |
| Figures of the Glasses, and therefore Mathematicians have propounded to |
| figure them by the conical Sections. To shew that they are mistaken, I |
| have inserted this Proposition; the truth of which will appear by the |
| measure of the Refractions of the several sorts of Rays; and these |
| measures I thus determine. |
| |
| In the third Experiment of this first Part, where the refracting Angle |
| of the Prism was 62-1/2 Degrees, the half of that Angle 31 deg. 15 min. |
| is the Angle of Incidence of the Rays at their going out of the Glass |
| into the Air[F]; and the Sine of this Angle is 5188, the Radius being |
| 10000. When the Axis of this Prism was parallel to the Horizon, and the |
| Refraction of the Rays at their Incidence on this Prism equal to that at |
| their Emergence out of it, I observed with a Quadrant the Angle which |
| the mean refrangible Rays, (that is those which went to the middle of |
| the Sun's coloured Image) made with the Horizon, and by this Angle and |
| the Sun's altitude observed at the same time, I found the Angle which |
| the emergent Rays contained with the incident to be 44 deg. and 40 min. |
| and the half of this Angle added to the Angle of Incidence 31 deg. 15 |
| min. makes the Angle of Refraction, which is therefore 53 deg. 35 min. |
| and its Sine 8047. These are the Sines of Incidence and Refraction of |
| the mean refrangible Rays, and their Proportion in round Numbers is 20 |
| to 31. This Glass was of a Colour inclining to green. The last of the |
| Prisms mentioned in the third Experiment was of clear white Glass. Its |
| refracting Angle 63-1/2 Degrees. The Angle which the emergent Rays |
| contained, with the incident 45 deg. 50 min. The Sine of half the first |
| Angle 5262. The Sine of half the Sum of the Angles 8157. And their |
| Proportion in round Numbers 20 to 31, as before. |
| |
| From the Length of the Image, which was about 9-3/4 or 10 Inches, |
| subduct its Breadth, which was 2-1/8 Inches, and the Remainder 7-3/4 |
| Inches would be the Length of the Image were the Sun but a Point, and |
| therefore subtends the Angle which the most and least refrangible Rays, |
| when incident on the Prism in the same Lines, do contain with one |
| another after their Emergence. Whence this Angle is 2 deg. 0´. 7´´. For |
| the distance between the Image and the Prism where this Angle is made, |
| was 18-1/2 Feet, and at that distance the Chord 7-3/4 Inches subtends an |
| Angle of 2 deg. 0´. 7´´. Now half this Angle is the Angle which these |
| emergent Rays contain with the emergent mean refrangible Rays, and a |
| quarter thereof, that is 30´. 2´´. may be accounted the Angle which they |
| would contain with the same emergent mean refrangible Rays, were they |
| co-incident to them within the Glass, and suffered no other Refraction |
| than that at their Emergence. For, if two equal Refractions, the one at |
| the Incidence of the Rays on the Prism, the other at their Emergence, |
| make half the Angle 2 deg. 0´. 7´´. then one of those Refractions will |
| make about a quarter of that Angle, and this quarter added to, and |
| subducted from the Angle of Refraction of the mean refrangible Rays, |
| which was 53 deg. 35´, gives the Angles of Refraction of the most and |
| least refrangible Rays 54 deg. 5´ 2´´, and 53 deg. 4´ 58´´, whose Sines |
| are 8099 and 7995, the common Angle of Incidence being 31 deg. 15´, and |
| its Sine 5188; and these Sines in the least round Numbers are in |
| proportion to one another, as 78 and 77 to 50. |
| |
| Now, if you subduct the common Sine of Incidence 50 from the Sines of |
| Refraction 77 and 78, the Remainders 27 and 28 shew, that in small |
| Refractions the Refraction of the least refrangible Rays is to the |
| Refraction of the most refrangible ones, as 27 to 28 very nearly, and |
| that the difference of the Refractions of the least refrangible and most |
| refrangible Rays is about the 27-1/2th Part of the whole Refraction of |
| the mean refrangible Rays. |
| |
| Whence they that are skilled in Opticks will easily understand,[G] that |
| the Breadth of the least circular Space, into which Object-glasses of |
| Telescopes can collect all sorts of Parallel Rays, is about the 27-1/2th |
| Part of half the Aperture of the Glass, or 55th Part of the whole |
| Aperture; and that the Focus of the most refrangible Rays is nearer to |
| the Object-glass than the Focus of the least refrangible ones, by about |
| the 27-1/2th Part of the distance between the Object-glass and the Focus |
| of the mean refrangible ones. |
| |
| And if Rays of all sorts, flowing from any one lucid Point in the Axis |
| of any convex Lens, be made by the Refraction of the Lens to converge to |
| Points not too remote from the Lens, the Focus of the most refrangible |
| Rays shall be nearer to the Lens than the Focus of the least refrangible |
| ones, by a distance which is to the 27-1/2th Part of the distance of the |
| Focus of the mean refrangible Rays from the Lens, as the distance |
| between that Focus and the lucid Point, from whence the Rays flow, is to |
| the distance between that lucid Point and the Lens very nearly. |
| |
| Now to examine whether the Difference between the Refractions, which the |
| most refrangible and the least refrangible Rays flowing from the same |
| Point suffer in the Object-glasses of Telescopes and such-like Glasses, |
| be so great as is here described, I contrived the following Experiment. |
| |
| _Exper._ 16. The Lens which I used in the second and eighth Experiments, |
| being placed six Feet and an Inch distant from any Object, collected the |
| Species of that Object by the mean refrangible Rays at the distance of |
| six Feet and an Inch from the Lens on the other side. And therefore by |
| the foregoing Rule, it ought to collect the Species of that Object by |
| the least refrangible Rays at the distance of six Feet and 3-2/3 Inches |
| from the Lens, and by the most refrangible ones at the distance of five |
| Feet and 10-1/3 Inches from it: So that between the two Places, where |
| these least and most refrangible Rays collect the Species, there may be |
| the distance of about 5-1/3 Inches. For by that Rule, as six Feet and an |
| Inch (the distance of the Lens from the lucid Object) is to twelve Feet |
| and two Inches (the distance of the lucid Object from the Focus of the |
| mean refrangible Rays) that is, as One is to Two; so is the 27-1/2th |
| Part of six Feet and an Inch (the distance between the Lens and the same |
| Focus) to the distance between the Focus of the most refrangible Rays |
| and the Focus of the least refrangible ones, which is therefore 5-17/55 |
| Inches, that is very nearly 5-1/3 Inches. Now to know whether this |
| Measure was true, I repeated the second and eighth Experiment with |
| coloured Light, which was less compounded than that I there made use of: |
| For I now separated the heterogeneous Rays from one another by the |
| Method I described in the eleventh Experiment, so as to make a coloured |
| Spectrum about twelve or fifteen Times longer than broad. This Spectrum |
| I cast on a printed Book, and placing the above-mentioned Lens at the |
| distance of six Feet and an Inch from this Spectrum to collect the |
| Species of the illuminated Letters at the same distance on the other |
| side, I found that the Species of the Letters illuminated with blue were |
| nearer to the Lens than those illuminated with deep red by about three |
| Inches, or three and a quarter; but the Species of the Letters |
| illuminated with indigo and violet appeared so confused and indistinct, |
| that I could not read them: Whereupon viewing the Prism, I found it was |
| full of Veins running from one end of the Glass to the other; so that |
| the Refraction could not be regular. I took another Prism therefore |
| which was free from Veins, and instead of the Letters I used two or |
| three Parallel black Lines a little broader than the Strokes of the |
| Letters, and casting the Colours upon these Lines in such manner, that |
| the Lines ran along the Colours from one end of the Spectrum to the |
| other, I found that the Focus where the indigo, or confine of this |
| Colour and violet cast the Species of the black Lines most distinctly, |
| to be about four Inches, or 4-1/4 nearer to the Lens than the Focus, |
| where the deepest red cast the Species of the same black Lines most |
| distinctly. The violet was so faint and dark, that I could not discern |
| the Species of the Lines distinctly by that Colour; and therefore |
| considering that the Prism was made of a dark coloured Glass inclining |
| to green, I took another Prism of clear white Glass; but the Spectrum of |
| Colours which this Prism made had long white Streams of faint Light |
| shooting out from both ends of the Colours, which made me conclude that |
| something was amiss; and viewing the Prism, I found two or three little |
| Bubbles in the Glass, which refracted the Light irregularly. Wherefore I |
| covered that Part of the Glass with black Paper, and letting the Light |
| pass through another Part of it which was free from such Bubbles, the |
| Spectrum of Colours became free from those irregular Streams of Light, |
| and was now such as I desired. But still I found the violet so dark and |
| faint, that I could scarce see the Species of the Lines by the violet, |
| and not at all by the deepest Part of it, which was next the end of the |
| Spectrum. I suspected therefore, that this faint and dark Colour might |
| be allayed by that scattering Light which was refracted, and reflected |
| irregularly, partly by some very small Bubbles in the Glasses, and |
| partly by the Inequalities of their Polish; which Light, tho' it was but |
| little, yet it being of a white Colour, might suffice to affect the |
| Sense so strongly as to disturb the Phænomena of that weak and dark |
| Colour the violet, and therefore I tried, as in the 12th, 13th, and 14th |
| Experiments, whether the Light of this Colour did not consist of a |
| sensible Mixture of heterogeneous Rays, but found it did not. Nor did |
| the Refractions cause any other sensible Colour than violet to emerge |
| out of this Light, as they would have done out of white Light, and by |
| consequence out of this violet Light had it been sensibly compounded |
| with white Light. And therefore I concluded, that the reason why I could |
| not see the Species of the Lines distinctly by this Colour, was only |
| the Darkness of this Colour, and Thinness of its Light, and its distance |
| from the Axis of the Lens; I divided therefore those Parallel black |
| Lines into equal Parts, by which I might readily know the distances of |
| the Colours in the Spectrum from one another, and noted the distances of |
| the Lens from the Foci of such Colours, as cast the Species of the Lines |
| distinctly, and then considered whether the difference of those |
| distances bear such proportion to 5-1/3 Inches, the greatest Difference |
| of the distances, which the Foci of the deepest red and violet ought to |
| have from the Lens, as the distance of the observed Colours from one |
| another in the Spectrum bear to the greatest distance of the deepest red |
| and violet measured in the Rectilinear Sides of the Spectrum, that is, |
| to the Length of those Sides, or Excess of the Length of the Spectrum |
| above its Breadth. And my Observations were as follows. |
| |
| When I observed and compared the deepest sensible red, and the Colour in |
| the Confine of green and blue, which at the Rectilinear Sides of the |
| Spectrum was distant from it half the Length of those Sides, the Focus |
| where the Confine of green and blue cast the Species of the Lines |
| distinctly on the Paper, was nearer to the Lens than the Focus, where |
| the red cast those Lines distinctly on it by about 2-1/2 or 2-3/4 |
| Inches. For sometimes the Measures were a little greater, sometimes a |
| little less, but seldom varied from one another above 1/3 of an Inch. |
| For it was very difficult to define the Places of the Foci, without some |
| little Errors. Now, if the Colours distant half the Length of the |
| Image, (measured at its Rectilinear Sides) give 2-1/2 or 2-3/4 |
| Difference of the distances of their Foci from the Lens, then the |
| Colours distant the whole Length ought to give 5 or 5-1/2 Inches |
| difference of those distances. |
| |
| But here it's to be noted, that I could not see the red to the full end |
| of the Spectrum, but only to the Center of the Semicircle which bounded |
| that end, or a little farther; and therefore I compared this red not |
| with that Colour which was exactly in the middle of the Spectrum, or |
| Confine of green and blue, but with that which verged a little more to |
| the blue than to the green: And as I reckoned the whole Length of the |
| Colours not to be the whole Length of the Spectrum, but the Length of |
| its Rectilinear Sides, so compleating the semicircular Ends into |
| Circles, when either of the observed Colours fell within those Circles, |
| I measured the distance of that Colour from the semicircular End of the |
| Spectrum, and subducting half this distance from the measured distance |
| of the two Colours, I took the Remainder for their corrected distance; |
| and in these Observations set down this corrected distance for the |
| difference of the distances of their Foci from the Lens. For, as the |
| Length of the Rectilinear Sides of the Spectrum would be the whole |
| Length of all the Colours, were the Circles of which (as we shewed) that |
| Spectrum consists contracted and reduced to Physical Points, so in that |
| Case this corrected distance would be the real distance of the two |
| observed Colours. |
| |
| When therefore I farther observed the deepest sensible red, and that |
| blue whose corrected distance from it was 7/12 Parts of the Length of |
| the Rectilinear Sides of the Spectrum, the difference of the distances |
| of their Foci from the Lens was about 3-1/4 Inches, and as 7 to 12, so |
| is 3-1/4 to 5-4/7. |
| |
| When I observed the deepest sensible red, and that indigo whose |
| corrected distance was 8/12 or 2/3 of the Length of the Rectilinear |
| Sides of the Spectrum, the difference of the distances of their Foci |
| from the Lens, was about 3-2/3 Inches, and as 2 to 3, so is 3-2/3 to |
| 5-1/2. |
| |
| When I observed the deepest sensible red, and that deep indigo whose |
| corrected distance from one another was 9/12 or 3/4 of the Length of the |
| Rectilinear Sides of the Spectrum, the difference of the distances of |
| their Foci from the Lens was about 4 Inches; and as 3 to 4, so is 4 to |
| 5-1/3. |
| |
| When I observed the deepest sensible red, and that Part of the violet |
| next the indigo, whose corrected distance from the red was 10/12 or 5/6 |
| of the Length of the Rectilinear Sides of the Spectrum, the difference |
| of the distances of their Foci from the Lens was about 4-1/2 Inches, and |
| as 5 to 6, so is 4-1/2 to 5-2/5. For sometimes, when the Lens was |
| advantageously placed, so that its Axis respected the blue, and all |
| Things else were well ordered, and the Sun shone clear, and I held my |
| Eye very near to the Paper on which the Lens cast the Species of the |
| Lines, I could see pretty distinctly the Species of those Lines by that |
| Part of the violet which was next the indigo; and sometimes I could see |
| them by above half the violet, For in making these Experiments I had |
| observed, that the Species of those Colours only appear distinct, which |
| were in or near the Axis of the Lens: So that if the blue or indigo were |
| in the Axis, I could see their Species distinctly; and then the red |
| appeared much less distinct than before. Wherefore I contrived to make |
| the Spectrum of Colours shorter than before, so that both its Ends might |
| be nearer to the Axis of the Lens. And now its Length was about 2-1/2 |
| Inches, and Breadth about 1/5 or 1/6 of an Inch. Also instead of the |
| black Lines on which the Spectrum was cast, I made one black Line |
| broader than those, that I might see its Species more easily; and this |
| Line I divided by short cross Lines into equal Parts, for measuring the |
| distances of the observed Colours. And now I could sometimes see the |
| Species of this Line with its Divisions almost as far as the Center of |
| the semicircular violet End of the Spectrum, and made these farther |
| Observations. |
| |
| When I observed the deepest sensible red, and that Part of the violet, |
| whose corrected distance from it was about 8/9 Parts of the Rectilinear |
| Sides of the Spectrum, the Difference of the distances of the Foci of |
| those Colours from the Lens, was one time 4-2/3, another time 4-3/4, |
| another time 4-7/8 Inches; and as 8 to 9, so are 4-2/3, 4-3/4, 4-7/8, to |
| 5-1/4, 5-11/32, 5-31/64 respectively. |
| |
| When I observed the deepest sensible red, and deepest sensible violet, |
| (the corrected distance of which Colours, when all Things were ordered |
| to the best Advantage, and the Sun shone very clear, was about 11/12 or |
| 15/16 Parts of the Length of the Rectilinear Sides of the coloured |
| Spectrum) I found the Difference of the distances of their Foci from the |
| Lens sometimes 4-3/4 sometimes 5-1/4, and for the most part 5 Inches or |
| thereabouts; and as 11 to 12, or 15 to 16, so is five Inches to 5-2/2 or |
| 5-1/3 Inches. |
| |
| And by this Progression of Experiments I satisfied my self, that had the |
| Light at the very Ends of the Spectrum been strong enough to make the |
| Species of the black Lines appear plainly on the Paper, the Focus of the |
| deepest violet would have been found nearer to the Lens, than the Focus |
| of the deepest red, by about 5-1/3 Inches at least. And this is a |
| farther Evidence, that the Sines of Incidence and Refraction of the |
| several sorts of Rays, hold the same Proportion to one another in the |
| smallest Refractions which they do in the greatest. |
| |
| My Progress in making this nice and troublesome Experiment I have set |
| down more at large, that they that shall try it after me may be aware of |
| the Circumspection requisite to make it succeed well. And if they cannot |
| make it succeed so well as I did, they may notwithstanding collect by |
| the Proportion of the distance of the Colours of the Spectrum, to the |
| Difference of the distances of their Foci from the Lens, what would be |
| the Success in the more distant Colours by a better trial. And yet, if |
| they use a broader Lens than I did, and fix it to a long strait Staff, |
| by means of which it may be readily and truly directed to the Colour |
| whose Focus is desired, I question not but the Experiment will succeed |
| better with them than it did with me. For I directed the Axis as nearly |
| as I could to the middle of the Colours, and then the faint Ends of the |
| Spectrum being remote from the Axis, cast their Species less distinctly |
| on the Paper than they would have done, had the Axis been successively |
| directed to them. |
| |
| Now by what has been said, it's certain that the Rays which differ in |
| Refrangibility do not converge to the same Focus; but if they flow from |
| a lucid Point, as far from the Lens on one side as their Foci are on the |
| other, the Focus of the most refrangible Rays shall be nearer to the |
| Lens than that of the least refrangible, by above the fourteenth Part of |
| the whole distance; and if they flow from a lucid Point, so very remote |
| from the Lens, that before their Incidence they may be accounted |
| parallel, the Focus of the most refrangible Rays shall be nearer to the |
| Lens than the Focus of the least refrangible, by about the 27th or 28th |
| Part of their whole distance from it. And the Diameter of the Circle in |
| the middle Space between those two Foci which they illuminate, when they |
| fall there on any Plane, perpendicular to the Axis (which Circle is the |
| least into which they can all be gathered) is about the 55th Part of the |
| Diameter of the Aperture of the Glass. So that 'tis a wonder, that |
| Telescopes represent Objects so distinct as they do. But were all the |
| Rays of Light equally refrangible, the Error arising only from the |
| Sphericalness of the Figures of Glasses would be many hundred times |
| less. For, if the Object-glass of a Telescope be Plano-convex, and the |
| Plane side be turned towards the Object, and the Diameter of the |
| Sphere, whereof this Glass is a Segment, be called D, and the |
| Semi-diameter of the Aperture of the Glass be called S, and the Sine of |
| Incidence out of Glass into Air, be to the Sine of Refraction as I to R; |
| the Rays which come parallel to the Axis of the Glass, shall in the |
| Place where the Image of the Object is most distinctly made, be |
| scattered all over a little Circle, whose Diameter is _(Rq/Iq) × (S |
| cub./D quad.)_ very nearly,[H] as I gather by computing the Errors of |
| the Rays by the Method of infinite Series, and rejecting the Terms, |
| whose Quantities are inconsiderable. As for instance, if the Sine of |
| Incidence I, be to the Sine of Refraction R, as 20 to 31, and if D the |
| Diameter of the Sphere, to which the Convex-side of the Glass is ground, |
| be 100 Feet or 1200 Inches, and S the Semi-diameter of the Aperture be |
| two Inches, the Diameter of the little Circle, (that is (_Rq × S |
| cub.)/(Iq × D quad._)) will be (31 × 31 × 8)/(20 × 20 × 1200 × 1200) (or |
| 961/72000000) Parts of an Inch. But the Diameter of the little Circle, |
| through which these Rays are scattered by unequal Refrangibility, will |
| be about the 55th Part of the Aperture of the Object-glass, which here |
| is four Inches. And therefore, the Error arising from the Spherical |
| Figure of the Glass, is to the Error arising from the different |
| Refrangibility of the Rays, as 961/72000000 to 4/55, that is as 1 to |
| 5449; and therefore being in comparison so very little, deserves not to |
| be considered. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 27.] |
| |
| But you will say, if the Errors caused by the different Refrangibility |
| be so very great, how comes it to pass, that Objects appear through |
| Telescopes so distinct as they do? I answer, 'tis because the erring |
| Rays are not scattered uniformly over all that Circular Space, but |
| collected infinitely more densely in the Center than in any other Part |
| of the Circle, and in the Way from the Center to the Circumference, grow |
| continually rarer and rarer, so as at the Circumference to become |
| infinitely rare; and by reason of their Rarity are not strong enough to |
| be visible, unless in the Center and very near it. Let ADE [in _Fig._ |
| 27.] represent one of those Circles described with the Center C, and |
| Semi-diameter AC, and let BFG be a smaller Circle concentrick to the |
| former, cutting with its Circumference the Diameter AC in B, and bisect |
| AC in N; and by my reckoning, the Density of the Light in any Place B, |
| will be to its Density in N, as AB to BC; and the whole Light within the |
| lesser Circle BFG, will be to the whole Light within the greater AED, as |
| the Excess of the Square of AC above the Square of AB, is to the Square |
| of AC. As if BC be the fifth Part of AC, the Light will be four times |
| denser in B than in N, and the whole Light within the less Circle, will |
| be to the whole Light within the greater, as nine to twenty-five. Whence |
| it's evident, that the Light within the less Circle, must strike the |
| Sense much more strongly, than that faint and dilated Light round about |
| between it and the Circumference of the greater. |
| |
| But it's farther to be noted, that the most luminous of the Prismatick |
| Colours are the yellow and orange. These affect the Senses more strongly |
| than all the rest together, and next to these in strength are the red |
| and green. The blue compared with these is a faint and dark Colour, and |
| the indigo and violet are much darker and fainter, so that these |
| compared with the stronger Colours are little to be regarded. The Images |
| of Objects are therefore to be placed, not in the Focus of the mean |
| refrangible Rays, which are in the Confine of green and blue, but in the |
| Focus of those Rays which are in the middle of the orange and yellow; |
| there where the Colour is most luminous and fulgent, that is in the |
| brightest yellow, that yellow which inclines more to orange than to |
| green. And by the Refraction of these Rays (whose Sines of Incidence and |
| Refraction in Glass are as 17 and 11) the Refraction of Glass and |
| Crystal for Optical Uses is to be measured. Let us therefore place the |
| Image of the Object in the Focus of these Rays, and all the yellow and |
| orange will fall within a Circle, whose Diameter is about the 250th |
| Part of the Diameter of the Aperture of the Glass. And if you add the |
| brighter half of the red, (that half which is next the orange) and the |
| brighter half of the green, (that half which is next the yellow) about |
| three fifth Parts of the Light of these two Colours will fall within the |
| same Circle, and two fifth Parts will fall without it round about; and |
| that which falls without will be spread through almost as much more |
| space as that which falls within, and so in the gross be almost three |
| times rarer. Of the other half of the red and green, (that is of the |
| deep dark red and willow green) about one quarter will fall within this |
| Circle, and three quarters without, and that which falls without will be |
| spread through about four or five times more space than that which falls |
| within; and so in the gross be rarer, and if compared with the whole |
| Light within it, will be about 25 times rarer than all that taken in the |
| gross; or rather more than 30 or 40 times rarer, because the deep red in |
| the end of the Spectrum of Colours made by a Prism is very thin and |
| rare, and the willow green is something rarer than the orange and |
| yellow. The Light of these Colours therefore being so very much rarer |
| than that within the Circle, will scarce affect the Sense, especially |
| since the deep red and willow green of this Light, are much darker |
| Colours than the rest. And for the same reason the blue and violet being |
| much darker Colours than these, and much more rarified, may be |
| neglected. For the dense and bright Light of the Circle, will obscure |
| the rare and weak Light of these dark Colours round about it, and |
| render them almost insensible. The sensible Image of a lucid Point is |
| therefore scarce broader than a Circle, whose Diameter is the 250th Part |
| of the Diameter of the Aperture of the Object-glass of a good Telescope, |
| or not much broader, if you except a faint and dark misty Light round |
| about it, which a Spectator will scarce regard. And therefore in a |
| Telescope, whose Aperture is four Inches, and Length an hundred Feet, it |
| exceeds not 2´´ 45´´´, or 3´´. And in a Telescope whose Aperture is two |
| Inches, and Length 20 or 30 Feet, it may be 5´´ or 6´´, and scarce |
| above. And this answers well to Experience: For some Astronomers have |
| found the Diameters of the fix'd Stars, in Telescopes of between 20 and |
| 60 Feet in length, to be about 5´´ or 6´´, or at most 8´´ or 10´´ in |
| diameter. But if the Eye-Glass be tincted faintly with the Smoak of a |
| Lamp or Torch, to obscure the Light of the Star, the fainter Light in |
| the Circumference of the Star ceases to be visible, and the Star (if the |
| Glass be sufficiently soiled with Smoak) appears something more like a |
| mathematical Point. And for the same Reason, the enormous Part of the |
| Light in the Circumference of every lucid Point ought to be less |
| discernible in shorter Telescopes than in longer, because the shorter |
| transmit less Light to the Eye. |
| |
| Now, that the fix'd Stars, by reason of their immense Distance, appear |
| like Points, unless so far as their Light is dilated by Refraction, may |
| appear from hence; that when the Moon passes over them and eclipses |
| them, their Light vanishes, not gradually like that of the Planets, but |
| all at once; and in the end of the Eclipse it returns into Sight all at |
| once, or certainly in less time than the second of a Minute; the |
| Refraction of the Moon's Atmosphere a little protracting the time in |
| which the Light of the Star first vanishes, and afterwards returns into |
| Sight. |
| |
| Now, if we suppose the sensible Image of a lucid Point, to be even 250 |
| times narrower than the Aperture of the Glass; yet this Image would be |
| still much greater than if it were only from the spherical Figure of the |
| Glass. For were it not for the different Refrangibility of the Rays, its |
| breadth in an 100 Foot Telescope whose aperture is 4 Inches, would be |
| but 961/72000000 parts of an Inch, as is manifest by the foregoing |
| Computation. And therefore in this case the greatest Errors arising from |
| the spherical Figure of the Glass, would be to the greatest sensible |
| Errors arising from the different Refrangibility of the Rays as |
| 961/72000000 to 4/250 at most, that is only as 1 to 1200. And this |
| sufficiently shews that it is not the spherical Figures of Glasses, but |
| the different Refrangibility of the Rays which hinders the perfection of |
| Telescopes. |
| |
| There is another Argument by which it may appear that the different |
| Refrangibility of Rays, is the true cause of the imperfection of |
| Telescopes. For the Errors of the Rays arising from the spherical |
| Figures of Object-glasses, are as the Cubes of the Apertures of the |
| Object Glasses; and thence to make Telescopes of various Lengths magnify |
| with equal distinctness, the Apertures of the Object-glasses, and the |
| Charges or magnifying Powers ought to be as the Cubes of the square |
| Roots of their lengths; which doth not answer to Experience. But the |
| Errors of the Rays arising from the different Refrangibility, are as the |
| Apertures of the Object-glasses; and thence to make Telescopes of |
| various lengths, magnify with equal distinctness, their Apertures and |
| Charges ought to be as the square Roots of their lengths; and this |
| answers to Experience, as is well known. For Instance, a Telescope of 64 |
| Feet in length, with an Aperture of 2-2/3 Inches, magnifies about 120 |
| times, with as much distinctness as one of a Foot in length, with 1/3 of |
| an Inch aperture, magnifies 15 times. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 28.] |
| |
| Now were it not for this different Refrangibility of Rays, Telescopes |
| might be brought to a greater perfection than we have yet describ'd, by |
| composing the Object-glass of two Glasses with Water between them. Let |
| ADFC [in _Fig._ 28.] represent the Object-glass composed of two Glasses |
| ABED and BEFC, alike convex on the outsides AGD and CHF, and alike |
| concave on the insides BME, BNE, with Water in the concavity BMEN. Let |
| the Sine of Incidence out of Glass into Air be as I to R, and out of |
| Water into Air, as K to R, and by consequence out of Glass into Water, |
| as I to K: and let the Diameter of the Sphere to which the convex sides |
| AGD and CHF are ground be D, and the Diameter of the Sphere to which the |
| concave sides BME and BNE, are ground be to D, as the Cube Root of |
| KK--KI to the Cube Root of RK--RI: and the Refractions on the concave |
| sides of the Glasses, will very much correct the Errors of the |
| Refractions on the convex sides, so far as they arise from the |
| sphericalness of the Figure. And by this means might Telescopes be |
| brought to sufficient perfection, were it not for the different |
| Refrangibility of several sorts of Rays. But by reason of this different |
| Refrangibility, I do not yet see any other means of improving Telescopes |
| by Refractions alone, than that of increasing their lengths, for which |
| end the late Contrivance of _Hugenius_ seems well accommodated. For very |
| long Tubes are cumbersome, and scarce to be readily managed, and by |
| reason of their length are very apt to bend, and shake by bending, so as |
| to cause a continual trembling in the Objects, whereby it becomes |
| difficult to see them distinctly: whereas by his Contrivance the Glasses |
| are readily manageable, and the Object-glass being fix'd upon a strong |
| upright Pole becomes more steady. |
| |
| Seeing therefore the Improvement of Telescopes of given lengths by |
| Refractions is desperate; I contrived heretofore a Perspective by |
| Reflexion, using instead of an Object-glass a concave Metal. The |
| diameter of the Sphere to which the Metal was ground concave was about |
| 25 _English_ Inches, and by consequence the length of the Instrument |
| about six Inches and a quarter. The Eye-glass was Plano-convex, and the |
| diameter of the Sphere to which the convex side was ground was about 1/5 |
| of an Inch, or a little less, and by consequence it magnified between 30 |
| and 40 times. By another way of measuring I found that it magnified |
| about 35 times. The concave Metal bore an Aperture of an Inch and a |
| third part; but the Aperture was limited not by an opake Circle, |
| covering the Limb of the Metal round about, but by an opake Circle |
| placed between the Eyeglass and the Eye, and perforated in the middle |
| with a little round hole for the Rays to pass through to the Eye. For |
| this Circle by being placed here, stopp'd much of the erroneous Light, |
| which otherwise would have disturbed the Vision. By comparing it with a |
| pretty good Perspective of four Feet in length, made with a concave |
| Eye-glass, I could read at a greater distance with my own Instrument |
| than with the Glass. Yet Objects appeared much darker in it than in the |
| Glass, and that partly because more Light was lost by Reflexion in the |
| Metal, than by Refraction in the Glass, and partly because my Instrument |
| was overcharged. Had it magnified but 30 or 25 times, it would have made |
| the Object appear more brisk and pleasant. Two of these I made about 16 |
| Years ago, and have one of them still by me, by which I can prove the |
| truth of what I write. Yet it is not so good as at the first. For the |
| concave has been divers times tarnished and cleared again, by rubbing |
| it with very soft Leather. When I made these an Artist in _London_ |
| undertook to imitate it; but using another way of polishing them than I |
| did, he fell much short of what I had attained to, as I afterwards |
| understood by discoursing the Under-workman he had employed. The Polish |
| I used was in this manner. I had two round Copper Plates, each six |
| Inches in Diameter, the one convex, the other concave, ground very true |
| to one another. On the convex I ground the Object-Metal or Concave which |
| was to be polish'd, 'till it had taken the Figure of the Convex and was |
| ready for a Polish. Then I pitched over the convex very thinly, by |
| dropping melted Pitch upon it, and warming it to keep the Pitch soft, |
| whilst I ground it with the concave Copper wetted to make it spread |
| eavenly all over the convex. Thus by working it well I made it as thin |
| as a Groat, and after the convex was cold I ground it again to give it |
| as true a Figure as I could. Then I took Putty which I had made very |
| fine by washing it from all its grosser Particles, and laying a little |
| of this upon the Pitch, I ground it upon the Pitch with the concave |
| Copper, till it had done making a Noise; and then upon the Pitch I |
| ground the Object-Metal with a brisk motion, for about two or three |
| Minutes of time, leaning hard upon it. Then I put fresh Putty upon the |
| Pitch, and ground it again till it had done making a noise, and |
| afterwards ground the Object-Metal upon it as before. And this Work I |
| repeated till the Metal was polished, grinding it the last time with all |
| my strength for a good while together, and frequently breathing upon |
| the Pitch, to keep it moist without laying on any more fresh Putty. The |
| Object-Metal was two Inches broad, and about one third part of an Inch |
| thick, to keep it from bending. I had two of these Metals, and when I |
| had polished them both, I tried which was best, and ground the other |
| again, to see if I could make it better than that which I kept. And thus |
| by many Trials I learn'd the way of polishing, till I made those two |
| reflecting Perspectives I spake of above. For this Art of polishing will |
| be better learn'd by repeated Practice than by my Description. Before I |
| ground the Object-Metal on the Pitch, I always ground the Putty on it |
| with the concave Copper, till it had done making a noise, because if the |
| Particles of the Putty were not by this means made to stick fast in the |
| Pitch, they would by rolling up and down grate and fret the Object-Metal |
| and fill it full of little holes. |
| |
| But because Metal is more difficult to polish than Glass, and is |
| afterwards very apt to be spoiled by tarnishing, and reflects not so |
| much Light as Glass quick-silver'd over does: I would propound to use |
| instead of the Metal, a Glass ground concave on the foreside, and as |
| much convex on the backside, and quick-silver'd over on the convex side. |
| The Glass must be every where of the same thickness exactly. Otherwise |
| it will make Objects look colour'd and indistinct. By such a Glass I |
| tried about five or six Years ago to make a reflecting Telescope of four |
| Feet in length to magnify about 150 times, and I satisfied my self that |
| there wants nothing but a good Artist to bring the Design to |
| perfection. For the Glass being wrought by one of our _London_ Artists |
| after such a manner as they grind Glasses for Telescopes, though it |
| seemed as well wrought as the Object-glasses use to be, yet when it was |
| quick-silver'd, the Reflexion discovered innumerable Inequalities all |
| over the Glass. And by reason of these Inequalities, Objects appeared |
| indistinct in this Instrument. For the Errors of reflected Rays caused |
| by any Inequality of the Glass, are about six times greater than the |
| Errors of refracted Rays caused by the like Inequalities. Yet by this |
| Experiment I satisfied my self that the Reflexion on the concave side of |
| the Glass, which I feared would disturb the Vision, did no sensible |
| prejudice to it, and by consequence that nothing is wanting to perfect |
| these Telescopes, but good Workmen who can grind and polish Glasses |
| truly spherical. An Object-glass of a fourteen Foot Telescope, made by |
| an Artificer at _London_, I once mended considerably, by grinding it on |
| Pitch with Putty, and leaning very easily on it in the grinding, lest |
| the Putty should scratch it. Whether this way may not do well enough for |
| polishing these reflecting Glasses, I have not yet tried. But he that |
| shall try either this or any other way of polishing which he may think |
| better, may do well to make his Glasses ready for polishing, by grinding |
| them without that Violence, wherewith our _London_ Workmen press their |
| Glasses in grinding. For by such violent pressure, Glasses are apt to |
| bend a little in the grinding, and such bending will certainly spoil |
| their Figure. To recommend therefore the consideration of these |
| reflecting Glasses to such Artists as are curious in figuring Glasses, I |
| shall describe this optical Instrument in the following Proposition. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VIII. PROB. II. |
| |
| _To shorten Telescopes._ |
| |
| Let ABCD [in _Fig._ 29.] represent a Glass spherically concave on the |
| foreside AB, and as much convex on the backside CD, so that it be every |
| where of an equal thickness. Let it not be thicker on one side than on |
| the other, lest it make Objects appear colour'd and indistinct, and let |
| it be very truly wrought and quick-silver'd over on the backside; and |
| set in the Tube VXYZ which must be very black within. Let EFG represent |
| a Prism of Glass or Crystal placed near the other end of the Tube, in |
| the middle of it, by means of a handle of Brass or Iron FGK, to the end |
| of which made flat it is cemented. Let this Prism be rectangular at E, |
| and let the other two Angles at F and G be accurately equal to each |
| other, and by consequence equal to half right ones, and let the plane |
| sides FE and GE be square, and by consequence the third side FG a |
| rectangular Parallelogram, whose length is to its breadth in a |
| subduplicate proportion of two to one. Let it be so placed in the Tube, |
| that the Axis of the Speculum may pass through the middle of the square |
| side EF perpendicularly and by consequence through the middle of the |
| side FG at an Angle of 45 Degrees, and let the side EF be turned towards |
| the Speculum, and the distance of this Prism from the Speculum be such |
| that the Rays of the Light PQ, RS, &c. which are incident upon the |
| Speculum in Lines parallel to the Axis thereof, may enter the Prism at |
| the side EF, and be reflected by the side FG, and thence go out of it |
| through the side GE, to the Point T, which must be the common Focus of |
| the Speculum ABDC, and of a Plano-convex Eye-glass H, through which |
| those Rays must pass to the Eye. And let the Rays at their coming out of |
| the Glass pass through a small round hole, or aperture made in a little |
| plate of Lead, Brass, or Silver, wherewith the Glass is to be covered, |
| which hole must be no bigger than is necessary for Light enough to pass |
| through. For so it will render the Object distinct, the Plate in which |
| 'tis made intercepting all the erroneous part of the Light which comes |
| from the verges of the Speculum AB. Such an Instrument well made, if it |
| be six Foot long, (reckoning the length from the Speculum to the Prism, |
| and thence to the Focus T) will bear an aperture of six Inches at the |
| Speculum, and magnify between two and three hundred times. But the hole |
| H here limits the aperture with more advantage, than if the aperture was |
| placed at the Speculum. If the Instrument be made longer or shorter, the |
| aperture must be in proportion as the Cube of the square-square Root of |
| the length, and the magnifying as the aperture. But it's convenient that |
| the Speculum be an Inch or two broader than the aperture at the least, |
| and that the Glass of the Speculum be thick, that it bend not in the |
| working. The Prism EFG must be no bigger than is necessary, and its back |
| side FG must not be quick-silver'd over. For without quicksilver it will |
| reflect all the Light incident on it from the Speculum. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 29.] |
| |
| In this Instrument the Object will be inverted, but may be erected by |
| making the square sides FF and EG of the Prism EFG not plane but |
| spherically convex, that the Rays may cross as well before they come at |
| it as afterwards between it and the Eye-glass. If it be desired that the |
| Instrument bear a larger aperture, that may be also done by composing |
| the Speculum of two Glasses with Water between them. |
| |
| If the Theory of making Telescopes could at length be fully brought into |
| Practice, yet there would be certain Bounds beyond which Telescopes |
| could not perform. For the Air through which we look upon the Stars, is |
| in a perpetual Tremor; as may be seen by the tremulous Motion of Shadows |
| cast from high Towers, and by the twinkling of the fix'd Stars. But |
| these Stars do not twinkle when viewed through Telescopes which have |
| large apertures. For the Rays of Light which pass through divers parts |
| of the aperture, tremble each of them apart, and by means of their |
| various and sometimes contrary Tremors, fall at one and the same time |
| upon different points in the bottom of the Eye, and their trembling |
| Motions are too quick and confused to be perceived severally. And all |
| these illuminated Points constitute one broad lucid Point, composed of |
| those many trembling Points confusedly and insensibly mixed with one |
| another by very short and swift Tremors, and thereby cause the Star to |
| appear broader than it is, and without any trembling of the whole. Long |
| Telescopes may cause Objects to appear brighter and larger than short |
| ones can do, but they cannot be so formed as to take away that confusion |
| of the Rays which arises from the Tremors of the Atmosphere. The only |
| Remedy is a most serene and quiet Air, such as may perhaps be found on |
| the tops of the highest Mountains above the grosser Clouds. |
| |
| FOOTNOTES: |
| |
| [C] _See our_ Author's Lectiones Opticæ § 10. _Sect. II. § 29. and Sect. |
| III. Prop. 25._ |
| |
| [D] See our Author's _Lectiones Opticæ_, Part. I. Sect. 1. §5. |
| |
| [E] _This is very fully treated of in our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ |
| I. _Sect._ II. |
| |
| [F] _See our_ Author's Lect. Optic. Part I. Sect. II. § 29. |
| |
| [G] _This is demonstrated in our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ I. |
| _Sect._ IV. _Prop._ 37. |
| |
| [H] _How to do this, is shewn in our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ I. |
| _Sect._ IV. _Prop._ 31. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE FIRST BOOK OF OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| _PART II._ |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ I. THEOR. I. |
| |
| _The Phænomena of Colours in refracted or reflected Light are not caused |
| by new Modifications of the Light variously impress'd, according to the |
| various Terminations of the Light and Shadow_. |
| |
| The PROOF by Experiments. |
| |
| _Exper._ 1. For if the Sun shine into a very dark Chamber through an |
| oblong hole F, [in _Fig._ 1.] whose breadth is the sixth or eighth part |
| of an Inch, or something less; and his beam FH do afterwards pass first |
| through a very large Prism ABC, distant about 20 Feet from the hole, and |
| parallel to it, and then (with its white part) through an oblong hole H, |
| whose breadth is about the fortieth or sixtieth part of an Inch, and |
| which is made in a black opake Body GI, and placed at the distance of |
| two or three Feet from the Prism, in a parallel Situation both to the |
| Prism and to the former hole, and if this white Light thus transmitted |
| through the hole H, fall afterwards upon a white Paper _pt_, placed |
| after that hole H, at the distance of three or four Feet from it, and |
| there paint the usual Colours of the Prism, suppose red at _t_, yellow |
| at _s_, green at _r_, blue at _q_, and violet at _p_; you may with an |
| Iron Wire, or any such like slender opake Body, whose breadth is about |
| the tenth part of an Inch, by intercepting the Rays at _k_, _l_, _m_, |
| _n_ or _o_, take away any one of the Colours at _t_, _s_, _r_, _q_ or |
| _p_, whilst the other Colours remain upon the Paper as before; or with |
| an Obstacle something bigger you may take away any two, or three, or |
| four Colours together, the rest remaining: So that any one of the |
| Colours as well as violet may become outmost in the Confine of the |
| Shadow towards _p_, and any one of them as well as red may become |
| outmost in the Confine of the Shadow towards _t_, and any one of them |
| may also border upon the Shadow made within the Colours by the Obstacle |
| R intercepting some intermediate part of the Light; and, lastly, any one |
| of them by being left alone, may border upon the Shadow on either hand. |
| All the Colours have themselves indifferently to any Confines of Shadow, |
| and therefore the differences of these Colours from one another, do not |
| arise from the different Confines of Shadow, whereby Light is variously |
| modified, as has hitherto been the Opinion of Philosophers. In trying |
| these things 'tis to be observed, that by how much the holes F and H are |
| narrower, and the Intervals between them and the Prism greater, and the |
| Chamber darker, by so much the better doth the Experiment succeed; |
| provided the Light be not so far diminished, but that the Colours at |
| _pt_ be sufficiently visible. To procure a Prism of solid Glass large |
| enough for this Experiment will be difficult, and therefore a prismatick |
| Vessel must be made of polish'd Glass Plates cemented together, and |
| filled with salt Water or clear Oil. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 1.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 2. The Sun's Light let into a dark Chamber through the round |
| hole F, [in _Fig._ 2.] half an Inch wide, passed first through the Prism |
| ABC placed at the hole, and then through a Lens PT something more than |
| four Inches broad, and about eight Feet distant from the Prism, and |
| thence converged to O the Focus of the Lens distant from it about three |
| Feet, and there fell upon a white Paper DE. If that Paper was |
| perpendicular to that Light incident upon it, as 'tis represented in the |
| posture DE, all the Colours upon it at O appeared white. But if the |
| Paper being turned about an Axis parallel to the Prism, became very much |
| inclined to the Light, as 'tis represented in the Positions _de_ and |
| _[Greek: de]_; the same Light in the one case appeared yellow and red, |
| in the other blue. Here one and the same part of the Light in one and |
| the same place, according to the various Inclinations of the Paper, |
| appeared in one case white, in another yellow or red, in a third blue, |
| whilst the Confine of Light and shadow, and the Refractions of the Prism |
| in all these cases remained the same. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 2.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 3.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 3. Such another Experiment may be more easily tried as follows. |
| Let a broad beam of the Sun's Light coming into a dark Chamber through a |
| hole in the Window-shut be refracted by a large Prism ABC, [in _Fig._ |
| 3.] whose refracting Angle C is more than 60 Degrees, and so soon as it |
| comes out of the Prism, let it fall upon the white Paper DE glewed upon |
| a stiff Plane; and this Light, when the Paper is perpendicular to it, as |
| 'tis represented in DE, will appear perfectly white upon the Paper; but |
| when the Paper is very much inclin'd to it in such a manner as to keep |
| always parallel to the Axis of the Prism, the whiteness of the whole |
| Light upon the Paper will according to the inclination of the Paper this |
| way or that way, change either into yellow and red, as in the posture |
| _de_, or into blue and violet, as in the posture [Greek: de]. And if the |
| Light before it fall upon the Paper be twice refracted the same way by |
| two parallel Prisms, these Colours will become the more conspicuous. |
| Here all the middle parts of the broad beam of white Light which fell |
| upon the Paper, did without any Confine of Shadow to modify it, become |
| colour'd all over with one uniform Colour, the Colour being always the |
| same in the middle of the Paper as at the edges, and this Colour changed |
| according to the various Obliquity of the reflecting Paper, without any |
| change in the Refractions or Shadow, or in the Light which fell upon the |
| Paper. And therefore these Colours are to be derived from some other |
| Cause than the new Modifications of Light by Refractions and Shadows. |
| |
| If it be asked, what then is their Cause? I answer, That the Paper in |
| the posture _de_, being more oblique to the more refrangible Rays than |
| to the less refrangible ones, is more strongly illuminated by the latter |
| than by the former, and therefore the less refrangible Rays are |
| predominant in the reflected Light. And where-ever they are predominant |
| in any Light, they tinge it with red or yellow, as may in some measure |
| appear by the first Proposition of the first Part of this Book, and will |
| more fully appear hereafter. And the contrary happens in the posture of |
| the Paper [Greek: de], the more refrangible Rays being then predominant |
| which always tinge Light with blues and violets. |
| |
| _Exper._ 4. The Colours of Bubbles with which Children play are various, |
| and change their Situation variously, without any respect to any Confine |
| or Shadow. If such a Bubble be cover'd with a concave Glass, to keep it |
| from being agitated by any Wind or Motion of the Air, the Colours will |
| slowly and regularly change their situation, even whilst the Eye and the |
| Bubble, and all Bodies which emit any Light, or cast any Shadow, remain |
| unmoved. And therefore their Colours arise from some regular Cause which |
| depends not on any Confine of Shadow. What this Cause is will be shewed |
| in the next Book. |
| |
| To these Experiments may be added the tenth Experiment of the first Part |
| of this first Book, where the Sun's Light in a dark Room being |
| trajected through the parallel Superficies of two Prisms tied together |
| in the form of a Parallelopipede, became totally of one uniform yellow |
| or red Colour, at its emerging out of the Prisms. Here, in the |
| production of these Colours, the Confine of Shadow can have nothing to |
| do. For the Light changes from white to yellow, orange and red |
| successively, without any alteration of the Confine of Shadow: And at |
| both edges of the emerging Light where the contrary Confines of Shadow |
| ought to produce different Effects, the Colour is one and the same, |
| whether it be white, yellow, orange or red: And in the middle of the |
| emerging Light, where there is no Confine of Shadow at all, the Colour |
| is the very same as at the edges, the whole Light at its very first |
| Emergence being of one uniform Colour, whether white, yellow, orange or |
| red, and going on thence perpetually without any change of Colour, such |
| as the Confine of Shadow is vulgarly supposed to work in refracted Light |
| after its Emergence. Neither can these Colours arise from any new |
| Modifications of the Light by Refractions, because they change |
| successively from white to yellow, orange and red, while the Refractions |
| remain the same, and also because the Refractions are made contrary ways |
| by parallel Superficies which destroy one another's Effects. They arise |
| not therefore from any Modifications of Light made by Refractions and |
| Shadows, but have some other Cause. What that Cause is we shewed above |
| in this tenth Experiment, and need not here repeat it. |
| |
| There is yet another material Circumstance of this Experiment. For this |
| emerging Light being by a third Prism HIK [in _Fig._ 22. _Part_ I.][I] |
| refracted towards the Paper PT, and there painting the usual Colours of |
| the Prism, red, yellow, green, blue, violet: If these Colours arose from |
| the Refractions of that Prism modifying the Light, they would not be in |
| the Light before its Incidence on that Prism. And yet in that Experiment |
| we found, that when by turning the two first Prisms about their common |
| Axis all the Colours were made to vanish but the red; the Light which |
| makes that red being left alone, appeared of the very same red Colour |
| before its Incidence on the third Prism. And in general we find by other |
| Experiments, that when the Rays which differ in Refrangibility are |
| separated from one another, and any one Sort of them is considered |
| apart, the Colour of the Light which they compose cannot be changed by |
| any Refraction or Reflexion whatever, as it ought to be were Colours |
| nothing else than Modifications of Light caused by Refractions, and |
| Reflexions, and Shadows. This Unchangeableness of Colour I am now to |
| describe in the following Proposition. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ II. THEOR. II. |
| |
| _All homogeneal Light has its proper Colour answering to its Degree of |
| Refrangibility, and that Colour cannot be changed by Reflexions and |
| Refractions._ |
| |
| In the Experiments of the fourth Proposition of the first Part of this |
| first Book, when I had separated the heterogeneous Rays from one |
| another, the Spectrum _pt_ formed by the separated Rays, did in the |
| Progress from its End _p_, on which the most refrangible Rays fell, unto |
| its other End _t_, on which the least refrangible Rays fell, appear |
| tinged with this Series of Colours, violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, |
| orange, red, together with all their intermediate Degrees in a continual |
| Succession perpetually varying. So that there appeared as many Degrees |
| of Colours, as there were sorts of Rays differing in Refrangibility. |
| |
| _Exper._ 5. Now, that these Colours could not be changed by Refraction, |
| I knew by refracting with a Prism sometimes one very little Part of this |
| Light, sometimes another very little Part, as is described in the |
| twelfth Experiment of the first Part of this Book. For by this |
| Refraction the Colour of the Light was never changed in the least. If |
| any Part of the red Light was refracted, it remained totally of the same |
| red Colour as before. No orange, no yellow, no green or blue, no other |
| new Colour was produced by that Refraction. Neither did the Colour any |
| ways change by repeated Refractions, but continued always the same red |
| entirely as at first. The like Constancy and Immutability I found also |
| in the blue, green, and other Colours. So also, if I looked through a |
| Prism upon any Body illuminated with any part of this homogeneal Light, |
| as in the fourteenth Experiment of the first Part of this Book is |
| described; I could not perceive any new Colour generated this way. All |
| Bodies illuminated with compound Light appear through Prisms confused, |
| (as was said above) and tinged with various new Colours, but those |
| illuminated with homogeneal Light appeared through Prisms neither less |
| distinct, nor otherwise colour'd, than when viewed with the naked Eyes. |
| Their Colours were not in the least changed by the Refraction of the |
| interposed Prism. I speak here of a sensible Change of Colour: For the |
| Light which I here call homogeneal, being not absolutely homogeneal, |
| there ought to arise some little Change of Colour from its |
| Heterogeneity. But, if that Heterogeneity was so little as it might be |
| made by the said Experiments of the fourth Proposition, that Change was |
| not sensible, and therefore in Experiments, where Sense is Judge, ought |
| to be accounted none at all. |
| |
| _Exper._ 6. And as these Colours were not changeable by Refractions, so |
| neither were they by Reflexions. For all white, grey, red, yellow, |
| green, blue, violet Bodies, as Paper, Ashes, red Lead, Orpiment, Indico |
| Bise, Gold, Silver, Copper, Grass, blue Flowers, Violets, Bubbles of |
| Water tinged with various Colours, Peacock's Feathers, the Tincture of |
| _Lignum Nephriticum_, and such-like, in red homogeneal Light appeared |
| totally red, in blue Light totally blue, in green Light totally green, |
| and so of other Colours. In the homogeneal Light of any Colour they all |
| appeared totally of that same Colour, with this only Difference, that |
| some of them reflected that Light more strongly, others more faintly. I |
| never yet found any Body, which by reflecting homogeneal Light could |
| sensibly change its Colour. |
| |
| From all which it is manifest, that if the Sun's Light consisted of but |
| one sort of Rays, there would be but one Colour in the whole World, nor |
| would it be possible to produce any new Colour by Reflexions and |
| Refractions, and by consequence that the variety of Colours depends upon |
| the Composition of Light. |
| |
| |
| _DEFINITION._ |
| |
| The homogeneal Light and Rays which appear red, or rather make Objects |
| appear so, I call Rubrifick or Red-making; those which make Objects |
| appear yellow, green, blue, and violet, I call Yellow-making, |
| Green-making, Blue-making, Violet-making, and so of the rest. And if at |
| any time I speak of Light and Rays as coloured or endued with Colours, I |
| would be understood to speak not philosophically and properly, but |
| grossly, and accordingly to such Conceptions as vulgar People in seeing |
| all these Experiments would be apt to frame. For the Rays to speak |
| properly are not coloured. In them there is nothing else than a certain |
| Power and Disposition to stir up a Sensation of this or that Colour. |
| For as Sound in a Bell or musical String, or other sounding Body, is |
| nothing but a trembling Motion, and in the Air nothing but that Motion |
| propagated from the Object, and in the Sensorium 'tis a Sense of that |
| Motion under the Form of Sound; so Colours in the Object are nothing but |
| a Disposition to reflect this or that sort of Rays more copiously than |
| the rest; in the Rays they are nothing but their Dispositions to |
| propagate this or that Motion into the Sensorium, and in the Sensorium |
| they are Sensations of those Motions under the Forms of Colours. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ III. PROB. I. |
| |
| _To define the Refrangibility of the several sorts of homogeneal Light |
| answering to the several Colours._ |
| |
| For determining this Problem I made the following Experiment.[J] |
| |
| _Exper._ 7. When I had caused the Rectilinear Sides AF, GM, [in _Fig._ |
| 4.] of the Spectrum of Colours made by the Prism to be distinctly |
| defined, as in the fifth Experiment of the first Part of this Book is |
| described, there were found in it all the homogeneal Colours in the same |
| Order and Situation one among another as in the Spectrum of simple |
| Light, described in the fourth Proposition of that Part. For the Circles |
| of which the Spectrum of compound Light PT is composed, and which in |
| the middle Parts of the Spectrum interfere, and are intermix'd with one |
| another, are not intermix'd in their outmost Parts where they touch |
| those Rectilinear Sides AF and GM. And therefore, in those Rectilinear |
| Sides when distinctly defined, there is no new Colour generated by |
| Refraction. I observed also, that if any where between the two outmost |
| Circles TMF and PGA a Right Line, as [Greek: gd], was cross to the |
| Spectrum, so as both Ends to fall perpendicularly upon its Rectilinear |
| Sides, there appeared one and the same Colour, and degree of Colour from |
| one End of this Line to the other. I delineated therefore in a Paper the |
| Perimeter of the Spectrum FAP GMT, and in trying the third Experiment of |
| the first Part of this Book, I held the Paper so that the Spectrum might |
| fall upon this delineated Figure, and agree with it exactly, whilst an |
| Assistant, whose Eyes for distinguishing Colours were more critical than |
| mine, did by Right Lines [Greek: ab, gd, ez,] &c. drawn cross the |
| Spectrum, note the Confines of the Colours, that is of the red M[Greek: |
| ab]F, of the orange [Greek: agdb], of the yellow [Greek: gezd], of the |
| green [Greek: eêthz], of the blue [Greek: êikth], of the indico [Greek: |
| ilmk], and of the violet [Greek: l]GA[Greek: m]. And this Operation |
| being divers times repeated both in the same, and in several Papers, I |
| found that the Observations agreed well enough with one another, and |
| that the Rectilinear Sides MG and FA were by the said cross Lines |
| divided after the manner of a Musical Chord. Let GM be produced to X, |
| that MX may be equal to GM, and conceive GX, [Greek: l]X, [Greek: i]X, |
| [Greek: ê]X, [Greek: e]X, [Greek: g]X, [Greek: a]X, MX, to be in |
| proportion to one another, as the Numbers, 1, 8/9, 5/6, 3/4, 2/3, 3/5, |
| 9/16, 1/2, and so to represent the Chords of the Key, and of a Tone, a |
| third Minor, a fourth, a fifth, a sixth Major, a seventh and an eighth |
| above that Key: And the Intervals M[Greek: a], [Greek: ag], [Greek: ge], |
| [Greek: eê], [Greek: êi], [Greek: il], and [Greek: l]G, will be the |
| Spaces which the several Colours (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, |
| indigo, violet) take up. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 4.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 5.] |
| |
| Now these Intervals or Spaces subtending the Differences of the |
| Refractions of the Rays going to the Limits of those Colours, that is, |
| to the Points M, [Greek: a], [Greek: g], [Greek: e], [Greek: ê], [Greek: |
| i], [Greek: l], G, may without any sensible Error be accounted |
| proportional to the Differences of the Sines of Refraction of those Rays |
| having one common Sine of Incidence, and therefore since the common Sine |
| of Incidence of the most and least refrangible Rays out of Glass into |
| Air was (by a Method described above) found in proportion to their Sines |
| of Refraction, as 50 to 77 and 78, divide the Difference between the |
| Sines of Refraction 77 and 78, as the Line GM is divided by those |
| Intervals, and you will have 77, 77-1/8, 77-1/5, 77-1/3, 77-1/2, 77-2/3, |
| 77-7/9, 78, the Sines of Refraction of those Rays out of Glass into Air, |
| their common Sine of Incidence being 50. So then the Sines of the |
| Incidences of all the red-making Rays out of Glass into Air, were to the |
| Sines of their Refractions, not greater than 50 to 77, nor less than 50 |
| to 77-1/8, but they varied from one another according to all |
| intermediate Proportions. And the Sines of the Incidences of the |
| green-making Rays were to the Sines of their Refractions in all |
| Proportions from that of 50 to 77-1/3, unto that of 50 to 77-1/2. And |
| by the like Limits above-mentioned were the Refractions of the Rays |
| belonging to the rest of the Colours defined, the Sines of the |
| red-making Rays extending from 77 to 77-1/8, those of the orange-making |
| from 77-1/8 to 77-1/5, those of the yellow-making from 77-1/5 to 77-1/3, |
| those of the green-making from 77-1/3 to 77-1/2, those of the |
| blue-making from 77-1/2 to 77-2/3, those of the indigo-making from |
| 77-2/3 to 77-7/9, and those of the violet from 77-7/9, to 78. |
| |
| These are the Laws of the Refractions made out of Glass into Air, and |
| thence by the third Axiom of the first Part of this Book, the Laws of |
| the Refractions made out of Air into Glass are easily derived. |
| |
| _Exper._ 8. I found moreover, that when Light goes out of Air through |
| several contiguous refracting Mediums as through Water and Glass, and |
| thence goes out again into Air, whether the refracting Superficies be |
| parallel or inclin'd to one another, that Light as often as by contrary |
| Refractions 'tis so corrected, that it emergeth in Lines parallel to |
| those in which it was incident, continues ever after to be white. But if |
| the emergent Rays be inclined to the incident, the Whiteness of the |
| emerging Light will by degrees in passing on from the Place of |
| Emergence, become tinged in its Edges with Colours. This I try'd by |
| refracting Light with Prisms of Glass placed within a Prismatick Vessel |
| of Water. Now those Colours argue a diverging and separation of the |
| heterogeneous Rays from one another by means of their unequal |
| Refractions, as in what follows will more fully appear. And, on the |
| contrary, the permanent whiteness argues, that in like Incidences of the |
| Rays there is no such separation of the emerging Rays, and by |
| consequence no inequality of their whole Refractions. Whence I seem to |
| gather the two following Theorems. |
| |
| 1. The Excesses of the Sines of Refraction of several sorts of Rays |
| above their common Sine of Incidence when the Refractions are made out |
| of divers denser Mediums immediately into one and the same rarer Medium, |
| suppose of Air, are to one another in a given Proportion. |
| |
| 2. The Proportion of the Sine of Incidence to the Sine of Refraction of |
| one and the same sort of Rays out of one Medium into another, is |
| composed of the Proportion of the Sine of Incidence to the Sine of |
| Refraction out of the first Medium into any third Medium, and of the |
| Proportion of the Sine of Incidence to the Sine of Refraction out of |
| that third Medium into the second Medium. |
| |
| By the first Theorem the Refractions of the Rays of every sort made out |
| of any Medium into Air are known by having the Refraction of the Rays of |
| any one sort. As for instance, if the Refractions of the Rays of every |
| sort out of Rain-water into Air be desired, let the common Sine of |
| Incidence out of Glass into Air be subducted from the Sines of |
| Refraction, and the Excesses will be 27, 27-1/8, 27-1/5, 27-1/3, 27-1/2, |
| 27-2/3, 27-7/9, 28. Suppose now that the Sine of Incidence of the least |
| refrangible Rays be to their Sine of Refraction out of Rain-water into |
| Air as 3 to 4, and say as 1 the difference of those Sines is to 3 the |
| Sine of Incidence, so is 27 the least of the Excesses above-mentioned to |
| a fourth Number 81; and 81 will be the common Sine of Incidence out of |
| Rain-water into Air, to which Sine if you add all the above-mentioned |
| Excesses, you will have the desired Sines of the Refractions 108, |
| 108-1/8, 108-1/5, 108-1/3, 108-1/2, 108-2/3, 108-7/9, 109. |
| |
| By the latter Theorem the Refraction out of one Medium into another is |
| gathered as often as you have the Refractions out of them both into any |
| third Medium. As if the Sine of Incidence of any Ray out of Glass into |
| Air be to its Sine of Refraction, as 20 to 31, and the Sine of Incidence |
| of the same Ray out of Air into Water, be to its Sine of Refraction as 4 |
| to 3; the Sine of Incidence of that Ray out of Glass into Water will be |
| to its Sine of Refraction as 20 to 31 and 4 to 3 jointly, that is, as |
| the Factum of 20 and 4 to the Factum of 31 and 3, or as 80 to 93. |
| |
| And these Theorems being admitted into Opticks, there would be scope |
| enough of handling that Science voluminously after a new manner,[K] not |
| only by teaching those things which tend to the perfection of Vision, |
| but also by determining mathematically all kinds of Phænomena of Colours |
| which could be produced by Refractions. For to do this, there is nothing |
| else requisite than to find out the Separations of heterogeneous Rays, |
| and their various Mixtures and Proportions in every Mixture. By this |
| way of arguing I invented almost all the Phænomena described in these |
| Books, beside some others less necessary to the Argument; and by the |
| successes I met with in the Trials, I dare promise, that to him who |
| shall argue truly, and then try all things with good Glasses and |
| sufficient Circumspection, the expected Event will not be wanting. But |
| he is first to know what Colours will arise from any others mix'd in any |
| assigned Proportion. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ IV. THEOR. III. |
| |
| _Colours may be produced by Composition which shall be like to the |
| Colours of homogeneal Light as to the Appearance of Colour, but not as |
| to the Immutability of Colour and Constitution of Light. And those |
| Colours by how much they are more compounded by so much are they less |
| full and intense, and by too much Composition they maybe diluted and |
| weaken'd till they cease, and the Mixture becomes white or grey. There |
| may be also Colours produced by Composition, which are not fully like |
| any of the Colours of homogeneal Light._ |
| |
| For a Mixture of homogeneal red and yellow compounds an Orange, like in |
| appearance of Colour to that orange which in the series of unmixed |
| prismatick Colours lies between them; but the Light of one orange is |
| homogeneal as to Refrangibility, and that of the other is heterogeneal, |
| and the Colour of the one, if viewed through a Prism, remains unchanged, |
| that of the other is changed and resolved into its component Colours red |
| and yellow. And after the same manner other neighbouring homogeneal |
| Colours may compound new Colours, like the intermediate homogeneal ones, |
| as yellow and green, the Colour between them both, and afterwards, if |
| blue be added, there will be made a green the middle Colour of the three |
| which enter the Composition. For the yellow and blue on either hand, if |
| they are equal in quantity they draw the intermediate green equally |
| towards themselves in Composition, and so keep it as it were in |
| Æquilibrion, that it verge not more to the yellow on the one hand, and |
| to the blue on the other, but by their mix'd Actions remain still a |
| middle Colour. To this mix'd green there may be farther added some red |
| and violet, and yet the green will not presently cease, but only grow |
| less full and vivid, and by increasing the red and violet, it will grow |
| more and more dilute, until by the prevalence of the added Colours it be |
| overcome and turned into whiteness, or some other Colour. So if to the |
| Colour of any homogeneal Light, the Sun's white Light composed of all |
| sorts of Rays be added, that Colour will not vanish or change its |
| Species, but be diluted, and by adding more and more white it will be |
| diluted more and more perpetually. Lastly, If red and violet be mingled, |
| there will be generated according to their various Proportions various |
| Purples, such as are not like in appearance to the Colour of any |
| homogeneal Light, and of these Purples mix'd with yellow and blue may be |
| made other new Colours. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ V. THEOR. IV. |
| |
| _Whiteness and all grey Colours between white and black, may be |
| compounded of Colours, and the whiteness of the Sun's Light is |
| compounded of all the primary Colours mix'd in a due Proportion._ |
| |
| The PROOF by Experiments. |
| |
| _Exper._ 9. The Sun shining into a dark Chamber through a little round |
| hole in the Window-shut, and his Light being there refracted by a Prism |
| to cast his coloured Image PT [in _Fig._ 5.] upon the opposite Wall: I |
| held a white Paper V to that image in such manner that it might be |
| illuminated by the colour'd Light reflected from thence, and yet not |
| intercept any part of that Light in its passage from the Prism to the |
| Spectrum. And I found that when the Paper was held nearer to any Colour |
| than to the rest, it appeared of that Colour to which it approached |
| nearest; but when it was equally or almost equally distant from all the |
| Colours, so that it might be equally illuminated by them all it appeared |
| white. And in this last situation of the Paper, if some Colours were |
| intercepted, the Paper lost its white Colour, and appeared of the Colour |
| of the rest of the Light which was not intercepted. So then the Paper |
| was illuminated with Lights of various Colours, namely, red, yellow, |
| green, blue and violet, and every part of the Light retained its proper |
| Colour, until it was incident on the Paper, and became reflected thence |
| to the Eye; so that if it had been either alone (the rest of the Light |
| being intercepted) or if it had abounded most, and been predominant in |
| the Light reflected from the Paper, it would have tinged the Paper with |
| its own Colour; and yet being mixed with the rest of the Colours in a |
| due proportion, it made the Paper look white, and therefore by a |
| Composition with the rest produced that Colour. The several parts of the |
| coloured Light reflected from the Spectrum, whilst they are propagated |
| from thence through the Air, do perpetually retain their proper Colours, |
| because wherever they fall upon the Eyes of any Spectator, they make the |
| several parts of the Spectrum to appear under their proper Colours. They |
| retain therefore their proper Colours when they fall upon the Paper V, |
| and so by the confusion and perfect mixture of those Colours compound |
| the whiteness of the Light reflected from thence. |
| |
| _Exper._ 10. Let that Spectrum or solar Image PT [in _Fig._ 6.] fall now |
| upon the Lens MN above four Inches broad, and about six Feet distant |
| from the Prism ABC and so figured that it may cause the coloured Light |
| which divergeth from the Prism to converge and meet again at its Focus |
| G, about six or eight Feet distant from the Lens, and there to fall |
| perpendicularly upon a white Paper DE. And if you move this Paper to and |
| fro, you will perceive that near the Lens, as at _de_, the whole solar |
| Image (suppose at _pt_) will appear upon it intensely coloured after the |
| manner above-explained, and that by receding from the Lens those Colours |
| will perpetually come towards one another, and by mixing more and more |
| dilute one another continually, until at length the Paper come to the |
| Focus G, where by a perfect mixture they will wholly vanish and be |
| converted into whiteness, the whole Light appearing now upon the Paper |
| like a little white Circle. And afterwards by receding farther from the |
| Lens, the Rays which before converged will now cross one another in the |
| Focus G, and diverge from thence, and thereby make the Colours to appear |
| again, but yet in a contrary order; suppose at [Greek: de], where the |
| red _t_ is now above which before was below, and the violet _p_ is below |
| which before was above. |
| |
| Let us now stop the Paper at the Focus G, where the Light appears |
| totally white and circular, and let us consider its whiteness. I say, |
| that this is composed of the converging Colours. For if any of those |
| Colours be intercepted at the Lens, the whiteness will cease and |
| degenerate into that Colour which ariseth from the composition of the |
| other Colours which are not intercepted. And then if the intercepted |
| Colours be let pass and fall upon that compound Colour, they mix with |
| it, and by their mixture restore the whiteness. So if the violet, blue |
| and green be intercepted, the remaining yellow, orange and red will |
| compound upon the Paper an orange, and then if the intercepted Colours |
| be let pass, they will fall upon this compounded orange, and together |
| with it decompound a white. So also if the red and violet be |
| intercepted, the remaining yellow, green and blue, will compound a green |
| upon the Paper, and then the red and violet being let pass will fall |
| upon this green, and together with it decompound a white. And that in |
| this Composition of white the several Rays do not suffer any Change in |
| their colorific Qualities by acting upon one another, but are only |
| mixed, and by a mixture of their Colours produce white, may farther |
| appear by these Arguments. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 6.] |
| |
| If the Paper be placed beyond the Focus G, suppose at [Greek: de], and |
| then the red Colour at the Lens be alternately intercepted, and let pass |
| again, the violet Colour on the Paper will not suffer any Change |
| thereby, as it ought to do if the several sorts of Rays acted upon one |
| another in the Focus G, where they cross. Neither will the red upon the |
| Paper be changed by any alternate stopping, and letting pass the violet |
| which crosseth it. |
| |
| And if the Paper be placed at the Focus G, and the white round Image at |
| G be viewed through the Prism HIK, and by the Refraction of that Prism |
| be translated to the place _rv_, and there appear tinged with various |
| Colours, namely, the violet at _v_ and red at _r_, and others between, |
| and then the red Colours at the Lens be often stopp'd and let pass by |
| turns, the red at _r_ will accordingly disappear, and return as often, |
| but the violet at _v_ will not thereby suffer any Change. And so by |
| stopping and letting pass alternately the blue at the Lens, the blue at |
| _v_ will accordingly disappear and return, without any Change made in |
| the red at _r_. The red therefore depends on one sort of Rays, and the |
| blue on another sort, which in the Focus G where they are commix'd, do |
| not act on one another. And there is the same Reason of the other |
| Colours. |
| |
| I considered farther, that when the most refrangible Rays P_p_, and the |
| least refrangible ones T_t_, are by converging inclined to one another, |
| the Paper, if held very oblique to those Rays in the Focus G, might |
| reflect one sort of them more copiously than the other sort, and by that |
| Means the reflected Light would be tinged in that Focus with the Colour |
| of the predominant Rays, provided those Rays severally retained their |
| Colours, or colorific Qualities in the Composition of White made by them |
| in that Focus. But if they did not retain them in that White, but became |
| all of them severally endued there with a Disposition to strike the |
| Sense with the Perception of White, then they could never lose their |
| Whiteness by such Reflexions. I inclined therefore the Paper to the Rays |
| very obliquely, as in the second Experiment of this second Part of the |
| first Book, that the most refrangible Rays, might be more copiously |
| reflected than the rest, and the Whiteness at Length changed |
| successively into blue, indigo, and violet. Then I inclined it the |
| contrary Way, that the least refrangible Rays might be more copious in |
| the reflected Light than the rest, and the Whiteness turned successively |
| to yellow, orange, and red. |
| |
| Lastly, I made an Instrument XY in fashion of a Comb, whose Teeth being |
| in number sixteen, were about an Inch and a half broad, and the |
| Intervals of the Teeth about two Inches wide. Then by interposing |
| successively the Teeth of this Instrument near the Lens, I intercepted |
| Part of the Colours by the interposed Tooth, whilst the rest of them |
| went on through the Interval of the Teeth to the Paper DE, and there |
| painted a round Solar Image. But the Paper I had first placed so, that |
| the Image might appear white as often as the Comb was taken away; and |
| then the Comb being as was said interposed, that Whiteness by reason of |
| the intercepted Part of the Colours at the Lens did always change into |
| the Colour compounded of those Colours which were not intercepted, and |
| that Colour was by the Motion of the Comb perpetually varied so, that in |
| the passing of every Tooth over the Lens all these Colours, red, yellow, |
| green, blue, and purple, did always succeed one another. I caused |
| therefore all the Teeth to pass successively over the Lens, and when the |
| Motion was slow, there appeared a perpetual Succession of the Colours |
| upon the Paper: But if I so much accelerated the Motion, that the |
| Colours by reason of their quick Succession could not be distinguished |
| from one another, the Appearance of the single Colours ceased. There was |
| no red, no yellow, no green, no blue, nor purple to be seen any longer, |
| but from a Confusion of them all there arose one uniform white Colour. |
| Of the Light which now by the Mixture of all the Colours appeared white, |
| there was no Part really white. One Part was red, another yellow, a |
| third green, a fourth blue, a fifth purple, and every Part retains its |
| proper Colour till it strike the Sensorium. If the Impressions follow |
| one another slowly, so that they may be severally perceived, there is |
| made a distinct Sensation of all the Colours one after another in a |
| continual Succession. But if the Impressions follow one another so |
| quickly, that they cannot be severally perceived, there ariseth out of |
| them all one common Sensation, which is neither of this Colour alone nor |
| of that alone, but hath it self indifferently to 'em all, and this is a |
| Sensation of Whiteness. By the Quickness of the Successions, the |
| Impressions of the several Colours are confounded in the Sensorium, and |
| out of that Confusion ariseth a mix'd Sensation. If a burning Coal be |
| nimbly moved round in a Circle with Gyrations continually repeated, the |
| whole Circle will appear like Fire; the reason of which is, that the |
| Sensation of the Coal in the several Places of that Circle remains |
| impress'd on the Sensorium, until the Coal return again to the same |
| Place. And so in a quick Consecution of the Colours the Impression of |
| every Colour remains in the Sensorium, until a Revolution of all the |
| Colours be compleated, and that first Colour return again. The |
| Impressions therefore of all the successive Colours are at once in the |
| Sensorium, and jointly stir up a Sensation of them all; and so it is |
| manifest by this Experiment, that the commix'd Impressions of all the |
| Colours do stir up and beget a Sensation of white, that is, that |
| Whiteness is compounded of all the Colours. |
| |
| And if the Comb be now taken away, that all the Colours may at once pass |
| from the Lens to the Paper, and be there intermixed, and together |
| reflected thence to the Spectator's Eyes; their Impressions on the |
| Sensorium being now more subtilly and perfectly commixed there, ought |
| much more to stir up a Sensation of Whiteness. |
| |
| You may instead of the Lens use two Prisms HIK and LMN, which by |
| refracting the coloured Light the contrary Way to that of the first |
| Refraction, may make the diverging Rays converge and meet again in G, as |
| you see represented in the seventh Figure. For where they meet and mix, |
| they will compose a white Light, as when a Lens is used. |
| |
| _Exper._ 11. Let the Sun's coloured Image PT [in _Fig._ 8.] fall upon |
| the Wall of a dark Chamber, as in the third Experiment of the first |
| Book, and let the same be viewed through a Prism _abc_, held parallel to |
| the Prism ABC, by whose Refraction that Image was made, and let it now |
| appear lower than before, suppose in the Place S over-against the red |
| Colour T. And if you go near to the Image PT, the Spectrum S will appear |
| oblong and coloured like the Image PT; but if you recede from it, the |
| Colours of the spectrum S will be contracted more and more, and at |
| length vanish, that Spectrum S becoming perfectly round and white; and |
| if you recede yet farther, the Colours will emerge again, but in a |
| contrary Order. Now that Spectrum S appears white in that Case, when the |
| Rays of several sorts which converge from the several Parts of the Image |
| PT, to the Prism _abc_, are so refracted unequally by it, that in their |
| Passage from the Prism to the Eye they may diverge from one and the same |
| Point of the Spectrum S, and so fall afterwards upon one and the same |
| Point in the bottom of the Eye, and there be mingled. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 7.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 8.] |
| |
| And farther, if the Comb be here made use of, by whose Teeth the Colours |
| at the Image PT may be successively intercepted; the Spectrum S, when |
| the Comb is moved slowly, will be perpetually tinged with successive |
| Colours: But when by accelerating the Motion of the Comb, the Succession |
| of the Colours is so quick that they cannot be severally seen, that |
| Spectrum S, by a confused and mix'd Sensation of them all, will appear |
| white. |
| |
| _Exper._ 12. The Sun shining through a large Prism ABC [in _Fig._ 9.] |
| upon a Comb XY, placed immediately behind the Prism, his Light which |
| passed through the Interstices of the Teeth fell upon a white Paper DE. |
| The Breadths of the Teeth were equal to their Interstices, and seven |
| Teeth together with their Interstices took up an Inch in Breadth. Now, |
| when the Paper was about two or three Inches distant from the Comb, the |
| Light which passed through its several Interstices painted so many |
| Ranges of Colours, _kl_, _mn_, _op_, _qr_, &c. which were parallel to |
| one another, and contiguous, and without any Mixture of white. And these |
| Ranges of Colours, if the Comb was moved continually up and down with a |
| reciprocal Motion, ascended and descended in the Paper, and when the |
| Motion of the Comb was so quick, that the Colours could not be |
| distinguished from one another, the whole Paper by their Confusion and |
| Mixture in the Sensorium appeared white. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 9.] |
| |
| Let the Comb now rest, and let the Paper be removed farther from the |
| Prism, and the several Ranges of Colours will be dilated and expanded |
| into one another more and more, and by mixing their Colours will dilute |
| one another, and at length, when the distance of the Paper from the Comb |
| is about a Foot, or a little more (suppose in the Place 2D 2E) they will |
| so far dilute one another, as to become white. |
| |
| With any Obstacle, let all the Light be now stopp'd which passes through |
| any one Interval of the Teeth, so that the Range of Colours which comes |
| from thence may be taken away, and you will see the Light of the rest of |
| the Ranges to be expanded into the Place of the Range taken away, and |
| there to be coloured. Let the intercepted Range pass on as before, and |
| its Colours falling upon the Colours of the other Ranges, and mixing |
| with them, will restore the Whiteness. |
| |
| Let the Paper 2D 2E be now very much inclined to the Rays, so that the |
| most refrangible Rays may be more copiously reflected than the rest, and |
| the white Colour of the Paper through the Excess of those Rays will be |
| changed into blue and violet. Let the Paper be as much inclined the |
| contrary way, that the least refrangible Rays may be now more copiously |
| reflected than the rest, and by their Excess the Whiteness will be |
| changed into yellow and red. The several Rays therefore in that white |
| Light do retain their colorific Qualities, by which those of any sort, |
| whenever they become more copious than the rest, do by their Excess and |
| Predominance cause their proper Colour to appear. |
| |
| And by the same way of arguing, applied to the third Experiment of this |
| second Part of the first Book, it may be concluded, that the white |
| Colour of all refracted Light at its very first Emergence, where it |
| appears as white as before its Incidence, is compounded of various |
| Colours. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 10.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 13. In the foregoing Experiment the several Intervals of the |
| Teeth of the Comb do the Office of so many Prisms, every Interval |
| producing the Phænomenon of one Prism. Whence instead of those Intervals |
| using several Prisms, I try'd to compound Whiteness by mixing their |
| Colours, and did it by using only three Prisms, as also by using only |
| two as follows. Let two Prisms ABC and _abc_, [in _Fig._ 10.] whose |
| refracting Angles B and _b_ are equal, be so placed parallel to one |
| another, that the refracting Angle B of the one may touch the Angle _c_ |
| at the Base of the other, and their Planes CB and _cb_, at which the |
| Rays emerge, may lie in Directum. Then let the Light trajected through |
| them fall upon the Paper MN, distant about 8 or 12 Inches from the |
| Prisms. And the Colours generated by the interior Limits B and _c_ of |
| the two Prisms, will be mingled at PT, and there compound white. For if |
| either Prism be taken away, the Colours made by the other will appear in |
| that Place PT, and when the Prism is restored to its Place again, so |
| that its Colours may there fall upon the Colours of the other, the |
| Mixture of them both will restore the Whiteness. |
| |
| This Experiment succeeds also, as I have tried, when the Angle _b_ of |
| the lower Prism, is a little greater than the Angle B of the upper, and |
| between the interior Angles B and _c_, there intercedes some Space B_c_, |
| as is represented in the Figure, and the refracting Planes BC and _bc_, |
| are neither in Directum, nor parallel to one another. For there is |
| nothing more requisite to the Success of this Experiment, than that the |
| Rays of all sorts may be uniformly mixed upon the Paper in the Place PT. |
| If the most refrangible Rays coming from the superior Prism take up all |
| the Space from M to P, the Rays of the same sort which come from the |
| inferior Prism ought to begin at P, and take up all the rest of the |
| Space from thence towards N. If the least refrangible Rays coming from |
| the superior Prism take up the Space MT, the Rays of the same kind which |
| come from the other Prism ought to begin at T, and take up the |
| remaining Space TN. If one sort of the Rays which have intermediate |
| Degrees of Refrangibility, and come from the superior Prism be extended |
| through the Space MQ, and another sort of those Rays through the Space |
| MR, and a third sort of them through the Space MS, the same sorts of |
| Rays coming from the lower Prism, ought to illuminate the remaining |
| Spaces QN, RN, SN, respectively. And the same is to be understood of all |
| the other sorts of Rays. For thus the Rays of every sort will be |
| scattered uniformly and evenly through the whole Space MN, and so being |
| every where mix'd in the same Proportion, they must every where produce |
| the same Colour. And therefore, since by this Mixture they produce white |
| in the Exterior Spaces MP and TN, they must also produce white in the |
| Interior Space PT. This is the reason of the Composition by which |
| Whiteness was produced in this Experiment, and by what other way soever |
| I made the like Composition, the Result was Whiteness. |
| |
| Lastly, If with the Teeth of a Comb of a due Size, the coloured Lights |
| of the two Prisms which fall upon the Space PT be alternately |
| intercepted, that Space PT, when the Motion of the Comb is slow, will |
| always appear coloured, but by accelerating the Motion of the Comb so |
| much that the successive Colours cannot be distinguished from one |
| another, it will appear white. |
| |
| _Exper._ 14. Hitherto I have produced Whiteness by mixing the Colours of |
| Prisms. If now the Colours of natural Bodies are to be mingled, let |
| Water a little thicken'd with Soap be agitated to raise a Froth, and |
| after that Froth has stood a little, there will appear to one that shall |
| view it intently various Colours every where in the Surfaces of the |
| several Bubbles; but to one that shall go so far off, that he cannot |
| distinguish the Colours from one another, the whole Froth will grow |
| white with a perfect Whiteness. |
| |
| _Exper._ 15. Lastly, In attempting to compound a white, by mixing the |
| coloured Powders which Painters use, I consider'd that all colour'd |
| Powders do suppress and stop in them a very considerable Part of the |
| Light by which they are illuminated. For they become colour'd by |
| reflecting the Light of their own Colours more copiously, and that of |
| all other Colours more sparingly, and yet they do not reflect the Light |
| of their own Colours so copiously as white Bodies do. If red Lead, for |
| instance, and a white Paper, be placed in the red Light of the colour'd |
| Spectrum made in a dark Chamber by the Refraction of a Prism, as is |
| described in the third Experiment of the first Part of this Book; the |
| Paper will appear more lucid than the red Lead, and therefore reflects |
| the red-making Rays more copiously than red Lead doth. And if they be |
| held in the Light of any other Colour, the Light reflected by the Paper |
| will exceed the Light reflected by the red Lead in a much greater |
| Proportion. And the like happens in Powders of other Colours. And |
| therefore by mixing such Powders, we are not to expect a strong and |
| full White, such as is that of Paper, but some dusky obscure one, such |
| as might arise from a Mixture of Light and Darkness, or from white and |
| black, that is, a grey, or dun, or russet brown, such as are the Colours |
| of a Man's Nail, of a Mouse, of Ashes, of ordinary Stones, of Mortar, of |
| Dust and Dirt in High-ways, and the like. And such a dark white I have |
| often produced by mixing colour'd Powders. For thus one Part of red |
| Lead, and five Parts of _Viride Æris_, composed a dun Colour like that |
| of a Mouse. For these two Colours were severally so compounded of |
| others, that in both together were a Mixture of all Colours; and there |
| was less red Lead used than _Viride Æris_, because of the Fulness of its |
| Colour. Again, one Part of red Lead, and four Parts of blue Bise, |
| composed a dun Colour verging a little to purple, and by adding to this |
| a certain Mixture of Orpiment and _Viride Æris_ in a due Proportion, the |
| Mixture lost its purple Tincture, and became perfectly dun. But the |
| Experiment succeeded best without Minium thus. To Orpiment I added by |
| little and little a certain full bright purple, which Painters use, |
| until the Orpiment ceased to be yellow, and became of a pale red. Then I |
| diluted that red by adding a little _Viride Æris_, and a little more |
| blue Bise than _Viride Æris_, until it became of such a grey or pale |
| white, as verged to no one of the Colours more than to another. For thus |
| it became of a Colour equal in Whiteness to that of Ashes, or of Wood |
| newly cut, or of a Man's Skin. The Orpiment reflected more Light than |
| did any other of the Powders, and therefore conduced more to the |
| Whiteness of the compounded Colour than they. To assign the Proportions |
| accurately may be difficult, by reason of the different Goodness of |
| Powders of the same kind. Accordingly, as the Colour of any Powder is |
| more or less full and luminous, it ought to be used in a less or greater |
| Proportion. |
| |
| Now, considering that these grey and dun Colours may be also produced by |
| mixing Whites and Blacks, and by consequence differ from perfect Whites, |
| not in Species of Colours, but only in degree of Luminousness, it is |
| manifest that there is nothing more requisite to make them perfectly |
| white than to increase their Light sufficiently; and, on the contrary, |
| if by increasing their Light they can be brought to perfect Whiteness, |
| it will thence also follow, that they are of the same Species of Colour |
| with the best Whites, and differ from them only in the Quantity of |
| Light. And this I tried as follows. I took the third of the |
| above-mention'd grey Mixtures, (that which was compounded of Orpiment, |
| Purple, Bise, and _Viride Æris_) and rubbed it thickly upon the Floor of |
| my Chamber, where the Sun shone upon it through the opened Casement; and |
| by it, in the shadow, I laid a Piece of white Paper of the same Bigness. |
| Then going from them to the distance of 12 or 18 Feet, so that I could |
| not discern the Unevenness of the Surface of the Powder, nor the little |
| Shadows let fall from the gritty Particles thereof; the Powder appeared |
| intensely white, so as to transcend even the Paper it self in Whiteness, |
| especially if the Paper were a little shaded from the Light of the |
| Clouds, and then the Paper compared with the Powder appeared of such a |
| grey Colour as the Powder had done before. But by laying the Paper where |
| the Sun shines through the Glass of the Window, or by shutting the |
| Window that the Sun might shine through the Glass upon the Powder, and |
| by such other fit Means of increasing or decreasing the Lights wherewith |
| the Powder and Paper were illuminated, the Light wherewith the Powder is |
| illuminated may be made stronger in such a due Proportion than the Light |
| wherewith the Paper is illuminated, that they shall both appear exactly |
| alike in Whiteness. For when I was trying this, a Friend coming to visit |
| me, I stopp'd him at the Door, and before I told him what the Colours |
| were, or what I was doing; I asked him, Which of the two Whites were the |
| best, and wherein they differed? And after he had at that distance |
| viewed them well, he answer'd, that they were both good Whites, and that |
| he could not say which was best, nor wherein their Colours differed. |
| Now, if you consider, that this White of the Powder in the Sun-shine was |
| compounded of the Colours which the component Powders (Orpiment, Purple, |
| Bise, and _Viride Æris_) have in the same Sun-shine, you must |
| acknowledge by this Experiment, as well as by the former, that perfect |
| Whiteness may be compounded of Colours. |
| |
| From what has been said it is also evident, that the Whiteness of the |
| Sun's Light is compounded of all the Colours wherewith the several sorts |
| of Rays whereof that Light consists, when by their several |
| Refrangibilities they are separated from one another, do tinge Paper or |
| any other white Body whereon they fall. For those Colours (by _Prop._ |
| II. _Part_ 2.) are unchangeable, and whenever all those Rays with those |
| their Colours are mix'd again, they reproduce the same white Light as |
| before. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VI. PROB. II. |
| |
| _In a mixture of Primary Colours, the Quantity and Quality of each being |
| given, to know the Colour of the Compound._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 11.] |
| |
| With the Center O [in _Fig._ 11.] and Radius OD describe a Circle ADF, |
| and distinguish its Circumference into seven Parts DE, EF, FG, GA, AB, |
| BC, CD, proportional to the seven Musical Tones or Intervals of the |
| eight Sounds, _Sol_, _la_, _fa_, _sol_, _la_, _mi_, _fa_, _sol_, |
| contained in an eight, that is, proportional to the Number 1/9, 1/16, |
| 1/10, 1/9, 1/16, 1/16, 1/9. Let the first Part DE represent a red |
| Colour, the second EF orange, the third FG yellow, the fourth CA green, |
| the fifth AB blue, the sixth BC indigo, and the seventh CD violet. And |
| conceive that these are all the Colours of uncompounded Light gradually |
| passing into one another, as they do when made by Prisms; the |
| Circumference DEFGABCD, representing the whole Series of Colours from |
| one end of the Sun's colour'd Image to the other, so that from D to E be |
| all degrees of red, at E the mean Colour between red and orange, from E |
| to F all degrees of orange, at F the mean between orange and yellow, |
| from F to G all degrees of yellow, and so on. Let _p_ be the Center of |
| Gravity of the Arch DE, and _q_, _r_, _s_, _t_, _u_, _x_, the Centers of |
| Gravity of the Arches EF, FG, GA, AB, BC, and CD respectively, and about |
| those Centers of Gravity let Circles proportional to the Number of Rays |
| of each Colour in the given Mixture be describ'd: that is, the Circle |
| _p_ proportional to the Number of the red-making Rays in the Mixture, |
| the Circle _q_ proportional to the Number of the orange-making Rays in |
| the Mixture, and so of the rest. Find the common Center of Gravity of |
| all those Circles, _p_, _q_, _r_, _s_, _t_, _u_, _x_. Let that Center be |
| Z; and from the Center of the Circle ADF, through Z to the |
| Circumference, drawing the Right Line OY, the Place of the Point Y in |
| the Circumference shall shew the Colour arising from the Composition of |
| all the Colours in the given Mixture, and the Line OZ shall be |
| proportional to the Fulness or Intenseness of the Colour, that is, to |
| its distance from Whiteness. As if Y fall in the middle between F and G, |
| the compounded Colour shall be the best yellow; if Y verge from the |
| middle towards F or G, the compound Colour shall accordingly be a |
| yellow, verging towards orange or green. If Z fall upon the |
| Circumference, the Colour shall be intense and florid in the highest |
| Degree; if it fall in the mid-way between the Circumference and Center, |
| it shall be but half so intense, that is, it shall be such a Colour as |
| would be made by diluting the intensest yellow with an equal quantity of |
| whiteness; and if it fall upon the center O, the Colour shall have lost |
| all its intenseness, and become a white. But it is to be noted, That if |
| the point Z fall in or near the line OD, the main ingredients being the |
| red and violet, the Colour compounded shall not be any of the prismatick |
| Colours, but a purple, inclining to red or violet, accordingly as the |
| point Z lieth on the side of the line DO towards E or towards C, and in |
| general the compounded violet is more bright and more fiery than the |
| uncompounded. Also if only two of the primary Colours which in the |
| circle are opposite to one another be mixed in an equal proportion, the |
| point Z shall fall upon the center O, and yet the Colour compounded of |
| those two shall not be perfectly white, but some faint anonymous Colour. |
| For I could never yet by mixing only two primary Colours produce a |
| perfect white. Whether it may be compounded of a mixture of three taken |
| at equal distances in the circumference I do not know, but of four or |
| five I do not much question but it may. But these are Curiosities of |
| little or no moment to the understanding the Phænomena of Nature. For in |
| all whites produced by Nature, there uses to be a mixture of all sorts |
| of Rays, and by consequence a composition of all Colours. |
| |
| To give an instance of this Rule; suppose a Colour is compounded of |
| these homogeneal Colours, of violet one part, of indigo one part, of |
| blue two parts, of green three parts, of yellow five parts, of orange |
| six parts, and of red ten parts. Proportional to these parts describe |
| the Circles _x_, _v_, _t_, _s_, _r_, _q_, _p_, respectively, that is, so |
| that if the Circle _x_ be one, the Circle _v_ may be one, the Circle _t_ |
| two, the Circle _s_ three, and the Circles _r_, _q_ and _p_, five, six |
| and ten. Then I find Z the common center of gravity of these Circles, |
| and through Z drawing the Line OY, the Point Y falls upon the |
| circumference between E and F, something nearer to E than to F, and |
| thence I conclude, that the Colour compounded of these Ingredients will |
| be an orange, verging a little more to red than to yellow. Also I find |
| that OZ is a little less than one half of OY, and thence I conclude, |
| that this orange hath a little less than half the fulness or intenseness |
| of an uncompounded orange; that is to say, that it is such an orange as |
| may be made by mixing an homogeneal orange with a good white in the |
| proportion of the Line OZ to the Line ZY, this Proportion being not of |
| the quantities of mixed orange and white Powders, but of the quantities |
| of the Lights reflected from them. |
| |
| This Rule I conceive accurate enough for practice, though not |
| mathematically accurate; and the truth of it may be sufficiently proved |
| to Sense, by stopping any of the Colours at the Lens in the tenth |
| Experiment of this Book. For the rest of the Colours which are not |
| stopp'd, but pass on to the Focus of the Lens, will there compound |
| either accurately or very nearly such a Colour, as by this Rule ought to |
| result from their Mixture. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VII. THEOR. V. |
| |
| _All the Colours in the Universe which are made by Light, and depend not |
| on the Power of Imagination, are either the Colours of homogeneal |
| Lights, or compounded of these, and that either accurately or very |
| nearly, according to the Rule of the foregoing Problem._ |
| |
| For it has been proved (in _Prop. 1. Part 2._) that the changes of |
| Colours made by Refractions do not arise from any new Modifications of |
| the Rays impress'd by those Refractions, and by the various Terminations |
| of Light and Shadow, as has been the constant and general Opinion of |
| Philosophers. It has also been proved that the several Colours of the |
| homogeneal Rays do constantly answer to their degrees of Refrangibility, |
| (_Prop._ 1. _Part_ 1. and _Prop._ 2. _Part_ 2.) and that their degrees |
| of Refrangibility cannot be changed by Refractions and Reflexions |
| (_Prop._ 2. _Part_ 1.) and by consequence that those their Colours are |
| likewise immutable. It has also been proved directly by refracting and |
| reflecting homogeneal Lights apart, that their Colours cannot be |
| changed, (_Prop._ 2. _Part_ 2.) It has been proved also, that when the |
| several sorts of Rays are mixed, and in crossing pass through the same |
| space, they do not act on one another so as to change each others |
| colorific qualities. (_Exper._ 10. _Part_ 2.) but by mixing their |
| Actions in the Sensorium beget a Sensation differing from what either |
| would do apart, that is a Sensation of a mean Colour between their |
| proper Colours; and particularly when by the concourse and mixtures of |
| all sorts of Rays, a white Colour is produced, the white is a mixture of |
| all the Colours which the Rays would have apart, (_Prop._ 5. _Part_ 2.) |
| The Rays in that mixture do not lose or alter their several colorific |
| qualities, but by all their various kinds of Actions mix'd in the |
| Sensorium, beget a Sensation of a middling Colour between all their |
| Colours, which is whiteness. For whiteness is a mean between all |
| Colours, having it self indifferently to them all, so as with equal |
| facility to be tinged with any of them. A red Powder mixed with a little |
| blue, or a blue with a little red, doth not presently lose its Colour, |
| but a white Powder mix'd with any Colour is presently tinged with that |
| Colour, and is equally capable of being tinged with any Colour whatever. |
| It has been shewed also, that as the Sun's Light is mix'd of all sorts |
| of Rays, so its whiteness is a mixture of the Colours of all sorts of |
| Rays; those Rays having from the beginning their several colorific |
| qualities as well as their several Refrangibilities, and retaining them |
| perpetually unchanged notwithstanding any Refractions or Reflexions they |
| may at any time suffer, and that whenever any sort of the Sun's Rays is |
| by any means (as by Reflexion in _Exper._ 9, and 10. _Part_ 1. or by |
| Refraction as happens in all Refractions) separated from the rest, they |
| then manifest their proper Colours. These things have been prov'd, and |
| the sum of all this amounts to the Proposition here to be proved. For if |
| the Sun's Light is mix'd of several sorts of Rays, each of which have |
| originally their several Refrangibilities and colorific Qualities, and |
| notwithstanding their Refractions and Reflexions, and their various |
| Separations or Mixtures, keep those their original Properties |
| perpetually the same without alteration; then all the Colours in the |
| World must be such as constantly ought to arise from the original |
| colorific qualities of the Rays whereof the Lights consist by which |
| those Colours are seen. And therefore if the reason of any Colour |
| whatever be required, we have nothing else to do than to consider how |
| the Rays in the Sun's Light have by Reflexions or Refractions, or other |
| causes, been parted from one another, or mixed together; or otherwise to |
| find out what sorts of Rays are in the Light by which that Colour is |
| made, and in what Proportion; and then by the last Problem to learn the |
| Colour which ought to arise by mixing those Rays (or their Colours) in |
| that proportion. I speak here of Colours so far as they arise from |
| Light. For they appear sometimes by other Causes, as when by the power |
| of Phantasy we see Colours in a Dream, or a Mad-man sees things before |
| him which are not there; or when we see Fire by striking the Eye, or see |
| Colours like the Eye of a Peacock's Feather, by pressing our Eyes in |
| either corner whilst we look the other way. Where these and such like |
| Causes interpose not, the Colour always answers to the sort or sorts of |
| the Rays whereof the Light consists, as I have constantly found in |
| whatever Phænomena of Colours I have hitherto been able to examine. I |
| shall in the following Propositions give instances of this in the |
| Phænomena of chiefest note. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ VIII. PROB. III. |
| |
| _By the discovered Properties of Light to explain the Colours made by |
| Prisms._ |
| |
| Let ABC [in _Fig._ 12.] represent a Prism refracting the Light of the |
| Sun, which comes into a dark Chamber through a hole F[Greek: ph] almost |
| as broad as the Prism, and let MN represent a white Paper on which the |
| refracted Light is cast, and suppose the most refrangible or deepest |
| violet-making Rays fall upon the Space P[Greek: p], the least |
| refrangible or deepest red-making Rays upon the Space T[Greek: t], the |
| middle sort between the indigo-making and blue-making Rays upon the |
| Space Q[Greek: ch], the middle sort of the green-making Rays upon the |
| Space R, the middle sort between the yellow-making and orange-making |
| Rays upon the Space S[Greek: s], and other intermediate sorts upon |
| intermediate Spaces. For so the Spaces upon which the several sorts |
| adequately fall will by reason of the different Refrangibility of those |
| sorts be one lower than another. Now if the Paper MN be so near the |
| Prism that the Spaces PT and [Greek: pt] do not interfere with one |
| another, the distance between them T[Greek: p] will be illuminated by |
| all the sorts of Rays in that proportion to one another which they have |
| at their very first coming out of the Prism, and consequently be white. |
| But the Spaces PT and [Greek: pt] on either hand, will not be |
| illuminated by them all, and therefore will appear coloured. And |
| particularly at P, where the outmost violet-making Rays fall alone, the |
| Colour must be the deepest violet. At Q where the violet-making and |
| indigo-making Rays are mixed, it must be a violet inclining much to |
| indigo. At R where the violet-making, indigo-making, blue-making, and |
| one half of the green-making Rays are mixed, their Colours must (by the |
| construction of the second Problem) compound a middle Colour between |
| indigo and blue. At S where all the Rays are mixed, except the |
| red-making and orange-making, their Colours ought by the same Rule to |
| compound a faint blue, verging more to green than indigo. And in the |
| progress from S to T, this blue will grow more and more faint and |
| dilute, till at T, where all the Colours begin to be mixed, it ends in |
| whiteness. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 12.] |
| |
| So again, on the other side of the white at [Greek: t], where the least |
| refrangible or utmost red-making Rays are alone, the Colour must be the |
| deepest red. At [Greek: s] the mixture of red and orange will compound a |
| red inclining to orange. At [Greek: r] the mixture of red, orange, |
| yellow, and one half of the green must compound a middle Colour between |
| orange and yellow. At [Greek: ch] the mixture of all Colours but violet |
| and indigo will compound a faint yellow, verging more to green than to |
| orange. And this yellow will grow more faint and dilute continually in |
| its progress from [Greek: ch] to [Greek: p], where by a mixture of all |
| sorts of Rays it will become white. |
| |
| These Colours ought to appear were the Sun's Light perfectly white: But |
| because it inclines to yellow, the Excess of the yellow-making Rays |
| whereby 'tis tinged with that Colour, being mixed with the faint blue |
| between S and T, will draw it to a faint green. And so the Colours in |
| order from P to [Greek: t] ought to be violet, indigo, blue, very faint |
| green, white, faint yellow, orange, red. Thus it is by the computation: |
| And they that please to view the Colours made by a Prism will find it so |
| in Nature. |
| |
| These are the Colours on both sides the white when the Paper is held |
| between the Prism and the Point X where the Colours meet, and the |
| interjacent white vanishes. For if the Paper be held still farther off |
| from the Prism, the most refrangible and least refrangible Rays will be |
| wanting in the middle of the Light, and the rest of the Rays which are |
| found there, will by mixture produce a fuller green than before. Also |
| the yellow and blue will now become less compounded, and by consequence |
| more intense than before. And this also agrees with experience. |
| |
| And if one look through a Prism upon a white Object encompassed with |
| blackness or darkness, the reason of the Colours arising on the edges is |
| much the same, as will appear to one that shall a little consider it. If |
| a black Object be encompassed with a white one, the Colours which appear |
| through the Prism are to be derived from the Light of the white one, |
| spreading into the Regions of the black, and therefore they appear in a |
| contrary order to that, when a white Object is surrounded with black. |
| And the same is to be understood when an Object is viewed, whose parts |
| are some of them less luminous than others. For in the borders of the |
| more and less luminous Parts, Colours ought always by the same |
| Principles to arise from the Excess of the Light of the more luminous, |
| and to be of the same kind as if the darker parts were black, but yet to |
| be more faint and dilute. |
| |
| What is said of Colours made by Prisms may be easily applied to Colours |
| made by the Glasses of Telescopes or Microscopes, or by the Humours of |
| the Eye. For if the Object-glass of a Telescope be thicker on one side |
| than on the other, or if one half of the Glass, or one half of the Pupil |
| of the Eye be cover'd with any opake substance; the Object-glass, or |
| that part of it or of the Eye which is not cover'd, may be consider'd as |
| a Wedge with crooked Sides, and every Wedge of Glass or other pellucid |
| Substance has the effect of a Prism in refracting the Light which passes |
| through it.[L] |
| |
| How the Colours in the ninth and tenth Experiments of the first Part |
| arise from the different Reflexibility of Light, is evident by what was |
| there said. But it is observable in the ninth Experiment, that whilst |
| the Sun's direct Light is yellow, the Excess of the blue-making Rays in |
| the reflected beam of Light MN, suffices only to bring that yellow to a |
| pale white inclining to blue, and not to tinge it with a manifestly blue |
| Colour. To obtain therefore a better blue, I used instead of the yellow |
| Light of the Sun the white Light of the Clouds, by varying a little the |
| Experiment, as follows. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 13.] |
| |
| _Exper._ 16 Let HFG [in _Fig._ 13.] represent a Prism in the open Air, |
| and S the Eye of the Spectator, viewing the Clouds by their Light coming |
| into the Prism at the Plane Side FIGK, and reflected in it by its Base |
| HEIG, and thence going out through its Plane Side HEFK to the Eye. And |
| when the Prism and Eye are conveniently placed, so that the Angles of |
| Incidence and Reflexion at the Base may be about 40 Degrees, the |
| Spectator will see a Bow MN of a blue Colour, running from one End of |
| the Base to the other, with the Concave Side towards him, and the Part |
| of the Base IMNG beyond this Bow will be brighter than the other Part |
| EMNH on the other Side of it. This blue Colour MN being made by nothing |
| else than by Reflexion of a specular Superficies, seems so odd a |
| Phænomenon, and so difficult to be explained by the vulgar Hypothesis of |
| Philosophers, that I could not but think it deserved to be taken Notice |
| of. Now for understanding the Reason of it, suppose the Plane ABC to cut |
| the Plane Sides and Base of the Prism perpendicularly. From the Eye to |
| the Line BC, wherein that Plane cuts the Base, draw the Lines S_p_ and |
| S_t_, in the Angles S_pc_ 50 degr. 1/9, and S_tc_ 49 degr. 1/28, and the |
| Point _p_ will be the Limit beyond which none of the most refrangible |
| Rays can pass through the Base of the Prism, and be refracted, whose |
| Incidence is such that they may be reflected to the Eye; and the Point |
| _t_ will be the like Limit for the least refrangible Rays, that is, |
| beyond which none of them can pass through the Base, whose Incidence is |
| such that by Reflexion they may come to the Eye. And the Point _r_ taken |
| in the middle Way between _p_ and _t_, will be the like Limit for the |
| meanly refrangible Rays. And therefore all the least refrangible Rays |
| which fall upon the Base beyond _t_, that is, between _t_ and B, and can |
| come from thence to the Eye, will be reflected thither: But on this side |
| _t_, that is, between _t_ and _c_, many of these Rays will be |
| transmitted through the Base. And all the most refrangible Rays which |
| fall upon the Base beyond _p_, that is, between, _p_ and B, and can by |
| Reflexion come from thence to the Eye, will be reflected thither, but |
| every where between _p_ and _c_, many of these Rays will get through the |
| Base, and be refracted; and the same is to be understood of the meanly |
| refrangible Rays on either side of the Point _r_. Whence it follows, |
| that the Base of the Prism must every where between _t_ and B, by a |
| total Reflexion of all sorts of Rays to the Eye, look white and bright. |
| And every where between _p_ and C, by reason of the Transmission of many |
| Rays of every sort, look more pale, obscure, and dark. But at _r_, and |
| in other Places between _p_ and _t_, where all the more refrangible Rays |
| are reflected to the Eye, and many of the less refrangible are |
| transmitted, the Excess of the most refrangible in the reflected Light |
| will tinge that Light with their Colour, which is violet and blue. And |
| this happens by taking the Line C _prt_ B any where between the Ends of |
| the Prism HG and EI. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ IX. PROB. IV. |
| |
| _By the discovered Properties of Light to explain the Colours of the |
| Rain-bow._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 14.] |
| |
| This Bow never appears, but where it rains in the Sun-shine, and may be |
| made artificially by spouting up Water which may break aloft, and |
| scatter into Drops, and fall down like Rain. For the Sun shining upon |
| these Drops certainly causes the Bow to appear to a Spectator standing |
| in a due Position to the Rain and Sun. And hence it is now agreed upon, |
| that this Bow is made by Refraction of the Sun's Light in drops of |
| falling Rain. This was understood by some of the Antients, and of late |
| more fully discover'd and explain'd by the famous _Antonius de Dominis_ |
| Archbishop of _Spalato_, in his book _De Radiis Visûs & Lucis_, |
| published by his Friend _Bartolus_ at _Venice_, in the Year 1611, and |
| written above 20 Years before. For he teaches there how the interior Bow |
| is made in round Drops of Rain by two Refractions of the Sun's Light, |
| and one Reflexion between them, and the exterior by two Refractions, and |
| two sorts of Reflexions between them in each Drop of Water, and proves |
| his Explications by Experiments made with a Phial full of Water, and |
| with Globes of Glass filled with Water, and placed in the Sun to make |
| the Colours of the two Bows appear in them. The same Explication |
| _Des-Cartes_ hath pursued in his Meteors, and mended that of the |
| exterior Bow. But whilst they understood not the true Origin of Colours, |
| it's necessary to pursue it here a little farther. For understanding |
| therefore how the Bow is made, let a Drop of Rain, or any other |
| spherical transparent Body be represented by the Sphere BNFG, [in _Fig._ |
| 14.] described with the Center C, and Semi-diameter CN. And let AN be |
| one of the Sun's Rays incident upon it at N, and thence refracted to F, |
| where let it either go out of the Sphere by Refraction towards V, or be |
| reflected to G; and at G let it either go out by Refraction to R, or be |
| reflected to H; and at H let it go out by Refraction towards S, cutting |
| the incident Ray in Y. Produce AN and RG, till they meet in X, and upon |
| AX and NF, let fall the Perpendiculars CD and CE, and produce CD till it |
| fall upon the Circumference at L. Parallel to the incident Ray AN draw |
| the Diameter BQ, and let the Sine of Incidence out of Air into Water be |
| to the Sine of Refraction as I to R. Now, if you suppose the Point of |
| Incidence N to move from the Point B, continually till it come to L, the |
| Arch QF will first increase and then decrease, and so will the Angle AXR |
| which the Rays AN and GR contain; and the Arch QF and Angle AXR will be |
| biggest when ND is to CN as sqrt(II - RR) to sqrt(3)RR, in which |
| case NE will be to ND as 2R to I. Also the Angle AYS, which the Rays AN |
| and HS contain will first decrease, and then increase and grow least |
| when ND is to CN as sqrt(II - RR) to sqrt(8)RR, in which case NE |
| will be to ND, as 3R to I. And so the Angle which the next emergent Ray |
| (that is, the emergent Ray after three Reflexions) contains with the |
| incident Ray AN will come to its Limit when ND is to CN as sqrt(II - |
| RR) to sqrt(15)RR, in which case NE will be to ND as 4R to I. And the |
| Angle which the Ray next after that Emergent, that is, the Ray emergent |
| after four Reflexions, contains with the Incident, will come to its |
| Limit, when ND is to CN as sqrt(II - RR) to sqrt(24)RR, in which |
| case NE will be to ND as 5R to I; and so on infinitely, the Numbers 3, |
| 8, 15, 24, &c. being gather'd by continual Addition of the Terms of the |
| arithmetical Progression 3, 5, 7, 9, &c. The Truth of all this |
| Mathematicians will easily examine.[M] |
| |
| Now it is to be observed, that as when the Sun comes to his Tropicks, |
| Days increase and decrease but a very little for a great while together; |
| so when by increasing the distance CD, these Angles come to their |
| Limits, they vary their quantity but very little for some time together, |
| and therefore a far greater number of the Rays which fall upon all the |
| Points N in the Quadrant BL, shall emerge in the Limits of these Angles, |
| than in any other Inclinations. And farther it is to be observed, that |
| the Rays which differ in Refrangibility will have different Limits of |
| their Angles of Emergence, and by consequence according to their |
| different Degrees of Refrangibility emerge most copiously in different |
| Angles, and being separated from one another appear each in their proper |
| Colours. And what those Angles are may be easily gather'd from the |
| foregoing Theorem by Computation. |
| |
| For in the least refrangible Rays the Sines I and R (as was found above) |
| are 108 and 81, and thence by Computation the greatest Angle AXR will be |
| found 42 Degrees and 2 Minutes, and the least Angle AYS, 50 Degrees and |
| 57 Minutes. And in the most refrangible Rays the Sines I and R are 109 |
| and 81, and thence by Computation the greatest Angle AXR will be found |
| 40 Degrees and 17 Minutes, and the least Angle AYS 54 Degrees and 7 |
| Minutes. |
| |
| Suppose now that O [in _Fig._ 15.] is the Spectator's Eye, and OP a Line |
| drawn parallel to the Sun's Rays and let POE, POF, POG, POH, be Angles |
| of 40 Degr. 17 Min. 42 Degr. 2 Min. 50 Degr. 57 Min. and 54 Degr. 7 Min. |
| respectively, and these Angles turned about their common Side OP, shall |
| with their other Sides OE, OF; OG, OH, describe the Verges of two |
| Rain-bows AF, BE and CHDG. For if E, F, G, H, be drops placed any where |
| in the conical Superficies described by OE, OF, OG, OH, and be |
| illuminated by the Sun's Rays SE, SF, SG, SH; the Angle SEO being equal |
| to the Angle POE, or 40 Degr. 17 Min. shall be the greatest Angle in |
| which the most refrangible Rays can after one Reflexion be refracted to |
| the Eye, and therefore all the Drops in the Line OE shall send the most |
| refrangible Rays most copiously to the Eye, and thereby strike the |
| Senses with the deepest violet Colour in that Region. And in like |
| manner the Angle SFO being equal to the Angle POF, or 42 Degr. 2 Min. |
| shall be the greatest in which the least refrangible Rays after one |
| Reflexion can emerge out of the Drops, and therefore those Rays shall |
| come most copiously to the Eye from the Drops in the Line OF, and strike |
| the Senses with the deepest red Colour in that Region. And by the same |
| Argument, the Rays which have intermediate Degrees of Refrangibility |
| shall come most copiously from Drops between E and F, and strike the |
| Senses with the intermediate Colours, in the Order which their Degrees |
| of Refrangibility require, that is in the Progress from E to F, or from |
| the inside of the Bow to the outside in this order, violet, indigo, |
| blue, green, yellow, orange, red. But the violet, by the mixture of the |
| white Light of the Clouds, will appear faint and incline to purple. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 15.] |
| |
| Again, the Angle SGO being equal to the Angle POG, or 50 Gr. 51 Min. |
| shall be the least Angle in which the least refrangible Rays can after |
| two Reflexions emerge out of the Drops, and therefore the least |
| refrangible Rays shall come most copiously to the Eye from the Drops in |
| the Line OG, and strike the Sense with the deepest red in that Region. |
| And the Angle SHO being equal to the Angle POH, or 54 Gr. 7 Min. shall |
| be the least Angle, in which the most refrangible Rays after two |
| Reflexions can emerge out of the Drops; and therefore those Rays shall |
| come most copiously to the Eye from the Drops in the Line OH, and strike |
| the Senses with the deepest violet in that Region. And by the same |
| Argument, the Drops in the Regions between G and H shall strike the |
| Sense with the intermediate Colours in the Order which their Degrees of |
| Refrangibility require, that is, in the Progress from G to H, or from |
| the inside of the Bow to the outside in this order, red, orange, yellow, |
| green, blue, indigo, violet. And since these four Lines OE, OF, OG, OH, |
| may be situated any where in the above-mention'd conical Superficies; |
| what is said of the Drops and Colours in these Lines is to be understood |
| of the Drops and Colours every where in those Superficies. |
| |
| Thus shall there be made two Bows of Colours, an interior and stronger, |
| by one Reflexion in the Drops, and an exterior and fainter by two; for |
| the Light becomes fainter by every Reflexion. And their Colours shall |
| lie in a contrary Order to one another, the red of both Bows bordering |
| upon the Space GF, which is between the Bows. The Breadth of the |
| interior Bow EOF measured cross the Colours shall be 1 Degr. 45 Min. and |
| the Breadth of the exterior GOH shall be 3 Degr. 10 Min. and the |
| distance between them GOF shall be 8 Gr. 15 Min. the greatest |
| Semi-diameter of the innermost, that is, the Angle POF being 42 Gr. 2 |
| Min. and the least Semi-diameter of the outermost POG, being 50 Gr. 57 |
| Min. These are the Measures of the Bows, as they would be were the Sun |
| but a Point; for by the Breadth of his Body, the Breadth of the Bows |
| will be increased, and their Distance decreased by half a Degree, and so |
| the breadth of the interior Iris will be 2 Degr. 15 Min. that of the |
| exterior 3 Degr. 40 Min. their distance 8 Degr. 25 Min. the greatest |
| Semi-diameter of the interior Bow 42 Degr. 17 Min. and the least of the |
| exterior 50 Degr. 42 Min. And such are the Dimensions of the Bows in the |
| Heavens found to be very nearly, when their Colours appear strong and |
| perfect. For once, by such means as I then had, I measured the greatest |
| Semi-diameter of the interior Iris about 42 Degrees, and the breadth of |
| the red, yellow and green in that Iris 63 or 64 Minutes, besides the |
| outmost faint red obscured by the brightness of the Clouds, for which we |
| may allow 3 or 4 Minutes more. The breadth of the blue was about 40 |
| Minutes more besides the violet, which was so much obscured by the |
| brightness of the Clouds, that I could not measure its breadth. But |
| supposing the breadth of the blue and violet together to equal that of |
| the red, yellow and green together, the whole breadth of this Iris will |
| be about 2-1/4 Degrees, as above. The least distance between this Iris |
| and the exterior Iris was about 8 Degrees and 30 Minutes. The exterior |
| Iris was broader than the interior, but so faint, especially on the blue |
| side, that I could not measure its breadth distinctly. At another time |
| when both Bows appeared more distinct, I measured the breadth of the |
| interior Iris 2 Gr. 10´, and the breadth of the red, yellow and green in |
| the exterior Iris, was to the breadth of the same Colours in the |
| interior as 3 to 2. |
| |
| This Explication of the Rain-bow is yet farther confirmed by the known |
| Experiment (made by _Antonius de Dominis_ and _Des-Cartes_) of hanging |
| up any where in the Sun-shine a Glass Globe filled with Water, and |
| viewing it in such a posture, that the Rays which come from the Globe to |
| the Eye may contain with the Sun's Rays an Angle of either 42 or 50 |
| Degrees. For if the Angle be about 42 or 43 Degrees, the Spectator |
| (suppose at O) shall see a full red Colour in that side of the Globe |
| opposed to the Sun as 'tis represented at F, and if that Angle become |
| less (suppose by depressing the Globe to E) there will appear other |
| Colours, yellow, green and blue successive in the same side of the |
| Globe. But if the Angle be made about 50 Degrees (suppose by lifting up |
| the Globe to G) there will appear a red Colour in that side of the Globe |
| towards the Sun, and if the Angle be made greater (suppose by lifting |
| up the Globe to H) the red will turn successively to the other Colours, |
| yellow, green and blue. The same thing I have tried, by letting a Globe |
| rest, and raising or depressing the Eye, or otherwise moving it to make |
| the Angle of a just magnitude. |
| |
| I have heard it represented, that if the Light of a Candle be refracted |
| by a Prism to the Eye; when the blue Colour falls upon the Eye, the |
| Spectator shall see red in the Prism, and when the red falls upon the |
| Eye he shall see blue; and if this were certain, the Colours of the |
| Globe and Rain-bow ought to appear in a contrary order to what we find. |
| But the Colours of the Candle being very faint, the mistake seems to |
| arise from the difficulty of discerning what Colours fall on the Eye. |
| For, on the contrary, I have sometimes had occasion to observe in the |
| Sun's Light refracted by a Prism, that the Spectator always sees that |
| Colour in the Prism which falls upon his Eye. And the same I have found |
| true also in Candle-light. For when the Prism is moved slowly from the |
| Line which is drawn directly from the Candle to the Eye, the red appears |
| first in the Prism and then the blue, and therefore each of them is seen |
| when it falls upon the Eye. For the red passes over the Eye first, and |
| then the blue. |
| |
| The Light which comes through drops of Rain by two Refractions without |
| any Reflexion, ought to appear strongest at the distance of about 26 |
| Degrees from the Sun, and to decay gradually both ways as the distance |
| from him increases and decreases. And the same is to be understood of |
| Light transmitted through spherical Hail-stones. And if the Hail be a |
| little flatted, as it often is, the Light transmitted may grow so strong |
| at a little less distance than that of 26 Degrees, as to form a Halo |
| about the Sun or Moon; which Halo, as often as the Hail-stones are duly |
| figured may be colour'd, and then it must be red within by the least |
| refrangible Rays, and blue without by the most refrangible ones, |
| especially if the Hail-stones have opake Globules of Snow in their |
| center to intercept the Light within the Halo (as _Hugenius_ has |
| observ'd) and make the inside thereof more distinctly defined than it |
| would otherwise be. For such Hail-stones, though spherical, by |
| terminating the Light by the Snow, may make a Halo red within and |
| colourless without, and darker in the red than without, as Halos used to |
| be. For of those Rays which pass close by the Snow the Rubriform will be |
| least refracted, and so come to the Eye in the directest Lines. |
| |
| The Light which passes through a drop of Rain after two Refractions, and |
| three or more Reflexions, is scarce strong enough to cause a sensible |
| Bow; but in those Cylinders of Ice by which _Hugenius_ explains the |
| _Parhelia_, it may perhaps be sensible. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ X. PROB. V. |
| |
| _By the discovered Properties of Light to explain the permanent Colours |
| of Natural Bodies._ |
| |
| These Colours arise from hence, that some natural Bodies reflect some |
| sorts of Rays, others other sorts more copiously than the rest. Minium |
| reflects the least refrangible or red-making Rays most copiously, and |
| thence appears red. Violets reflect the most refrangible most copiously, |
| and thence have their Colour, and so of other Bodies. Every Body |
| reflects the Rays of its own Colour more copiously than the rest, and |
| from their excess and predominance in the reflected Light has its |
| Colour. |
| |
| _Exper._ 17. For if in the homogeneal Lights obtained by the solution of |
| the Problem proposed in the fourth Proposition of the first Part of this |
| Book, you place Bodies of several Colours, you will find, as I have |
| done, that every Body looks most splendid and luminous in the Light of |
| its own Colour. Cinnaber in the homogeneal red Light is most |
| resplendent, in the green Light it is manifestly less resplendent, and |
| in the blue Light still less. Indigo in the violet blue Light is most |
| resplendent, and its splendor is gradually diminish'd, as it is removed |
| thence by degrees through the green and yellow Light to the red. By a |
| Leek the green Light, and next that the blue and yellow which compound |
| green, are more strongly reflected than the other Colours red and |
| violet, and so of the rest. But to make these Experiments the more |
| manifest, such Bodies ought to be chosen as have the fullest and most |
| vivid Colours, and two of those Bodies are to be compared together. |
| Thus, for instance, if Cinnaber and _ultra_-marine blue, or some other |
| full blue be held together in the red homogeneal Light, they will both |
| appear red, but the Cinnaber will appear of a strongly luminous and |
| resplendent red, and the _ultra_-marine blue of a faint obscure and dark |
| red; and if they be held together in the blue homogeneal Light, they |
| will both appear blue, but the _ultra_-marine will appear of a strongly |
| luminous and resplendent blue, and the Cinnaber of a faint and dark |
| blue. Which puts it out of dispute that the Cinnaber reflects the red |
| Light much more copiously than the _ultra_-marine doth, and the |
| _ultra_-marine reflects the blue Light much more copiously than the |
| Cinnaber doth. The same Experiment may be tried successfully with red |
| Lead and Indigo, or with any other two colour'd Bodies, if due allowance |
| be made for the different strength or weakness of their Colour and |
| Light. |
| |
| And as the reason of the Colours of natural Bodies is evident by these |
| Experiments, so it is farther confirmed and put past dispute by the two |
| first Experiments of the first Part, whereby 'twas proved in such Bodies |
| that the reflected Lights which differ in Colours do differ also in |
| degrees of Refrangibility. For thence it's certain, that some Bodies |
| reflect the more refrangible, others the less refrangible Rays more |
| copiously. |
| |
| And that this is not only a true reason of these Colours, but even the |
| only reason, may appear farther from this Consideration, that the Colour |
| of homogeneal Light cannot be changed by the Reflexion of natural |
| Bodies. |
| |
| For if Bodies by Reflexion cannot in the least change the Colour of any |
| one sort of Rays, they cannot appear colour'd by any other means than by |
| reflecting those which either are of their own Colour, or which by |
| mixture must produce it. |
| |
| But in trying Experiments of this kind care must be had that the Light |
| be sufficiently homogeneal. For if Bodies be illuminated by the ordinary |
| prismatick Colours, they will appear neither of their own Day-light |
| Colours, nor of the Colour of the Light cast on them, but of some middle |
| Colour between both, as I have found by Experience. Thus red Lead (for |
| instance) illuminated with the ordinary prismatick green will not appear |
| either red or green, but orange or yellow, or between yellow and green, |
| accordingly as the green Light by which 'tis illuminated is more or less |
| compounded. For because red Lead appears red when illuminated with white |
| Light, wherein all sorts of Rays are equally mix'd, and in the green |
| Light all sorts of Rays are not equally mix'd, the Excess of the |
| yellow-making, green-making and blue-making Rays in the incident green |
| Light, will cause those Rays to abound so much in the reflected Light, |
| as to draw the Colour from red towards their Colour. And because the red |
| Lead reflects the red-making Rays most copiously in proportion to their |
| number, and next after them the orange-making and yellow-making Rays; |
| these Rays in the reflected Light will be more in proportion to the |
| Light than they were in the incident green Light, and thereby will draw |
| the reflected Light from green towards their Colour. And therefore the |
| red Lead will appear neither red nor green, but of a Colour between |
| both. |
| |
| In transparently colour'd Liquors 'tis observable, that their Colour |
| uses to vary with their thickness. Thus, for instance, a red Liquor in a |
| conical Glass held between the Light and the Eye, looks of a pale and |
| dilute yellow at the bottom where 'tis thin, and a little higher where |
| 'tis thicker grows orange, and where 'tis still thicker becomes red, and |
| where 'tis thickest the red is deepest and darkest. For it is to be |
| conceiv'd that such a Liquor stops the indigo-making and violet-making |
| Rays most easily, the blue-making Rays more difficultly, the |
| green-making Rays still more difficultly, and the red-making most |
| difficultly: And that if the thickness of the Liquor be only so much as |
| suffices to stop a competent number of the violet-making and |
| indigo-making Rays, without diminishing much the number of the rest, the |
| rest must (by _Prop._ 6. _Part_ 2.) compound a pale yellow. But if the |
| Liquor be so much thicker as to stop also a great number of the |
| blue-making Rays, and some of the green-making, the rest must compound |
| an orange; and where it is so thick as to stop also a great number of |
| the green-making and a considerable number of the yellow-making, the |
| rest must begin to compound a red, and this red must grow deeper and |
| darker as the yellow-making and orange-making Rays are more and more |
| stopp'd by increasing the thickness of the Liquor, so that few Rays |
| besides the red-making can get through. |
| |
| Of this kind is an Experiment lately related to me by Mr. _Halley_, who, |
| in diving deep into the Sea in a diving Vessel, found in a clear |
| Sun-shine Day, that when he was sunk many Fathoms deep into the Water |
| the upper part of his Hand on which the Sun shone directly through the |
| Water and through a small Glass Window in the Vessel appeared of a red |
| Colour, like that of a Damask Rose, and the Water below and the under |
| part of his Hand illuminated by Light reflected from the Water below |
| look'd green. For thence it may be gather'd, that the Sea-Water reflects |
| back the violet and blue-making Rays most easily, and lets the |
| red-making Rays pass most freely and copiously to great Depths. For |
| thereby the Sun's direct Light at all great Depths, by reason of the |
| predominating red-making Rays, must appear red; and the greater the |
| Depth is, the fuller and intenser must that red be. And at such Depths |
| as the violet-making Rays scarce penetrate unto, the blue-making, |
| green-making, and yellow-making Rays being reflected from below more |
| copiously than the red-making ones, must compound a green. |
| |
| Now, if there be two Liquors of full Colours, suppose a red and blue, |
| and both of them so thick as suffices to make their Colours sufficiently |
| full; though either Liquor be sufficiently transparent apart, yet will |
| you not be able to see through both together. For, if only the |
| red-making Rays pass through one Liquor, and only the blue-making |
| through the other, no Rays can pass through both. This Mr. _Hook_ tried |
| casually with Glass Wedges filled with red and blue Liquors, and was |
| surprized at the unexpected Event, the reason of it being then unknown; |
| which makes me trust the more to his Experiment, though I have not tried |
| it my self. But he that would repeat it, must take care the Liquors be |
| of very good and full Colours. |
| |
| Now, whilst Bodies become coloured by reflecting or transmitting this or |
| that sort of Rays more copiously than the rest, it is to be conceived |
| that they stop and stifle in themselves the Rays which they do not |
| reflect or transmit. For, if Gold be foliated and held between your Eye |
| and the Light, the Light looks of a greenish blue, and therefore massy |
| Gold lets into its Body the blue-making Rays to be reflected to and fro |
| within it till they be stopp'd and stifled, whilst it reflects the |
| yellow-making outwards, and thereby looks yellow. And much after the |
| same manner that Leaf Gold is yellow by reflected, and blue by |
| transmitted Light, and massy Gold is yellow in all Positions of the Eye; |
| there are some Liquors, as the Tincture of _Lignum Nephriticum_, and |
| some sorts of Glass which transmit one sort of Light most copiously, and |
| reflect another sort, and thereby look of several Colours, according to |
| the Position of the Eye to the Light. But, if these Liquors or Glasses |
| were so thick and massy that no Light could get through them, I question |
| not but they would like all other opake Bodies appear of one and the |
| same Colour in all Positions of the Eye, though this I cannot yet affirm |
| by Experience. For all colour'd Bodies, so far as my Observation |
| reaches, may be seen through if made sufficiently thin, and therefore |
| are in some measure transparent, and differ only in degrees of |
| Transparency from tinged transparent Liquors; these Liquors, as well as |
| those Bodies, by a sufficient Thickness becoming opake. A transparent |
| Body which looks of any Colour by transmitted Light, may also look of |
| the same Colour by reflected Light, the Light of that Colour being |
| reflected by the farther Surface of the Body, or by the Air beyond it. |
| And then the reflected Colour will be diminished, and perhaps cease, by |
| making the Body very thick, and pitching it on the backside to diminish |
| the Reflexion of its farther Surface, so that the Light reflected from |
| the tinging Particles may predominate. In such Cases, the Colour of the |
| reflected Light will be apt to vary from that of the Light transmitted. |
| But whence it is that tinged Bodies and Liquors reflect some sort of |
| Rays, and intromit or transmit other sorts, shall be said in the next |
| Book. In this Proposition I content my self to have put it past dispute, |
| that Bodies have such Properties, and thence appear colour'd. |
| |
| |
| _PROP._ XI. PROB. VI. |
| |
| _By mixing colour'd Lights to compound a beam of Light of the same |
| Colour and Nature with a beam of the Sun's direct Light, and therein to |
| experience the Truth of the foregoing Propositions._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 16.] |
| |
| Let ABC _abc_ [in _Fig._ 16.] represent a Prism, by which the Sun's |
| Light let into a dark Chamber through the Hole F, may be refracted |
| towards the Lens MN, and paint upon it at _p_, _q_, _r_, _s_, and _t_, |
| the usual Colours violet, blue, green, yellow, and red, and let the |
| diverging Rays by the Refraction of this Lens converge again towards X, |
| and there, by the mixture of all those their Colours, compound a white |
| according to what was shewn above. Then let another Prism DEG _deg_, |
| parallel to the former, be placed at X, to refract that white Light |
| upwards towards Y. Let the refracting Angles of the Prisms, and their |
| distances from the Lens be equal, so that the Rays which converged from |
| the Lens towards X, and without Refraction, would there have crossed and |
| diverged again, may by the Refraction of the second Prism be reduced |
| into Parallelism and diverge no more. For then those Rays will recompose |
| a beam of white Light XY. If the refracting Angle of either Prism be the |
| bigger, that Prism must be so much the nearer to the Lens. You will know |
| when the Prisms and the Lens are well set together, by observing if the |
| beam of Light XY, which comes out of the second Prism be perfectly white |
| to the very edges of the Light, and at all distances from the Prism |
| continue perfectly and totally white like a beam of the Sun's Light. For |
| till this happens, the Position of the Prisms and Lens to one another |
| must be corrected; and then if by the help of a long beam of Wood, as is |
| represented in the Figure, or by a Tube, or some other such Instrument, |
| made for that Purpose, they be made fast in that Situation, you may try |
| all the same Experiments in this compounded beam of Light XY, which have |
| been made in the Sun's direct Light. For this compounded beam of Light |
| has the same appearance, and is endow'd with all the same Properties |
| with a direct beam of the Sun's Light, so far as my Observation reaches. |
| And in trying Experiments in this beam you may by stopping any of the |
| Colours, _p_, _q_, _r_, _s_, and _t_, at the Lens, see how the Colours |
| produced in the Experiments are no other than those which the Rays had |
| at the Lens before they entered the Composition of this Beam: And by |
| consequence, that they arise not from any new Modifications of the Light |
| by Refractions and Reflexions, but from the various Separations and |
| Mixtures of the Rays originally endow'd with their colour-making |
| Qualities. |
| |
| So, for instance, having with a Lens 4-1/4 Inches broad, and two Prisms |
| on either hand 6-1/4 Feet distant from the Lens, made such a beam of |
| compounded Light; to examine the reason of the Colours made by Prisms, I |
| refracted this compounded beam of Light XY with another Prism HIK _kh_, |
| and thereby cast the usual Prismatick Colours PQRST upon the Paper LV |
| placed behind. And then by stopping any of the Colours _p_, _q_, _r_, |
| _s_, _t_, at the Lens, I found that the same Colour would vanish at the |
| Paper. So if the Purple _p_ was stopp'd at the Lens, the Purple P upon |
| the Paper would vanish, and the rest of the Colours would remain |
| unalter'd, unless perhaps the blue, so far as some purple latent in it |
| at the Lens might be separated from it by the following Refractions. And |
| so by intercepting the green upon the Lens, the green R upon the Paper |
| would vanish, and so of the rest; which plainly shews, that as the white |
| beam of Light XY was compounded of several Lights variously colour'd at |
| the Lens, so the Colours which afterwards emerge out of it by new |
| Refractions are no other than those of which its Whiteness was |
| compounded. The Refraction of the Prism HIK _kh_ generates the Colours |
| PQRST upon the Paper, not by changing the colorific Qualities of the |
| Rays, but by separating the Rays which had the very same colorific |
| Qualities before they enter'd the Composition of the refracted beam of |
| white Light XY. For otherwise the Rays which were of one Colour at the |
| Lens might be of another upon the Paper, contrary to what we find. |
| |
| So again, to examine the reason of the Colours of natural Bodies, I |
| placed such Bodies in the Beam of Light XY, and found that they all |
| appeared there of those their own Colours which they have in Day-light, |
| and that those Colours depend upon the Rays which had the same Colours |
| at the Lens before they enter'd the Composition of that beam. Thus, for |
| instance, Cinnaber illuminated by this beam appears of the same red |
| Colour as in Day-light; and if at the Lens you intercept the |
| green-making and blue-making Rays, its redness will become more full and |
| lively: But if you there intercept the red-making Rays, it will not any |
| longer appear red, but become yellow or green, or of some other Colour, |
| according to the sorts of Rays which you do not intercept. So Gold in |
| this Light XY appears of the same yellow Colour as in Day-light, but by |
| intercepting at the Lens a due Quantity of the yellow-making Rays it |
| will appear white like Silver (as I have tried) which shews that its |
| yellowness arises from the Excess of the intercepted Rays tinging that |
| Whiteness with their Colour when they are let pass. So the Infusion of |
| _Lignum Nephriticum_ (as I have also tried) when held in this beam of |
| Light XY, looks blue by the reflected Part of the Light, and red by the |
| transmitted Part of it, as when 'tis view'd in Day-light; but if you |
| intercept the blue at the Lens the Infusion will lose its reflected blue |
| Colour, whilst its transmitted red remains perfect, and by the loss of |
| some blue-making Rays, wherewith it was allay'd, becomes more intense |
| and full. And, on the contrary, if the red and orange-making Rays be |
| intercepted at the Lens, the Infusion will lose its transmitted red, |
| whilst its blue will remain and become more full and perfect. Which |
| shews, that the Infusion does not tinge the Rays with blue and red, but |
| only transmits those most copiously which were red-making before, and |
| reflects those most copiously which were blue-making before. And after |
| the same manner may the Reasons of other Phænomena be examined, by |
| trying them in this artificial beam of Light XY. |
| |
| FOOTNOTES: |
| |
| [I] See p. 59. |
| |
| [J] _See our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ II. _Sect._ II. _p._ 239. |
| |
| [K] _As is done in our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ I. _Sect._ III. |
| _and_ IV. _and Part_ II. _Sect._ II. |
| |
| [L] _See our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ II. _Sect._ II. _pag._ 269, |
| &c. |
| |
| [M] _This is demonstrated in our_ Author's Lect. Optic. _Part_ I. |
| _Sect._ IV. _Prop._ 35 _and_ 36. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE |
| |
| SECOND BOOK |
| |
| OF |
| |
| OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| _PART I._ |
| |
| _Observations concerning the Reflexions, Refractions, and Colours of |
| thin transparent Bodies._ |
| |
| |
| It has been observed by others, that transparent Substances, as Glass, |
| Water, Air, &c. when made very thin by being blown into Bubbles, or |
| otherwise formed into Plates, do exhibit various Colours according to |
| their various thinness, altho' at a greater thickness they appear very |
| clear and colourless. In the former Book I forbore to treat of these |
| Colours, because they seemed of a more difficult Consideration, and were |
| not necessary for establishing the Properties of Light there discoursed |
| of. But because they may conduce to farther Discoveries for compleating |
| the Theory of Light, especially as to the constitution of the parts of |
| natural Bodies, on which their Colours or Transparency depend; I have |
| here set down an account of them. To render this Discourse short and |
| distinct, I have first described the principal of my Observations, and |
| then consider'd and made use of them. The Observations are these. |
| |
| _Obs._ 1. Compressing two Prisms hard together that their sides (which |
| by chance were a very little convex) might somewhere touch one another: |
| I found the place in which they touched to become absolutely |
| transparent, as if they had there been one continued piece of Glass. For |
| when the Light fell so obliquely on the Air, which in other places was |
| between them, as to be all reflected; it seemed in that place of contact |
| to be wholly transmitted, insomuch that when look'd upon, it appeared |
| like a black or dark spot, by reason that little or no sensible Light |
| was reflected from thence, as from other places; and when looked through |
| it seemed (as it were) a hole in that Air which was formed into a thin |
| Plate, by being compress'd between the Glasses. And through this hole |
| Objects that were beyond might be seen distinctly, which could not at |
| all be seen through other parts of the Glasses where the Air was |
| interjacent. Although the Glasses were a little convex, yet this |
| transparent spot was of a considerable breadth, which breadth seemed |
| principally to proceed from the yielding inwards of the parts of the |
| Glasses, by reason of their mutual pressure. For by pressing them very |
| hard together it would become much broader than otherwise. |
| |
| _Obs._ 2. When the Plate of Air, by turning the Prisms about their |
| common Axis, became so little inclined to the incident Rays, that some |
| of them began to be transmitted, there arose in it many slender Arcs of |
| Colours which at first were shaped almost like the Conchoid, as you see |
| them delineated in the first Figure. And by continuing the Motion of the |
| Prisms, these Arcs increased and bended more and more about the said |
| transparent spot, till they were compleated into Circles or Rings |
| incompassing it, and afterwards continually grew more and more |
| contracted. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 1.] |
| |
| These Arcs at their first appearance were of a violet and blue Colour, |
| and between them were white Arcs of Circles, which presently by |
| continuing the Motion of the Prisms became a little tinged in their |
| inward Limbs with red and yellow, and to their outward Limbs the blue |
| was adjacent. So that the order of these Colours from the central dark |
| spot, was at that time white, blue, violet; black, red, orange, yellow, |
| white, blue, violet, &c. But the yellow and red were much fainter than |
| the blue and violet. |
| |
| The Motion of the Prisms about their Axis being continued, these Colours |
| contracted more and more, shrinking towards the whiteness on either |
| side of it, until they totally vanished into it. And then the Circles in |
| those parts appear'd black and white, without any other Colours |
| intermix'd. But by farther moving the Prisms about, the Colours again |
| emerged out of the whiteness, the violet and blue at its inward Limb, |
| and at its outward Limb the red and yellow. So that now their order from |
| the central Spot was white, yellow, red; black; violet, blue, white, |
| yellow, red, &c. contrary to what it was before. |
| |
| _Obs._ 3. When the Rings or some parts of them appeared only black and |
| white, they were very distinct and well defined, and the blackness |
| seemed as intense as that of the central Spot. Also in the Borders of |
| the Rings, where the Colours began to emerge out of the whiteness, they |
| were pretty distinct, which made them visible to a very great multitude. |
| I have sometimes number'd above thirty Successions (reckoning every |
| black and white Ring for one Succession) and seen more of them, which by |
| reason of their smalness I could not number. But in other Positions of |
| the Prisms, at which the Rings appeared of many Colours, I could not |
| distinguish above eight or nine of them, and the Exterior of those were |
| very confused and dilute. |
| |
| In these two Observations to see the Rings distinct, and without any |
| other Colour than Black and white, I found it necessary to hold my Eye |
| at a good distance from them. For by approaching nearer, although in the |
| same inclination of my Eye to the Plane of the Rings, there emerged a |
| bluish Colour out of the white, which by dilating it self more and more |
| into the black, render'd the Circles less distinct, and left the white a |
| little tinged with red and yellow. I found also by looking through a |
| slit or oblong hole, which was narrower than the pupil of my Eye, and |
| held close to it parallel to the Prisms, I could see the Circles much |
| distincter and visible to a far greater number than otherwise. |
| |
| _Obs._ 4. To observe more nicely the order of the Colours which arose |
| out of the white Circles as the Rays became less and less inclined to |
| the Plate of Air; I took two Object-glasses, the one a Plano-convex for |
| a fourteen Foot Telescope, and the other a large double Convex for one |
| of about fifty Foot; and upon this, laying the other with its plane side |
| downwards, I pressed them slowly together, to make the Colours |
| successively emerge in the middle of the Circles, and then slowly lifted |
| the upper Glass from the lower to make them successively vanish again in |
| the same place. The Colour, which by pressing the Glasses together, |
| emerged last in the middle of the other Colours, would upon its first |
| appearance look like a Circle of a Colour almost uniform from the |
| circumference to the center and by compressing the Glasses still more, |
| grow continually broader until a new Colour emerged in its center, and |
| thereby it became a Ring encompassing that new Colour. And by |
| compressing the Glasses still more, the diameter of this Ring would |
| increase, and the breadth of its Orbit or Perimeter decrease until |
| another new Colour emerged in the center of the last: And so on until a |
| third, a fourth, a fifth, and other following new Colours successively |
| emerged there, and became Rings encompassing the innermost Colour, the |
| last of which was the black Spot. And, on the contrary, by lifting up |
| the upper Glass from the lower, the diameter of the Rings would |
| decrease, and the breadth of their Orbit increase, until their Colours |
| reached successively to the center; and then they being of a |
| considerable breadth, I could more easily discern and distinguish their |
| Species than before. And by this means I observ'd their Succession and |
| Quantity to be as followeth. |
| |
| Next to the pellucid central Spot made by the contact of the Glasses |
| succeeded blue, white, yellow, and red. The blue was so little in |
| quantity, that I could not discern it in the Circles made by the Prisms, |
| nor could I well distinguish any violet in it, but the yellow and red |
| were pretty copious, and seemed about as much in extent as the white, |
| and four or five times more than the blue. The next Circuit in order of |
| Colours immediately encompassing these were violet, blue, green, yellow, |
| and red: and these were all of them copious and vivid, excepting the |
| green, which was very little in quantity, and seemed much more faint and |
| dilute than the other Colours. Of the other four, the violet was the |
| least in extent, and the blue less than the yellow or red. The third |
| Circuit or Order was purple, blue, green, yellow, and red; in which the |
| purple seemed more reddish than the violet in the former Circuit, and |
| the green was much more conspicuous, being as brisk and copious as any |
| of the other Colours, except the yellow, but the red began to be a |
| little faded, inclining very much to purple. After this succeeded the |
| fourth Circuit of green and red. The green was very copious and lively, |
| inclining on the one side to blue, and on the other side to yellow. But |
| in this fourth Circuit there was neither violet, blue, nor yellow, and |
| the red was very imperfect and dirty. Also the succeeding Colours became |
| more and more imperfect and dilute, till after three or four revolutions |
| they ended in perfect whiteness. Their form, when the Glasses were most |
| compress'd so as to make the black Spot appear in the center, is |
| delineated in the second Figure; where _a_, _b_, _c_, _d_, _e_: _f_, |
| _g_, _h_, _i_, _k_: _l_, _m_, _n_, _o_, _p_: _q_, _r_: _s_, _t_: _v_, |
| _x_: _y_, _z_, denote the Colours reckon'd in order from the center, |
| black, blue, white, yellow, red: violet, blue, green, yellow, red: |
| purple, blue, green, yellow, red: green, red: greenish blue, red: |
| greenish blue, pale red: greenish blue, reddish white. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 2.] |
| |
| _Obs._ 5. To determine the interval of the Glasses, or thickness of the |
| interjacent Air, by which each Colour was produced, I measured the |
| Diameters of the first six Rings at the most lucid part of their Orbits, |
| and squaring them, I found their Squares to be in the arithmetical |
| Progression of the odd Numbers, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11. And since one of |
| these Glasses was plane, and the other spherical, their Intervals at |
| those Rings must be in the same Progression. I measured also the |
| Diameters of the dark or faint Rings between the more lucid Colours, and |
| found their Squares to be in the arithmetical Progression of the even |
| Numbers, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12. And it being very nice and difficult to |
| take these measures exactly; I repeated them divers times at divers |
| parts of the Glasses, that by their Agreement I might be confirmed in |
| them. And the same method I used in determining some others of the |
| following Observations. |
| |
| _Obs._ 6. The Diameter of the sixth Ring at the most lucid part of its |
| Orbit was 58/100 parts of an Inch, and the Diameter of the Sphere on |
| which the double convex Object-glass was ground was about 102 Feet, and |
| hence I gathered the thickness of the Air or Aereal Interval of the |
| Glasses at that Ring. But some time after, suspecting that in making |
| this Observation I had not determined the Diameter of the Sphere with |
| sufficient accurateness, and being uncertain whether the Plano-convex |
| Glass was truly plane, and not something concave or convex on that side |
| which I accounted plane; and whether I had not pressed the Glasses |
| together, as I often did, to make them touch; (For by pressing such |
| Glasses together their parts easily yield inwards, and the Rings thereby |
| become sensibly broader than they would be, did the Glasses keep their |
| Figures.) I repeated the Experiment, and found the Diameter of the sixth |
| lucid Ring about 55/100 parts of an Inch. I repeated the Experiment also |
| with such an Object-glass of another Telescope as I had at hand. This |
| was a double Convex ground on both sides to one and the same Sphere, and |
| its Focus was distant from it 83-2/5 Inches. And thence, if the Sines of |
| Incidence and Refraction of the bright yellow Light be assumed in |
| proportion as 11 to 17, the Diameter of the Sphere to which the Glass |
| was figured will by computation be found 182 Inches. This Glass I laid |
| upon a flat one, so that the black Spot appeared in the middle of the |
| Rings of Colours without any other Pressure than that of the weight of |
| the Glass. And now measuring the Diameter of the fifth dark Circle as |
| accurately as I could, I found it the fifth part of an Inch precisely. |
| This Measure was taken with the points of a pair of Compasses on the |
| upper Surface on the upper Glass, and my Eye was about eight or nine |
| Inches distance from the Glass, almost perpendicularly over it, and the |
| Glass was 1/6 of an Inch thick, and thence it is easy to collect that |
| the true Diameter of the Ring between the Glasses was greater than its |
| measur'd Diameter above the Glasses in the Proportion of 80 to 79, or |
| thereabouts, and by consequence equal to 16/79 parts of an Inch, and its |
| true Semi-diameter equal to 8/79 parts. Now as the Diameter of the |
| Sphere (182 Inches) is to the Semi-diameter of this fifth dark Ring |
| (8/79 parts of an Inch) so is this Semi-diameter to the thickness of the |
| Air at this fifth dark Ring; which is therefore 32/567931 or |
| 100/1774784. Parts of an Inch; and the fifth Part thereof, _viz._ the |
| 1/88739 Part of an Inch, is the Thickness of the Air at the first of |
| these dark Rings. |
| |
| The same Experiment I repeated with another double convex Object-glass |
| ground on both sides to one and the same Sphere. Its Focus was distant |
| from it 168-1/2 Inches, and therefore the Diameter of that Sphere was |
| 184 Inches. This Glass being laid upon the same plain Glass, the |
| Diameter of the fifth of the dark Rings, when the black Spot in their |
| Center appear'd plainly without pressing the Glasses, was by the measure |
| of the Compasses upon the upper Glass 121/600 Parts of an Inch, and by |
| consequence between the Glasses it was 1222/6000: For the upper Glass |
| was 1/8 of an Inch thick, and my Eye was distant from it 8 Inches. And a |
| third proportional to half this from the Diameter of the Sphere is |
| 5/88850 Parts of an Inch. This is therefore the Thickness of the Air at |
| this Ring, and a fifth Part thereof, _viz._ the 1/88850th Part of an |
| Inch is the Thickness thereof at the first of the Rings, as above. |
| |
| I tried the same Thing, by laying these Object-glasses upon flat Pieces |
| of a broken Looking-glass, and found the same Measures of the Rings: |
| Which makes me rely upon them till they can be determin'd more |
| accurately by Glasses ground to larger Spheres, though in such Glasses |
| greater care must be taken of a true Plane. |
| |
| These Dimensions were taken, when my Eye was placed almost |
| perpendicularly over the Glasses, being about an Inch, or an Inch and a |
| quarter, distant from the incident Rays, and eight Inches distant from |
| the Glass; so that the Rays were inclined to the Glass in an Angle of |
| about four Degrees. Whence by the following Observation you will |
| understand, that had the Rays been perpendicular to the Glasses, the |
| Thickness of the Air at these Rings would have been less in the |
| Proportion of the Radius to the Secant of four Degrees, that is, of |
| 10000 to 10024. Let the Thicknesses found be therefore diminish'd in |
| this Proportion, and they will become 1/88952 and 1/89063, or (to use |
| the nearest round Number) the 1/89000th Part of an Inch. This is the |
| Thickness of the Air at the darkest Part of the first dark Ring made by |
| perpendicular Rays; and half this Thickness multiplied by the |
| Progression, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, &c. gives the Thicknesses of the Air at |
| the most luminous Parts of all the brightest Rings, _viz._ 1/178000, |
| 3/178000, 5/178000, 7/178000, &c. their arithmetical Means 2/178000, |
| 4/178000, 6/178000, &c. being its Thicknesses at the darkest Parts of |
| all the dark ones. |
| |
| _Obs._ 7. The Rings were least, when my Eye was placed perpendicularly |
| over the Glasses in the Axis of the Rings: And when I view'd them |
| obliquely they became bigger, continually swelling as I removed my Eye |
| farther from the Axis. And partly by measuring the Diameter of the same |
| Circle at several Obliquities of my Eye, partly by other Means, as also |
| by making use of the two Prisms for very great Obliquities, I found its |
| Diameter, and consequently the Thickness of the Air at its Perimeter in |
| all those Obliquities to be very nearly in the Proportions express'd in |
| this Table. |
| |
| -------------------+--------------------+----------+---------- |
| Angle of Incidence |Angle of Refraction |Diameter |Thickness |
| on | into | of the | of the |
| the Air. | the Air. | Ring. | Air. |
| -------------------+--------------------+----------+---------- |
| Deg. Min. | | | |
| | | | |
| 00 00 | 00 00 | 10 | 10 |
| | | | |
| 06 26 | 10 00 | 10-1/13 | 10-2/13 |
| | | | |
| 12 45 | 20 00 | 10-1/3 | 10-2/3 |
| | | | |
| 18 49 | 30 00 | 10-3/4 | 11-1/2 |
| | | | |
| 24 30 | 40 00 | 11-2/5 | 13 |
| | | | |
| 29 37 | 50 00 | 12-1/2 | 15-1/2 |
| | | | |
| 33 58 | 60 00 | 14 | 20 |
| | | | |
| 35 47 | 65 00 | 15-1/4 | 23-1/4 |
| | | | |
| 37 19 | 70 00 | 16-4/5 | 28-1/4 |
| | | | |
| 38 33 | 75 00 | 19-1/4 | 37 |
| | | | |
| 39 27 | 80 00 | 22-6/7 | 52-1/4 |
| | | | |
| 40 00 | 85 00 | 29 | 84-1/12 |
| | | | |
| 40 11 | 90 00 | 35 | 122-1/2 |
| -------------------+--------------------+----------+---------- |
| |
| In the two first Columns are express'd the Obliquities of the incident |
| and emergent Rays to the Plate of the Air, that is, their Angles of |
| Incidence and Refraction. In the third Column the Diameter of any |
| colour'd Ring at those Obliquities is expressed in Parts, of which ten |
| constitute that Diameter when the Rays are perpendicular. And in the |
| fourth Column the Thickness of the Air at the Circumference of that Ring |
| is expressed in Parts, of which also ten constitute its Thickness when |
| the Rays are perpendicular. |
| |
| And from these Measures I seem to gather this Rule: That the Thickness |
| of the Air is proportional to the Secant of an Angle, whose Sine is a |
| certain mean Proportional between the Sines of Incidence and Refraction. |
| And that mean Proportional, so far as by these Measures I can determine |
| it, is the first of an hundred and six arithmetical mean Proportionals |
| between those Sines counted from the bigger Sine, that is, from the Sine |
| of Refraction when the Refraction is made out of the Glass into the |
| Plate of Air, or from the Sine of Incidence when the Refraction is made |
| out of the Plate of Air into the Glass. |
| |
| _Obs._ 8. The dark Spot in the middle of the Rings increased also by the |
| Obliquation of the Eye, although almost insensibly. But, if instead of |
| the Object-glasses the Prisms were made use of, its Increase was more |
| manifest when viewed so obliquely that no Colours appear'd about it. It |
| was least when the Rays were incident most obliquely on the interjacent |
| Air, and as the obliquity decreased it increased more and more until the |
| colour'd Rings appear'd, and then decreased again, but not so much as it |
| increased before. And hence it is evident, that the Transparency was |
| not only at the absolute Contact of the Glasses, but also where they had |
| some little Interval. I have sometimes observed the Diameter of that |
| Spot to be between half and two fifth parts of the Diameter of the |
| exterior Circumference of the red in the first Circuit or Revolution of |
| Colours when view'd almost perpendicularly; whereas when view'd |
| obliquely it hath wholly vanish'd and become opake and white like the |
| other parts of the Glass; whence it may be collected that the Glasses |
| did then scarcely, or not at all, touch one another, and that their |
| Interval at the perimeter of that Spot when view'd perpendicularly was |
| about a fifth or sixth part of their Interval at the circumference of |
| the said red. |
| |
| _Obs._ 9. By looking through the two contiguous Object-glasses, I found |
| that the interjacent Air exhibited Rings of Colours, as well by |
| transmitting Light as by reflecting it. The central Spot was now white, |
| and from it the order of the Colours were yellowish red; black, violet, |
| blue, white, yellow, red; violet, blue, green, yellow, red, &c. But |
| these Colours were very faint and dilute, unless when the Light was |
| trajected very obliquely through the Glasses: For by that means they |
| became pretty vivid. Only the first yellowish red, like the blue in the |
| fourth Observation, was so little and faint as scarcely to be discern'd. |
| Comparing the colour'd Rings made by Reflexion, with these made by |
| transmission of the Light; I found that white was opposite to black, red |
| to blue, yellow to violet, and green to a Compound of red and violet. |
| That is, those parts of the Glass were black when looked through, which |
| when looked upon appeared white, and on the contrary. And so those which |
| in one case exhibited blue, did in the other case exhibit red. And the |
| like of the other Colours. The manner you have represented in the third |
| Figure, where AB, CD, are the Surfaces of the Glasses contiguous at E, |
| and the black Lines between them are their Distances in arithmetical |
| Progression, and the Colours written above are seen by reflected Light, |
| and those below by Light transmitted (p. 209). |
| |
| _Obs._ 10. Wetting the Object-glasses a little at their edges, the Water |
| crept in slowly between them, and the Circles thereby became less and |
| the Colours more faint: Insomuch that as the Water crept along, one half |
| of them at which it first arrived would appear broken off from the other |
| half, and contracted into a less Room. By measuring them I found the |
| Proportions of their Diameters to the Diameters of the like Circles made |
| by Air to be about seven to eight, and consequently the Intervals of the |
| Glasses at like Circles, caused by those two Mediums Water and Air, are |
| as about three to four. Perhaps it may be a general Rule, That if any |
| other Medium more or less dense than Water be compress'd between the |
| Glasses, their Intervals at the Rings caused thereby will be to their |
| Intervals caused by interjacent Air, as the Sines are which measure the |
| Refraction made out of that Medium into Air. |
| |
| _Obs._ 11. When the Water was between the Glasses, if I pressed the |
| upper Glass variously at its edges to make the Rings move nimbly from |
| one place to another, a little white Spot would immediately follow the |
| center of them, which upon creeping in of the ambient Water into that |
| place would presently vanish. Its appearance was such as interjacent Air |
| would have caused, and it exhibited the same Colours. But it was not |
| air, for where any Bubbles of Air were in the Water they would not |
| vanish. The Reflexion must have rather been caused by a subtiler Medium, |
| which could recede through the Glasses at the creeping in of the Water. |
| |
| _Obs._ 12. These Observations were made in the open Air. But farther to |
| examine the Effects of colour'd Light falling on the Glasses, I darken'd |
| the Room, and view'd them by Reflexion of the Colours of a Prism cast on |
| a Sheet of white Paper, my Eye being so placed that I could see the |
| colour'd Paper by Reflexion in the Glasses, as in a Looking-glass. And |
| by this means the Rings became distincter and visible to a far greater |
| number than in the open Air. I have sometimes seen more than twenty of |
| them, whereas in the open Air I could not discern above eight or nine. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 3.] |
| |
| _Obs._ 13. Appointing an Assistant to move the Prism to and fro about |
| its Axis, that all the Colours might successively fall on that part of |
| the Paper which I saw by Reflexion from that part of the Glasses, where |
| the Circles appear'd, so that all the Colours might be successively |
| reflected from the Circles to my Eye, whilst I held it immovable, I |
| found the Circles which the red Light made to be manifestly bigger than |
| those which were made by the blue and violet. And it was very pleasant |
| to see them gradually swell or contract accordingly as the Colour of the |
| Light was changed. The Interval of the Glasses at any of the Rings when |
| they were made by the utmost red Light, was to their Interval at the |
| same Ring when made by the utmost violet, greater than as 3 to 2, and |
| less than as 13 to 8. By the most of my Observations it was as 14 to 9. |
| And this Proportion seem'd very nearly the same in all Obliquities of my |
| Eye; unless when two Prisms were made use of instead of the |
| Object-glasses. For then at a certain great obliquity of my Eye, the |
| Rings made by the several Colours seem'd equal, and at a greater |
| obliquity those made by the violet would be greater than the same Rings |
| made by the red: the Refraction of the Prism in this case causing the |
| most refrangible Rays to fall more obliquely on that plate of the Air |
| than the least refrangible ones. Thus the Experiment succeeded in the |
| colour'd Light, which was sufficiently strong and copious to make the |
| Rings sensible. And thence it may be gather'd, that if the most |
| refrangible and least refrangible Rays had been copious enough to make |
| the Rings sensible without the mixture of other Rays, the Proportion |
| which here was 14 to 9 would have been a little greater, suppose 14-1/4 |
| or 14-1/3 to 9. |
| |
| _Obs._ 14. Whilst the Prism was turn'd about its Axis with an uniform |
| Motion, to make all the several Colours fall successively upon the |
| Object-glasses, and thereby to make the Rings contract and dilate: The |
| Contraction or Dilatation of each Ring thus made by the variation of its |
| Colour was swiftest in the red, and slowest in the violet, and in the |
| intermediate Colours it had intermediate degrees of Celerity. Comparing |
| the quantity of Contraction and Dilatation made by all the degrees of |
| each Colour, I found that it was greatest in the red; less in the |
| yellow, still less in the blue, and least in the violet. And to make as |
| just an Estimation as I could of the Proportions of their Contractions |
| or Dilatations, I observ'd that the whole Contraction or Dilatation of |
| the Diameter of any Ring made by all the degrees of red, was to that of |
| the Diameter of the same Ring made by all the degrees of violet, as |
| about four to three, or five to four, and that when the Light was of the |
| middle Colour between yellow and green, the Diameter of the Ring was |
| very nearly an arithmetical Mean between the greatest Diameter of the |
| same Ring made by the outmost red, and the least Diameter thereof made |
| by the outmost violet: Contrary to what happens in the Colours of the |
| oblong Spectrum made by the Refraction of a Prism, where the red is most |
| contracted, the violet most expanded, and in the midst of all the |
| Colours is the Confine of green and blue. And hence I seem to collect |
| that the thicknesses of the Air between the Glasses there, where the |
| Ring is successively made by the limits of the five principal Colours |
| (red, yellow, green, blue, violet) in order (that is, by the extreme |
| red, by the limit of red and yellow in the middle of the orange, by the |
| limit of yellow and green, by the limit of green and blue, by the limit |
| of blue and violet in the middle of the indigo, and by the extreme |
| violet) are to one another very nearly as the sixth lengths of a Chord |
| which found the Notes in a sixth Major, _sol_, _la_, _mi_, _fa_, _sol_, |
| _la_. But it agrees something better with the Observation to say, that |
| the thicknesses of the Air between the Glasses there, where the Rings |
| are successively made by the limits of the seven Colours, red, orange, |
| yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet in order, are to one another as the |
| Cube Roots of the Squares of the eight lengths of a Chord, which found |
| the Notes in an eighth, _sol_, _la_, _fa_, _sol_, _la_, _mi_, _fa_, |
| _sol_; that is, as the Cube Roots of the Squares of the Numbers, 1, 8/9, |
| 5/6, 3/4, 2/3, 3/5, 9/16, 1/2. |
| |
| _Obs._ 15. These Rings were not of various Colours like those made in |
| the open Air, but appeared all over of that prismatick Colour only with |
| which they were illuminated. And by projecting the prismatick Colours |
| immediately upon the Glasses, I found that the Light which fell on the |
| dark Spaces which were between the Colour'd Rings was transmitted |
| through the Glasses without any variation of Colour. For on a white |
| Paper placed behind, it would paint Rings of the same Colour with those |
| which were reflected, and of the bigness of their immediate Spaces. And |
| from thence the origin of these Rings is manifest; namely, that the Air |
| between the Glasses, according to its various thickness, is disposed in |
| some places to reflect, and in others to transmit the Light of any one |
| Colour (as you may see represented in the fourth Figure) and in the same |
| place to reflect that of one Colour where it transmits that of another. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 4.] |
| |
| _Obs._ 16. The Squares of the Diameters of these Rings made by any |
| prismatick Colour were in arithmetical Progression, as in the fifth |
| Observation. And the Diameter of the sixth Circle, when made by the |
| citrine yellow, and viewed almost perpendicularly was about 58/100 parts |
| of an Inch, or a little less, agreeable to the sixth Observation. |
| |
| The precedent Observations were made with a rarer thin Medium, |
| terminated by a denser, such as was Air or Water compress'd between two |
| Glasses. In those that follow are set down the Appearances of a denser |
| Medium thin'd within a rarer, such as are Plates of Muscovy Glass, |
| Bubbles of Water, and some other thin Substances terminated on all sides |
| with air. |
| |
| _Obs._ 17. If a Bubble be blown with Water first made tenacious by |
| dissolving a little Soap in it, 'tis a common Observation, that after a |
| while it will appear tinged with a great variety of Colours. To defend |
| these Bubbles from being agitated by the external Air (whereby their |
| Colours are irregularly moved one among another, so that no accurate |
| Observation can be made of them,) as soon as I had blown any of them I |
| cover'd it with a clear Glass, and by that means its Colours emerged in |
| a very regular order, like so many concentrick Rings encompassing the |
| top of the Bubble. And as the Bubble grew thinner by the continual |
| subsiding of the Water, these Rings dilated slowly and overspread the |
| whole Bubble, descending in order to the bottom of it, where they |
| vanish'd successively. In the mean while, after all the Colours were |
| emerged at the top, there grew in the center of the Rings a small round |
| black Spot, like that in the first Observation, which continually |
| dilated it self till it became sometimes more than 1/2 or 3/4 of an Inch |
| in breadth before the Bubble broke. At first I thought there had been no |
| Light reflected from the Water in that place, but observing it more |
| curiously, I saw within it several smaller round Spots, which appeared |
| much blacker and darker than the rest, whereby I knew that there was |
| some Reflexion at the other places which were not so dark as those |
| Spots. And by farther Tryal I found that I could see the Images of some |
| things (as of a Candle or the Sun) very faintly reflected, not only from |
| the great black Spot, but also from the little darker Spots which were |
| within it. |
| |
| Besides the aforesaid colour'd Rings there would often appear small |
| Spots of Colours, ascending and descending up and down the sides of the |
| Bubble, by reason of some Inequalities in the subsiding of the Water. |
| And sometimes small black Spots generated at the sides would ascend up |
| to the larger black Spot at the top of the Bubble, and unite with it. |
| |
| _Obs._ 18. Because the Colours of these Bubbles were more extended and |
| lively than those of the Air thinn'd between two Glasses, and so more |
| easy to be distinguish'd, I shall here give you a farther description of |
| their order, as they were observ'd in viewing them by Reflexion of the |
| Skies when of a white Colour, whilst a black substance was placed |
| behind the Bubble. And they were these, red, blue; red, blue; red, blue; |
| red, green; red, yellow, green, blue, purple; red, yellow, green, blue, |
| violet; red, yellow, white, blue, black. |
| |
| The three first Successions of red and blue were very dilute and dirty, |
| especially the first, where the red seem'd in a manner to be white. |
| Among these there was scarce any other Colour sensible besides red and |
| blue, only the blues (and principally the second blue) inclined a little |
| to green. |
| |
| The fourth red was also dilute and dirty, but not so much as the former |
| three; after that succeeded little or no yellow, but a copious green, |
| which at first inclined a little to yellow, and then became a pretty |
| brisk and good willow green, and afterwards changed to a bluish Colour; |
| but there succeeded neither blue nor violet. |
| |
| The fifth red at first inclined very much to purple, and afterwards |
| became more bright and brisk, but yet not very pure. This was succeeded |
| with a very bright and intense yellow, which was but little in quantity, |
| and soon chang'd to green: But that green was copious and something more |
| pure, deep and lively, than the former green. After that follow'd an |
| excellent blue of a bright Sky-colour, and then a purple, which was less |
| in quantity than the blue, and much inclined to red. |
| |
| The sixth red was at first of a very fair and lively scarlet, and soon |
| after of a brighter Colour, being very pure and brisk, and the best of |
| all the reds. Then after a lively orange follow'd an intense bright and |
| copious yellow, which was also the best of all the yellows, and this |
| changed first to a greenish yellow, and then to a greenish blue; but the |
| green between the yellow and the blue, was very little and dilute, |
| seeming rather a greenish white than a green. The blue which succeeded |
| became very good, and of a very bright Sky-colour, but yet something |
| inferior to the former blue; and the violet was intense and deep with |
| little or no redness in it. And less in quantity than the blue. |
| |
| In the last red appeared a tincture of scarlet next to violet, which |
| soon changed to a brighter Colour, inclining to an orange; and the |
| yellow which follow'd was at first pretty good and lively, but |
| afterwards it grew more dilute until by degrees it ended in perfect |
| whiteness. And this whiteness, if the Water was very tenacious and |
| well-temper'd, would slowly spread and dilate it self over the greater |
| part of the Bubble; continually growing paler at the top, where at |
| length it would crack in many places, and those cracks, as they dilated, |
| would appear of a pretty good, but yet obscure and dark Sky-colour; the |
| white between the blue Spots diminishing, until it resembled the Threds |
| of an irregular Net-work, and soon after vanish'd, and left all the |
| upper part of the Bubble of the said dark blue Colour. And this Colour, |
| after the aforesaid manner, dilated it self downwards, until sometimes |
| it hath overspread the whole Bubble. In the mean while at the top, which |
| was of a darker blue than the bottom, and appear'd also full of many |
| round blue Spots, something darker than the rest, there would emerge |
| one or more very black Spots, and within those, other Spots of an |
| intenser blackness, which I mention'd in the former Observation; and |
| these continually dilated themselves until the Bubble broke. |
| |
| If the Water was not very tenacious, the black Spots would break forth |
| in the white, without any sensible intervention of the blue. And |
| sometimes they would break forth within the precedent yellow, or red, or |
| perhaps within the blue of the second order, before the intermediate |
| Colours had time to display themselves. |
| |
| By this description you may perceive how great an affinity these Colours |
| have with those of Air described in the fourth Observation, although set |
| down in a contrary order, by reason that they begin to appear when the |
| Bubble is thickest, and are most conveniently reckon'd from the lowest |
| and thickest part of the Bubble upwards. |
| |
| _Obs._ 19. Viewing in several oblique Positions of my Eye the Rings of |
| Colours emerging on the top of the Bubble, I found that they were |
| sensibly dilated by increasing the obliquity, but yet not so much by far |
| as those made by thinn'd Air in the seventh Observation. For there they |
| were dilated so much as, when view'd most obliquely, to arrive at a part |
| of the Plate more than twelve times thicker than that where they |
| appear'd when viewed perpendicularly; whereas in this case the thickness |
| of the Water, at which they arrived when viewed most obliquely, was to |
| that thickness which exhibited them by perpendicular Rays, something |
| less than as 8 to 5. By the best of my Observations it was between 15 |
| and 15-1/2 to 10; an increase about 24 times less than in the other |
| case. |
| |
| Sometimes the Bubble would become of an uniform thickness all over, |
| except at the top of it near the black Spot, as I knew, because it would |
| exhibit the same appearance of Colours in all Positions of the Eye. And |
| then the Colours which were seen at its apparent circumference by the |
| obliquest Rays, would be different from those that were seen in other |
| places, by Rays less oblique to it. And divers Spectators might see the |
| same part of it of differing Colours, by viewing it at very differing |
| Obliquities. Now observing how much the Colours at the same places of |
| the Bubble, or at divers places of equal thickness, were varied by the |
| several Obliquities of the Rays; by the assistance of the 4th, 14th, |
| 16th and 18th Observations, as they are hereafter explain'd, I collect |
| the thickness of the Water requisite to exhibit any one and the same |
| Colour, at several Obliquities, to be very nearly in the Proportion |
| expressed in this Table. |
| |
| -----------------+------------------+---------------- |
| Incidence on | Refraction into | Thickness of |
| the Water. | the Water. | the Water. |
| -----------------+------------------+---------------- |
| Deg. Min. | Deg. Min. | |
| | | |
| 00 00 | 00 00 | 10 |
| | | |
| 15 00 | 11 11 | 10-1/4 |
| | | |
| 30 00 | 22 1 | 10-4/5 |
| | | |
| 45 00 | 32 2 | 11-4/5 |
| | | |
| 60 00 | 40 30 | 13 |
| | | |
| 75 00 | 46 25 | 14-1/2 |
| | | |
| 90 00 | 48 35 | 15-1/5 |
| -----------------+------------------+---------------- |
| |
| In the two first Columns are express'd the Obliquities of the Rays to |
| the Superficies of the Water, that is, their Angles of Incidence and |
| Refraction. Where I suppose, that the Sines which measure them are in |
| round Numbers, as 3 to 4, though probably the Dissolution of Soap in the |
| Water, may a little alter its refractive Virtue. In the third Column, |
| the Thickness of the Bubble, at which any one Colour is exhibited in |
| those several Obliquities, is express'd in Parts, of which ten |
| constitute its Thickness when the Rays are perpendicular. And the Rule |
| found by the seventh Observation agrees well with these Measures, if |
| duly apply'd; namely, that the Thickness of a Plate of Water requisite |
| to exhibit one and the same Colour at several Obliquities of the Eye, is |
| proportional to the Secant of an Angle, whose Sine is the first of an |
| hundred and six arithmetical mean Proportionals between the Sines of |
| Incidence and Refraction counted from the lesser Sine, that is, from the |
| Sine of Refraction when the Refraction is made out of Air into Water, |
| otherwise from the Sine of Incidence. |
| |
| I have sometimes observ'd, that the Colours which arise on polish'd |
| Steel by heating it, or on Bell-metal, and some other metalline |
| Substances, when melted and pour'd on the Ground, where they may cool in |
| the open Air, have, like the Colours of Water-bubbles, been a little |
| changed by viewing them at divers Obliquities, and particularly that a |
| deep blue, or violet, when view'd very obliquely, hath been changed to a |
| deep red. But the Changes of these Colours are not so great and |
| sensible as of those made by Water. For the Scoria, or vitrified Part of |
| the Metal, which most Metals when heated or melted do continually |
| protrude, and send out to their Surface, and which by covering the |
| Metals in form of a thin glassy Skin, causes these Colours, is much |
| denser than Water; and I find that the Change made by the Obliquation of |
| the Eye is least in Colours of the densest thin Substances. |
| |
| _Obs._ 20. As in the ninth Observation, so here, the Bubble, by |
| transmitted Light, appear'd of a contrary Colour to that, which it |
| exhibited by Reflexion. Thus when the Bubble being look'd on by the |
| Light of the Clouds reflected from it, seemed red at its apparent |
| Circumference, if the Clouds at the same time, or immediately after, |
| were view'd through it, the Colour at its Circumference would be blue. |
| And, on the contrary, when by reflected Light it appeared blue, it would |
| appear red by transmitted Light. |
| |
| _Obs._ 21. By wetting very thin Plates of _Muscovy_ Glass, whose |
| thinness made the like Colours appear, the Colours became more faint and |
| languid, especially by wetting the Plates on that side opposite to the |
| Eye: But I could not perceive any variation of their Species. So then |
| the thickness of a Plate requisite to produce any Colour, depends only |
| on the density of the Plate, and not on that of the ambient Medium. And |
| hence, by the 10th and 16th Observations, may be known the thickness |
| which Bubbles of Water, or Plates of _Muscovy_ Glass, or other |
| Substances, have at any Colour produced by them. |
| |
| _Obs._ 22. A thin transparent Body, which is denser than its ambient |
| Medium, exhibits more brisk and vivid Colours than that which is so much |
| rarer; as I have particularly observed in the Air and Glass. For blowing |
| Glass very thin at a Lamp Furnace, those Plates encompassed with Air did |
| exhibit Colours much more vivid than those of Air made thin between two |
| Glasses. |
| |
| _Obs._ 23. Comparing the quantity of Light reflected from the several |
| Rings, I found that it was most copious from the first or inmost, and in |
| the exterior Rings became gradually less and less. Also the whiteness of |
| the first Ring was stronger than that reflected from those parts of the |
| thin Medium or Plate which were without the Rings; as I could manifestly |
| perceive by viewing at a distance the Rings made by the two |
| Object-glasses; or by comparing two Bubbles of Water blown at distant |
| Times, in the first of which the Whiteness appear'd, which succeeded all |
| the Colours, and in the other, the Whiteness which preceded them all. |
| |
| _Obs._ 24. When the two Object-glasses were lay'd upon one another, so |
| as to make the Rings of the Colours appear, though with my naked Eye I |
| could not discern above eight or nine of those Rings, yet by viewing |
| them through a Prism I have seen a far greater Multitude, insomuch that |
| I could number more than forty, besides many others, that were so very |
| small and close together, that I could not keep my Eye steady on them |
| severally so as to number them, but by their Extent I have sometimes |
| estimated them to be more than an hundred. And I believe the Experiment |
| may be improved to the Discovery of far greater Numbers. For they seem |
| to be really unlimited, though visible only so far as they can be |
| separated by the Refraction of the Prism, as I shall hereafter explain. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 5.] |
| |
| But it was but one side of these Rings, namely, that towards which the |
| Refraction was made, which by that Refraction was render'd distinct, and |
| the other side became more confused than when view'd by the naked Eye, |
| insomuch that there I could not discern above one or two, and sometimes |
| none of those Rings, of which I could discern eight or nine with my |
| naked Eye. And their Segments or Arcs, which on the other side appear'd |
| so numerous, for the most part exceeded not the third Part of a Circle. |
| If the Refraction was very great, or the Prism very distant from the |
| Object-glasses, the middle Part of those Arcs became also confused, so |
| as to disappear and constitute an even Whiteness, whilst on either side |
| their Ends, as also the whole Arcs farthest from the Center, became |
| distincter than before, appearing in the Form as you see them design'd |
| in the fifth Figure. |
| |
| The Arcs, where they seem'd distinctest, were only white and black |
| successively, without any other Colours intermix'd. But in other Places |
| there appeared Colours, whose Order was inverted by the refraction in |
| such manner, that if I first held the Prism very near the |
| Object-glasses, and then gradually removed it farther off towards my |
| Eye, the Colours of the 2d, 3d, 4th, and following Rings, shrunk towards |
| the white that emerged between them, until they wholly vanish'd into it |
| at the middle of the Arcs, and afterwards emerged again in a contrary |
| Order. But at the Ends of the Arcs they retain'd their Order unchanged. |
| |
| I have sometimes so lay'd one Object-glass upon the other, that to the |
| naked Eye they have all over seem'd uniformly white, without the least |
| Appearance of any of the colour'd Rings; and yet by viewing them through |
| a Prism, great Multitudes of those Rings have discover'd themselves. And |
| in like manner Plates of _Muscovy_ Glass, and Bubbles of Glass blown at |
| a Lamp-Furnace, which were not so thin as to exhibit any Colours to the |
| naked Eye, have through the Prism exhibited a great Variety of them |
| ranged irregularly up and down in the Form of Waves. And so Bubbles of |
| Water, before they began to exhibit their Colours to the naked Eye of a |
| Bystander, have appeared through a Prism, girded about with many |
| parallel and horizontal Rings; to produce which Effect, it was necessary |
| to hold the Prism parallel, or very nearly parallel to the Horizon, and |
| to dispose it so that the Rays might be refracted upwards. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE |
| |
| SECOND BOOK |
| |
| OF |
| |
| OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| _PART II._ |
| |
| _Remarks upon the foregoing Observations._ |
| |
| |
| Having given my Observations of these Colours, before I make use of them |
| to unfold the Causes of the Colours of natural Bodies, it is convenient |
| that by the simplest of them, such as are the 2d, 3d, 4th, 9th, 12th, |
| 18th, 20th, and 24th, I first explain the more compounded. And first to |
| shew how the Colours in the fourth and eighteenth Observations are |
| produced, let there be taken in any Right Line from the Point Y, [in |
| _Fig._ 6.] the Lengths YA, YB, YC, YD, YE, YF, YG, YH, in proportion to |
| one another, as the Cube-Roots of the Squares of the Numbers, 1/2, 9/16, |
| 3/5, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6, 8/9, 1, whereby the Lengths of a Musical Chord to |
| sound all the Notes in an eighth are represented; that is, in the |
| Proportion of the Numbers 6300, 6814, 7114, 7631, 8255, 8855, 9243, |
| 10000. And at the Points A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, let Perpendiculars |
| A[Greek: a], B[Greek: b], &c. be erected, by whose Intervals the Extent |
| of the several Colours set underneath against them, is to be |
| represented. Then divide the Line _A[Greek: a]_ in such Proportion as |
| the Numbers 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, &c. set at the Points of |
| Division denote. And through those Divisions from Y draw Lines 1I, 2K, |
| 3L, 5M, 6N, 7O, &c. |
| |
| Now, if A2 be supposed to represent the Thickness of any thin |
| transparent Body, at which the outmost Violet is most copiously |
| reflected in the first Ring, or Series of Colours, then by the 13th |
| Observation, HK will represent its Thickness, at which the utmost Red is |
| most copiously reflected in the same Series. Also by the 5th and 16th |
| Observations, A6 and HN will denote the Thicknesses at which those |
| extreme Colours are most copiously reflected in the second Series, and |
| A10 and HQ the Thicknesses at which they are most copiously reflected in |
| the third Series, and so on. And the Thickness at which any of the |
| intermediate Colours are reflected most copiously, will, according to |
| the 14th Observation, be defined by the distance of the Line AH from the |
| intermediate parts of the Lines 2K, 6N, 10Q, &c. against which the Names |
| of those Colours are written below. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 6.] |
| |
| But farther, to define the Latitude of these Colours in each Ring or |
| Series, let A1 design the least thickness, and A3 the greatest |
| thickness, at which the extreme violet in the first Series is reflected, |
| and let HI, and HL, design the like limits for the extreme red, and let |
| the intermediate Colours be limited by the intermediate parts of the |
| Lines 1I, and 3L, against which the Names of those Colours are written, |
| and so on: But yet with this caution, that the Reflexions be supposed |
| strongest at the intermediate Spaces, 2K, 6N, 10Q, &c. and from thence |
| to decrease gradually towards these limits, 1I, 3L, 5M, 7O, &c. on |
| either side; where you must not conceive them to be precisely limited, |
| but to decay indefinitely. And whereas I have assign'd the same Latitude |
| to every Series, I did it, because although the Colours in the first |
| Series seem to be a little broader than the rest, by reason of a |
| stronger Reflexion there, yet that inequality is so insensible as |
| scarcely to be determin'd by Observation. |
| |
| Now according to this Description, conceiving that the Rays originally |
| of several Colours are by turns reflected at the Spaces 1I, L3, 5M, O7, |
| 9PR11, &c. and transmitted at the Spaces AHI1, 3LM5, 7OP9, &c. it is |
| easy to know what Colour must in the open Air be exhibited at any |
| thickness of a transparent thin Body. For if a Ruler be applied parallel |
| to AH, at that distance from it by which the thickness of the Body is |
| represented, the alternate Spaces 1IL3, 5MO7, &c. which it crosseth will |
| denote the reflected original Colours, of which the Colour exhibited in |
| the open Air is compounded. Thus if the constitution of the green in the |
| third Series of Colours be desired, apply the Ruler as you see at |
| [Greek: prsph], and by its passing through some of the blue at [Greek: |
| p] and yellow at [Greek: s], as well as through the green at [Greek: r], |
| you may conclude that the green exhibited at that thickness of the Body |
| is principally constituted of original green, but not without a mixture |
| of some blue and yellow. |
| |
| By this means you may know how the Colours from the center of the Rings |
| outward ought to succeed in order as they were described in the 4th and |
| 18th Observations. For if you move the Ruler gradually from AH through |
| all distances, having pass'd over the first Space which denotes little |
| or no Reflexion to be made by thinnest Substances, it will first arrive |
| at 1 the violet, and then very quickly at the blue and green, which |
| together with that violet compound blue, and then at the yellow and red, |
| by whose farther addition that blue is converted into whiteness, which |
| whiteness continues during the transit of the edge of the Ruler from I |
| to 3, and after that by the successive deficience of its component |
| Colours, turns first to compound yellow, and then to red, and last of |
| all the red ceaseth at L. Then begin the Colours of the second Series, |
| which succeed in order during the transit of the edge of the Ruler from |
| 5 to O, and are more lively than before, because more expanded and |
| severed. And for the same reason instead of the former white there |
| intercedes between the blue and yellow a mixture of orange, yellow, |
| green, blue and indigo, all which together ought to exhibit a dilute and |
| imperfect green. So the Colours of the third Series all succeed in |
| order; first, the violet, which a little interferes with the red of the |
| second order, and is thereby inclined to a reddish purple; then the blue |
| and green, which are less mix'd with other Colours, and consequently |
| more lively than before, especially the green: Then follows the yellow, |
| some of which towards the green is distinct and good, but that part of |
| it towards the succeeding red, as also that red is mix'd with the violet |
| and blue of the fourth Series, whereby various degrees of red very much |
| inclining to purple are compounded. This violet and blue, which should |
| succeed this red, being mixed with, and hidden in it, there succeeds a |
| green. And this at first is much inclined to blue, but soon becomes a |
| good green, the only unmix'd and lively Colour in this fourth Series. |
| For as it verges towards the yellow, it begins to interfere with the |
| Colours of the fifth Series, by whose mixture the succeeding yellow and |
| red are very much diluted and made dirty, especially the yellow, which |
| being the weaker Colour is scarce able to shew it self. After this the |
| several Series interfere more and more, and their Colours become more |
| and more intermix'd, till after three or four more revolutions (in which |
| the red and blue predominate by turns) all sorts of Colours are in all |
| places pretty equally blended, and compound an even whiteness. |
| |
| And since by the 15th Observation the Rays endued with one Colour are |
| transmitted, where those of another Colour are reflected, the reason of |
| the Colours made by the transmitted Light in the 9th and 20th |
| Observations is from hence evident. |
| |
| If not only the Order and Species of these Colours, but also the precise |
| thickness of the Plate, or thin Body at which they are exhibited, be |
| desired in parts of an Inch, that may be also obtained by assistance of |
| the 6th or 16th Observations. For according to those Observations the |
| thickness of the thinned Air, which between two Glasses exhibited the |
| most luminous parts of the first six Rings were 1/178000, 3/178000, |
| 5/178000, 7/178000, 9/178000, 11/178000 parts of an Inch. Suppose the |
| Light reflected most copiously at these thicknesses be the bright |
| citrine yellow, or confine of yellow and orange, and these thicknesses |
| will be F[Greek: l], F[Greek: m], F[Greek: u], F[Greek: x], F[Greek: o], |
| F[Greek: t]. And this being known, it is easy to determine what |
| thickness of Air is represented by G[Greek: ph], or by any other |
| distance of the Ruler from AH. |
| |
| But farther, since by the 10th Observation the thickness of Air was to |
| the thickness of Water, which between the same Glasses exhibited the |
| same Colour, as 4 to 3, and by the 21st Observation the Colours of thin |
| Bodies are not varied by varying the ambient Medium; the thickness of a |
| Bubble of Water, exhibiting any Colour, will be 3/4 of the thickness of |
| Air producing the same Colour. And so according to the same 10th and |
| 21st Observations, the thickness of a Plate of Glass, whose Refraction |
| of the mean refrangible Ray, is measured by the proportion of the Sines |
| 31 to 20, may be 20/31 of the thickness of Air producing the same |
| Colours; and the like of other Mediums. I do not affirm, that this |
| proportion of 20 to 31, holds in all the Rays; for the Sines of other |
| sorts of Rays have other Proportions. But the differences of those |
| Proportions are so little that I do not here consider them. On these |
| Grounds I have composed the following Table, wherein the thickness of |
| Air, Water, and Glass, at which each Colour is most intense and |
| specifick, is expressed in parts of an Inch divided into ten hundred |
| thousand equal parts. |
| |
| Now if this Table be compared with the 6th Scheme, you will there see |
| the constitution of each Colour, as to its Ingredients, or the original |
| Colours of which it is compounded, and thence be enabled to judge of its |
| Intenseness or Imperfection; which may suffice in explication of the 4th |
| and 18th Observations, unless it be farther desired to delineate the |
| manner how the Colours appear, when the two Object-glasses are laid upon |
| one another. To do which, let there be described a large Arc of a |
| Circle, and a streight Line which may touch that Arc, and parallel to |
| that Tangent several occult Lines, at such distances from it, as the |
| Numbers set against the several Colours in the Table denote. For the |
| Arc, and its Tangent, will represent the Superficies of the Glasses |
| terminating the interjacent Air; and the places where the occult Lines |
| cut the Arc will show at what distances from the center, or Point of |
| contact, each Colour is reflected. |
| |
| _The thickness of colour'd Plates and Particles of_ |
| _____________|_______________ |
| / \ |
| Air. Water. Glass. |
| |---------+----------+----------+ |
| {Very black | 1/2 | 3/8 | 10/31 | |
| {Black | 1 | 3/4 | 20/31 | |
| {Beginning of | | | | |
| { Black | 2 | 1-1/2 | 1-2/7 | |
| Their Colours of the {Blue | 2-2/5 | 1-4/5 | 1-11/22 | |
| first Order, {White | 5-1/4 | 3-7/8 | 3-2/5 | |
| {Yellow | 7-1/9 | 5-1/3 | 4-3/5 | |
| {Orange | 8 | 6 | 5-1/6 | |
| {Red | 9 | 6-3/4 | 5-4/5 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| {Violet | 11-1/6 | 8-3/8 | 7-1/5 | |
| {Indigo | 12-5/6 | 9-5/8 | 8-2/11 | |
| {Blue | 14 | 10-1/2 | 9 | |
| {Green | 15-1/8 | 11-2/3 | 9-5/7 | |
| Of the second order, {Yellow | 16-2/7 | 12-1/5 | 10-2/5 | |
| {Orange | 17-2/9 | 13 | 11-1/9 | |
| {Bright red | 18-1/3 | 13-3/4 | 11-5/6 | |
| {Scarlet | 19-2/3 | 14-3/4 | 12-2/3 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| {Purple | 21 | 15-3/4 | 13-11/20 | |
| {Indigo | 22-1/10 | 16-4/7 | 14-1/4 | |
| {Blue | 23-2/5 | 17-11/20 | 15-1/10 | |
| Of the third Order, {Green | 25-1/5 | 18-9/10 | 16-1/4 | |
| {Yellow | 27-1/7 | 20-1/3 | 17-1/2 | |
| {Red | 29 | 21-3/4 | 18-5/7 | |
| {Bluish red | 32 | 24 | 20-2/3 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| {Bluish green | 34 | 25-1/2 | 22 | |
| {Green | 35-2/7 | 26-1/2 | 22-3/4 | |
| Of the fourth Order, {Yellowish green | 36 | 27 | 23-2/9 | |
| {Red | 40-1/3 | 30-1/4 | 26 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| {Greenish blue | 46 | 34-1/2 | 29-2/3 | |
| Of the fifth Order, {Red | 52-1/2 | 39-3/8 | 34 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| {Greenish blue | 58-3/4 | 44 | 38 | |
| Of the sixth Order, {Red | 65 | 48-3/4 | 42 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| Of the seventh Order, {Greenish blue | 71 | 53-1/4 | 45-4/5 | |
| {Ruddy White | 77 | 57-3/4 | 49-2/3 | |
| |---------+----------+----------| |
| |
| There are also other Uses of this Table: For by its assistance the |
| thickness of the Bubble in the 19th Observation was determin'd by the |
| Colours which it exhibited. And so the bigness of the parts of natural |
| Bodies may be conjectured by their Colours, as shall be hereafter shewn. |
| Also, if two or more very thin Plates be laid one upon another, so as to |
| compose one Plate equalling them all in thickness, the resulting Colour |
| may be hereby determin'd. For instance, Mr. _Hook_ observed, as is |
| mentioned in his _Micrographia_, that a faint yellow Plate of _Muscovy_ |
| Glass laid upon a blue one, constituted a very deep purple. The yellow |
| of the first Order is a faint one, and the thickness of the Plate |
| exhibiting it, according to the Table is 4-3/5, to which add 9, the |
| thickness exhibiting blue of the second Order, and the Sum will be |
| 13-3/5, which is the thickness exhibiting the purple of the third Order. |
| |
| To explain, in the next place, the circumstances of the 2d and 3d |
| Observations; that is, how the Rings of the Colours may (by turning the |
| Prisms about their common Axis the contrary way to that expressed in |
| those Observations) be converted into white and black Rings, and |
| afterwards into Rings of Colours again, the Colours of each Ring lying |
| now in an inverted order; it must be remember'd, that those Rings of |
| Colours are dilated by the obliquation of the Rays to the Air which |
| intercedes the Glasses, and that according to the Table in the 7th |
| Observation, their Dilatation or Increase of their Diameter is most |
| manifest and speedy when they are obliquest. Now the Rays of yellow |
| being more refracted by the first Superficies of the said Air than those |
| of red, are thereby made more oblique to the second Superficies, at |
| which they are reflected to produce the colour'd Rings, and consequently |
| the yellow Circle in each Ring will be more dilated than the red; and |
| the Excess of its Dilatation will be so much the greater, by how much |
| the greater is the obliquity of the Rays, until at last it become of |
| equal extent with the red of the same Ring. And for the same reason the |
| green, blue and violet, will be also so much dilated by the still |
| greater obliquity of their Rays, as to become all very nearly of equal |
| extent with the red, that is, equally distant from the center of the |
| Rings. And then all the Colours of the same Ring must be co-incident, |
| and by their mixture exhibit a white Ring. And these white Rings must |
| have black and dark Rings between them, because they do not spread and |
| interfere with one another, as before. And for that reason also they |
| must become distincter, and visible to far greater numbers. But yet the |
| violet being obliquest will be something more dilated, in proportion to |
| its extent, than the other Colours, and so very apt to appear at the |
| exterior Verges of the white. |
| |
| Afterwards, by a greater obliquity of the Rays, the violet and blue |
| become more sensibly dilated than the red and yellow, and so being |
| farther removed from the center of the Rings, the Colours must emerge |
| out of the white in an order contrary to that which they had before; the |
| violet and blue at the exterior Limbs of each Ring, and the red and |
| yellow at the interior. And the violet, by reason of the greatest |
| obliquity of its Rays, being in proportion most of all expanded, will |
| soonest appear at the exterior Limb of each white Ring, and become more |
| conspicuous than the rest. And the several Series of Colours belonging |
| to the several Rings, will, by their unfolding and spreading, begin |
| again to interfere, and thereby render the Rings less distinct, and not |
| visible to so great numbers. |
| |
| If instead of the Prisms the Object-glasses be made use of, the Rings |
| which they exhibit become not white and distinct by the obliquity of the |
| Eye, by reason that the Rays in their passage through that Air which |
| intercedes the Glasses are very nearly parallel to those Lines in which |
| they were first incident on the Glasses, and consequently the Rays |
| endued with several Colours are not inclined one more than another to |
| that Air, as it happens in the Prisms. |
| |
| There is yet another circumstance of these Experiments to be consider'd, |
| and that is why the black and white Rings which when view'd at a |
| distance appear distinct, should not only become confused by viewing |
| them near at hand, but also yield a violet Colour at both the edges of |
| every white Ring. And the reason is, that the Rays which enter the Eye |
| at several parts of the Pupil, have several Obliquities to the Glasses, |
| and those which are most oblique, if consider'd apart, would represent |
| the Rings bigger than those which are the least oblique. Whence the |
| breadth of the Perimeter of every white Ring is expanded outwards by the |
| obliquest Rays, and inwards by the least oblique. And this Expansion is |
| so much the greater by how much the greater is the difference of the |
| Obliquity; that is, by how much the Pupil is wider, or the Eye nearer to |
| the Glasses. And the breadth of the violet must be most expanded, |
| because the Rays apt to excite a Sensation of that Colour are most |
| oblique to a second or farther Superficies of the thinn'd Air at which |
| they are reflected, and have also the greatest variation of Obliquity, |
| which makes that Colour soonest emerge out of the edges of the white. |
| And as the breadth of every Ring is thus augmented, the dark Intervals |
| must be diminish'd, until the neighbouring Rings become continuous, and |
| are blended, the exterior first, and then those nearer the center; so |
| that they can no longer be distinguish'd apart, but seem to constitute |
| an even and uniform whiteness. |
| |
| Among all the Observations there is none accompanied with so odd |
| circumstances as the twenty-fourth. Of those the principal are, that in |
| thin Plates, which to the naked Eye seem of an even and uniform |
| transparent whiteness, without any terminations of Shadows, the |
| Refraction of a Prism should make Rings of Colours appear, whereas it |
| usually makes Objects appear colour'd only there where they are |
| terminated with Shadows, or have parts unequally luminous; and that it |
| should make those Rings exceedingly distinct and white, although it |
| usually renders Objects confused and coloured. The Cause of these things |
| you will understand by considering, that all the Rings of Colours are |
| really in the Plate, when view'd with the naked Eye, although by reason |
| of the great breadth of their Circumferences they so much interfere and |
| are blended together, that they seem to constitute an uniform whiteness. |
| But when the Rays pass through the Prism to the Eye, the Orbits of the |
| several Colours in every Ring are refracted, some more than others, |
| according to their degrees of Refrangibility: By which means the Colours |
| on one side of the Ring (that is in the circumference on one side of its |
| center), become more unfolded and dilated, and those on the other side |
| more complicated and contracted. And where by a due Refraction they are |
| so much contracted, that the several Rings become narrower than to |
| interfere with one another, they must appear distinct, and also white, |
| if the constituent Colours be so much contracted as to be wholly |
| co-incident. But on the other side, where the Orbit of every Ring is |
| made broader by the farther unfolding of its Colours, it must interfere |
| more with other Rings than before, and so become less distinct. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 7.] |
| |
| To explain this a little farther, suppose the concentrick Circles AV, |
| and BX, [in _Fig._ 7.] represent the red and violet of any Order, which, |
| together with the intermediate Colours, constitute any one of these |
| Rings. Now these being view'd through a Prism, the violet Circle BX, |
| will, by a greater Refraction, be farther translated from its place than |
| the red AV, and so approach nearer to it on that side of the Circles, |
| towards which the Refractions are made. For instance, if the red be |
| translated to _av_, the violet may be translated to _bx_, so as to |
| approach nearer to it at _x_ than before; and if the red be farther |
| translated to av, the violet may be so much farther translated to bx as |
| to convene with it at x; and if the red be yet farther translated to |
| [Greek: aY], the violet may be still so much farther translated to |
| [Greek: bx] as to pass beyond it at [Greek: x], and convene with it at |
| _e_ and _f_. And this being understood not only of the red and violet, |
| but of all the other intermediate Colours, and also of every revolution |
| of those Colours, you will easily perceive how those of the same |
| revolution or order, by their nearness at _xv_ and [Greek: Yx], and |
| their coincidence at xv, _e_ and _f_, ought to constitute pretty |
| distinct Arcs of Circles, especially at xv, or at _e_ and _f_; and that |
| they will appear severally at _x_[Greek: u] and at xv exhibit whiteness |
| by their coincidence, and again appear severally at [Greek: Yx], but yet |
| in a contrary order to that which they had before, and still retain |
| beyond _e_ and _f_. But on the other side, at _ab_, ab, or [Greek: ab], |
| these Colours must become much more confused by being dilated and spread |
| so as to interfere with those of other Orders. And the same confusion |
| will happen at [Greek: Ux] between _e_ and _f_, if the Refraction be |
| very great, or the Prism very distant from the Object-glasses: In which |
| case no parts of the Rings will be seen, save only two little Arcs at |
| _e_ and _f_, whose distance from one another will be augmented by |
| removing the Prism still farther from the Object-glasses: And these |
| little Arcs must be distinctest and whitest at their middle, and at |
| their ends, where they begin to grow confused, they must be colour'd. |
| And the Colours at one end of every Arc must be in a contrary order to |
| those at the other end, by reason that they cross in the intermediate |
| white; namely, their ends, which verge towards [Greek: Ux], will be red |
| and yellow on that side next the center, and blue and violet on the |
| other side. But their other ends which verge from [Greek: Ux], will on |
| the contrary be blue and violet on that side towards the center, and on |
| the other side red and yellow. |
| |
| Now as all these things follow from the properties of Light by a |
| mathematical way of reasoning, so the truth of them may be manifested by |
| Experiments. For in a dark Room, by viewing these Rings through a Prism, |
| by reflexion of the several prismatick Colours, which an assistant |
| causes to move to and fro upon a Wall or Paper from whence they are |
| reflected, whilst the Spectator's Eye, the Prism, and the |
| Object-glasses, (as in the 13th Observation,) are placed steady; the |
| Position of the Circles made successively by the several Colours, will |
| be found such, in respect of one another, as I have described in the |
| Figures _abxv_, or abxv, or _[Greek: abxU]_. And by the same method the |
| truth of the Explications of other Observations may be examined. |
| |
| By what hath been said, the like Phænomena of Water and thin Plates of |
| Glass may be understood. But in small fragments of those Plates there is |
| this farther observable, that where they lie flat upon a Table, and are |
| turned about their centers whilst they are view'd through a Prism, they |
| will in some postures exhibit Waves of various Colours; and some of them |
| exhibit these Waves in one or two Positions only, but the most of them |
| do in all Positions exhibit them, and make them for the most part appear |
| almost all over the Plates. The reason is, that the Superficies of such |
| Plates are not even, but have many Cavities and Swellings, which, how |
| shallow soever, do a little vary the thickness of the Plate. For at the |
| several sides of those Cavities, for the Reasons newly described, there |
| ought to be produced Waves in several postures of the Prism. Now though |
| it be but some very small and narrower parts of the Glass, by which |
| these Waves for the most part are caused, yet they may seem to extend |
| themselves over the whole Glass, because from the narrowest of those |
| parts there are Colours of several Orders, that is, of several Rings, |
| confusedly reflected, which by Refraction of the Prism are unfolded, |
| separated, and, according to their degrees of Refraction, dispersed to |
| several places, so as to constitute so many several Waves, as there were |
| divers orders of Colours promiscuously reflected from that part of the |
| Glass. |
| |
| These are the principal Phænomena of thin Plates or Bubbles, whose |
| Explications depend on the properties of Light, which I have heretofore |
| deliver'd. And these you see do necessarily follow from them, and agree |
| with them, even to their very least circumstances; and not only so, but |
| do very much tend to their proof. Thus, by the 24th Observation it |
| appears, that the Rays of several Colours, made as well by thin Plates |
| or Bubbles, as by Refractions of a Prism, have several degrees of |
| Refrangibility; whereby those of each order, which at the reflexion from |
| the Plate or Bubble are intermix'd with those of other orders, are |
| separated from them by Refraction, and associated together so as to |
| become visible by themselves like Arcs of Circles. For if the Rays were |
| all alike refrangible, 'tis impossible that the whiteness, which to the |
| naked Sense appears uniform, should by Refraction have its parts |
| transposed and ranged into those black and white Arcs. |
| |
| It appears also that the unequal Refractions of difform Rays proceed not |
| from any contingent irregularities; such as are Veins, an uneven Polish, |
| or fortuitous Position of the Pores of Glass; unequal and casual Motions |
| in the Air or Æther, the spreading, breaking, or dividing the same Ray |
| into many diverging parts; or the like. For, admitting any such |
| irregularities, it would be impossible for Refractions to render those |
| Rings so very distinct, and well defined, as they do in the 24th |
| Observation. It is necessary therefore that every Ray have its proper |
| and constant degree of Refrangibility connate with it, according to |
| which its refraction is ever justly and regularly perform'd; and that |
| several Rays have several of those degrees. |
| |
| And what is said of their Refrangibility may be also understood of their |
| Reflexibility, that is, of their Dispositions to be reflected, some at a |
| greater, and others at a less thickness of thin Plates or Bubbles; |
| namely, that those Dispositions are also connate with the Rays, and |
| immutable; as may appear by the 13th, 14th, and 15th Observations, |
| compared with the fourth and eighteenth. |
| |
| By the Precedent Observations it appears also, that whiteness is a |
| dissimilar mixture of all Colours, and that Light is a mixture of Rays |
| endued with all those Colours. For, considering the multitude of the |
| Rings of Colours in the 3d, 12th, and 24th Observations, it is manifest, |
| that although in the 4th and 18th Observations there appear no more than |
| eight or nine of those Rings, yet there are really a far greater number, |
| which so much interfere and mingle with one another, as after those |
| eight or nine revolutions to dilute one another wholly, and constitute |
| an even and sensibly uniform whiteness. And consequently that whiteness |
| must be allow'd a mixture of all Colours, and the Light which conveys it |
| to the Eye must be a mixture of Rays endued with all those Colours. |
| |
| But farther; by the 24th Observation it appears, that there is a |
| constant relation between Colours and Refrangibility; the most |
| refrangible Rays being violet, the least refrangible red, and those of |
| intermediate Colours having proportionably intermediate degrees of |
| Refrangibility. And by the 13th, 14th, and 15th Observations, compared |
| with the 4th or 18th there appears to be the same constant relation |
| between Colour and Reflexibility; the violet being in like circumstances |
| reflected at least thicknesses of any thin Plate or Bubble, the red at |
| greatest thicknesses, and the intermediate Colours at intermediate |
| thicknesses. Whence it follows, that the colorifick Dispositions of |
| Rays are also connate with them, and immutable; and by consequence, that |
| all the Productions and Appearances of Colours in the World are derived, |
| not from any physical Change caused in Light by Refraction or Reflexion, |
| but only from the various Mixtures or Separations of Rays, by virtue of |
| their different Refrangibility or Reflexibility. And in this respect the |
| Science of Colours becomes a Speculation as truly mathematical as any |
| other part of Opticks. I mean, so far as they depend on the Nature of |
| Light, and are not produced or alter'd by the Power of Imagination, or |
| by striking or pressing the Eye. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE |
| |
| SECOND BOOK |
| |
| OF |
| |
| OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| _PART III._ |
| |
| _Of the permanent Colours of natural Bodies, and the Analogy between |
| them and the Colours of thin transparent Plates._ |
| |
| I am now come to another part of this Design, which is to consider how |
| the Phænomena of thin transparent Plates stand related to those of all |
| other natural Bodies. Of these Bodies I have already told you that they |
| appear of divers Colours, accordingly as they are disposed to reflect |
| most copiously the Rays originally endued with those Colours. But their |
| Constitutions, whereby they reflect some Rays more copiously than |
| others, remain to be discover'd; and these I shall endeavour to manifest |
| in the following Propositions. |
| |
| |
| PROP. I. |
| |
| _Those Superficies of transparent Bodies reflect the greatest quantity |
| of Light, which have the greatest refracting Power; that is, which |
| intercede Mediums that differ most in their refractive Densities. And in |
| the Confines of equally refracting Mediums there is no Reflexion._ |
| |
| The Analogy between Reflexion and Refraction will appear by considering, |
| that when Light passeth obliquely out of one Medium into another which |
| refracts from the perpendicular, the greater is the difference of their |
| refractive Density, the less Obliquity of Incidence is requisite to |
| cause a total Reflexion. For as the Sines are which measure the |
| Refraction, so is the Sine of Incidence at which the total Reflexion |
| begins, to the Radius of the Circle; and consequently that Angle of |
| Incidence is least where there is the greatest difference of the Sines. |
| Thus in the passing of Light out of Water into Air, where the Refraction |
| is measured by the Ratio of the Sines 3 to 4, the total Reflexion begins |
| when the Angle of Incidence is about 48 Degrees 35 Minutes. In passing |
| out of Glass into Air, where the Refraction is measured by the Ratio of |
| the Sines 20 to 31, the total Reflexion begins when the Angle of |
| Incidence is 40 Degrees 10 Minutes; and so in passing out of Crystal, or |
| more strongly refracting Mediums into Air, there is still a less |
| obliquity requisite to cause a total reflexion. Superficies therefore |
| which refract most do soonest reflect all the Light which is incident on |
| them, and so must be allowed most strongly reflexive. |
| |
| But the truth of this Proposition will farther appear by observing, that |
| in the Superficies interceding two transparent Mediums, (such as are |
| Air, Water, Oil, common Glass, Crystal, metalline Glasses, Island |
| Glasses, white transparent Arsenick, Diamonds, &c.) the Reflexion is |
| stronger or weaker accordingly, as the Superficies hath a greater or |
| less refracting Power. For in the Confine of Air and Sal-gem 'tis |
| stronger than in the Confine of Air and Water, and still stronger in the |
| Confine of Air and common Glass or Crystal, and stronger in the Confine |
| of Air and a Diamond. If any of these, and such like transparent Solids, |
| be immerged in Water, its Reflexion becomes, much weaker than before; |
| and still weaker if they be immerged in the more strongly refracting |
| Liquors of well rectified Oil of Vitriol or Spirit of Turpentine. If |
| Water be distinguish'd into two parts by any imaginary Surface, the |
| Reflexion in the Confine of those two parts is none at all. In the |
| Confine of Water and Ice 'tis very little; in that of Water and Oil 'tis |
| something greater; in that of Water and Sal-gem still greater; and in |
| that of Water and Glass, or Crystal or other denser Substances still |
| greater, accordingly as those Mediums differ more or less in their |
| refracting Powers. Hence in the Confine of common Glass and Crystal, |
| there ought to be a weak Reflexion, and a stronger Reflexion in the |
| Confine of common and metalline Glass; though I have not yet tried |
| this. But in the Confine of two Glasses of equal density, there is not |
| any sensible Reflexion; as was shewn in the first Observation. And the |
| same may be understood of the Superficies interceding two Crystals, or |
| two Liquors, or any other Substances in which no Refraction is caused. |
| So then the reason why uniform pellucid Mediums (such as Water, Glass, |
| or Crystal,) have no sensible Reflexion but in their external |
| Superficies, where they are adjacent to other Mediums of a different |
| density, is because all their contiguous parts have one and the same |
| degree of density. |
| |
| |
| PROP. II. |
| |
| _The least parts of almost all natural Bodies are in some measure |
| transparent: And the Opacity of those Bodies ariseth from the multitude |
| of Reflexions caused in their internal Parts._ |
| |
| That this is so has been observed by others, and will easily be granted |
| by them that have been conversant with Microscopes. And it may be also |
| tried by applying any substance to a hole through which some Light is |
| immitted into a dark Room. For how opake soever that Substance may seem |
| in the open Air, it will by that means appear very manifestly |
| transparent, if it be of a sufficient thinness. Only white metalline |
| Bodies must be excepted, which by reason of their excessive density seem |
| to reflect almost all the Light incident on their first Superficies; |
| unless by solution in Menstruums they be reduced into very small |
| Particles, and then they become transparent. |
| |
| |
| PROP. III. |
| |
| _Between the parts of opake and colour'd Bodies are many Spaces, either |
| empty, or replenish'd with Mediums of other Densities; as Water between |
| the tinging Corpuscles wherewith any Liquor is impregnated, Air between |
| the aqueous Globules that constitute Clouds or Mists; and for the most |
| part Spaces void of both Air and Water, but yet perhaps not wholly void |
| of all Substance, between the parts of hard Bodies._ |
| |
| The truth of this is evinced by the two precedent Propositions: For by |
| the second Proposition there are many Reflexions made by the internal |
| parts of Bodies, which, by the first Proposition, would not happen if |
| the parts of those Bodies were continued without any such Interstices |
| between them; because Reflexions are caused only in Superficies, which |
| intercede Mediums of a differing density, by _Prop._ 1. |
| |
| But farther, that this discontinuity of parts is the principal Cause of |
| the opacity of Bodies, will appear by considering, that opake Substances |
| become transparent by filling their Pores with any Substance of equal or |
| almost equal density with their parts. Thus Paper dipped in Water or |
| Oil, the _Oculus Mundi_ Stone steep'd in Water, Linnen Cloth oiled or |
| varnish'd, and many other Substances soaked in such Liquors as will |
| intimately pervade their little Pores, become by that means more |
| transparent than otherwise; so, on the contrary, the most transparent |
| Substances, may, by evacuating their Pores, or separating their parts, |
| be render'd sufficiently opake; as Salts or wet Paper, or the _Oculus |
| Mundi_ Stone by being dried, Horn by being scraped, Glass by being |
| reduced to Powder, or otherwise flawed; Turpentine by being stirred |
| about with Water till they mix imperfectly, and Water by being form'd |
| into many small Bubbles, either alone in the form of Froth, or by |
| shaking it together with Oil of Turpentine, or Oil Olive, or with some |
| other convenient Liquor, with which it will not perfectly incorporate. |
| And to the increase of the opacity of these Bodies, it conduces |
| something, that by the 23d Observation the Reflexions of very thin |
| transparent Substances are considerably stronger than those made by the |
| same Substances of a greater thickness. |
| |
| |
| PROP. IV. |
| |
| _The Parts of Bodies and their Interstices must not be less than of some |
| definite bigness, to render them opake and colour'd._ |
| |
| For the opakest Bodies, if their parts be subtilly divided, (as Metals, |
| by being dissolved in acid Menstruums, &c.) become perfectly |
| transparent. And you may also remember, that in the eighth Observation |
| there was no sensible reflexion at the Superficies of the |
| Object-glasses, where they were very near one another, though they did |
| not absolutely touch. And in the 17th Observation the Reflexion of the |
| Water-bubble where it became thinnest was almost insensible, so as to |
| cause very black Spots to appear on the top of the Bubble, by the want |
| of reflected Light. |
| |
| On these grounds I perceive it is that Water, Salt, Glass, Stones, and |
| such like Substances, are transparent. For, upon divers Considerations, |
| they seem to be as full of Pores or Interstices between their parts as |
| other Bodies are, but yet their Parts and Interstices to be too small to |
| cause Reflexions in their common Surfaces. |
| |
| |
| PROP. V. |
| |
| _The transparent parts of Bodies, according to their several sizes, |
| reflect Rays of one Colour, and transmit those of another, on the same |
| grounds that thin Plates or Bubbles do reflect or transmit those Rays. |
| And this I take to be the ground of all their Colours._ |
| |
| For if a thinn'd or plated Body, which being of an even thickness, |
| appears all over of one uniform Colour, should be slit into Threads, or |
| broken into Fragments, of the same thickness with the Plate; I see no |
| reason why every Thread or Fragment should not keep its Colour, and by |
| consequence why a heap of those Threads or Fragments should not |
| constitute a Mass or Powder of the same Colour, which the Plate |
| exhibited before it was broken. And the parts of all natural Bodies |
| being like so many Fragments of a Plate, must on the same grounds |
| exhibit the same Colours. |
| |
| Now, that they do so will appear by the affinity of their Properties. |
| The finely colour'd Feathers of some Birds, and particularly those of |
| Peacocks Tails, do, in the very same part of the Feather, appear of |
| several Colours in several Positions of the Eye, after the very same |
| manner that thin Plates were found to do in the 7th and 19th |
| Observations, and therefore their Colours arise from the thinness of the |
| transparent parts of the Feathers; that is, from the slenderness of the |
| very fine Hairs, or _Capillamenta_, which grow out of the sides of the |
| grosser lateral Branches or Fibres of those Feathers. And to the same |
| purpose it is, that the Webs of some Spiders, by being spun very fine, |
| have appeared colour'd, as some have observ'd, and that the colour'd |
| Fibres of some Silks, by varying the Position of the Eye, do vary their |
| Colour. Also the Colours of Silks, Cloths, and other Substances, which |
| Water or Oil can intimately penetrate, become more faint and obscure by |
| being immerged in those Liquors, and recover their Vigor again by being |
| dried; much after the manner declared of thin Bodies in the 10th and |
| 21st Observations. Leaf-Gold, some sorts of painted Glass, the Infusion |
| of _Lignum Nephriticum_, and some other Substances, reflect one Colour, |
| and transmit another; like thin Bodies in the 9th and 20th Observations. |
| And some of those colour'd Powders which Painters use, may have their |
| Colours a little changed, by being very elaborately and finely ground. |
| Where I see not what can be justly pretended for those changes, besides |
| the breaking of their parts into less parts by that contrition, after |
| the same manner that the Colour of a thin Plate is changed by varying |
| its thickness. For which reason also it is that the colour'd Flowers of |
| Plants and Vegetables, by being bruised, usually become more transparent |
| than before, or at least in some degree or other change their Colours. |
| Nor is it much less to my purpose, that, by mixing divers Liquors, very |
| odd and remarkable Productions and Changes of Colours may be effected, |
| of which no cause can be more obvious and rational than that the saline |
| Corpuscles of one Liquor do variously act upon or unite with the tinging |
| Corpuscles of another, so as to make them swell, or shrink, (whereby not |
| only their bulk but their density also may be changed,) or to divide |
| them into smaller Corpuscles, (whereby a colour'd Liquor may become |
| transparent,) or to make many of them associate into one cluster, |
| whereby two transparent Liquors may compose a colour'd one. For we see |
| how apt those saline Menstruums are to penetrate and dissolve Substances |
| to which they are applied, and some of them to precipitate what others |
| dissolve. In like manner, if we consider the various Phænomena of the |
| Atmosphere, we may observe, that when Vapours are first raised, they |
| hinder not the transparency of the Air, being divided into parts too |
| small to cause any Reflexion in their Superficies. But when in order to |
| compose drops of Rain they begin to coalesce and constitute Globules of |
| all intermediate sizes, those Globules, when they become of convenient |
| size to reflect some Colours and transmit others, may constitute Clouds |
| of various Colours according to their sizes. And I see not what can be |
| rationally conceived in so transparent a Substance as Water for the |
| production of these Colours, besides the various sizes of its fluid and |
| globular Parcels. |
| |
| |
| PROP. VI. |
| |
| _The parts of Bodies on which their Colours depend, are denser than the |
| Medium which pervades their Interstices._ |
| |
| This will appear by considering, that the Colour of a Body depends not |
| only on the Rays which are incident perpendicularly on its parts, but on |
| those also which are incident at all other Angles. And that according to |
| the 7th Observation, a very little variation of obliquity will change |
| the reflected Colour, where the thin Body or small Particles is rarer |
| than the ambient Medium, insomuch that such a small Particle will at |
| diversly oblique Incidences reflect all sorts of Colours, in so great a |
| variety that the Colour resulting from them all, confusedly reflected |
| from a heap of such Particles, must rather be a white or grey than any |
| other Colour, or at best it must be but a very imperfect and dirty |
| Colour. Whereas if the thin Body or small Particle be much denser than |
| the ambient Medium, the Colours, according to the 19th Observation, are |
| so little changed by the variation of obliquity, that the Rays which |
| are reflected least obliquely may predominate over the rest, so much as |
| to cause a heap of such Particles to appear very intensely of their |
| Colour. |
| |
| It conduces also something to the confirmation of this Proposition, |
| that, according to the 22d Observation, the Colours exhibited by the |
| denser thin Body within the rarer, are more brisk than those exhibited |
| by the rarer within the denser. |
| |
| |
| PROP. VII. |
| |
| _The bigness of the component parts of natural Bodies may be conjectured |
| by their Colours._ |
| |
| For since the parts of these Bodies, by _Prop._ 5. do most probably |
| exhibit the same Colours with a Plate of equal thickness, provided they |
| have the same refractive density; and since their parts seem for the |
| most part to have much the same density with Water or Glass, as by many |
| circumstances is obvious to collect; to determine the sizes of those |
| parts, you need only have recourse to the precedent Tables, in which the |
| thickness of Water or Glass exhibiting any Colour is expressed. Thus if |
| it be desired to know the diameter of a Corpuscle, which being of equal |
| density with Glass shall reflect green of the third Order; the Number |
| 16-1/4 shews it to be (16-1/4)/10000 parts of an Inch. |
| |
| The greatest difficulty is here to know of what Order the Colour of any |
| Body is. And for this end we must have recourse to the 4th and 18th |
| Observations; from whence may be collected these particulars. |
| |
| _Scarlets_, and other _reds_, _oranges_, and _yellows_, if they be pure |
| and intense, are most probably of the second order. Those of the first |
| and third order also may be pretty good; only the yellow of the first |
| order is faint, and the orange and red of the third Order have a great |
| Mixture of violet and blue. |
| |
| There may be good _Greens_ of the fourth Order, but the purest are of |
| the third. And of this Order the green of all Vegetables seems to be, |
| partly by reason of the Intenseness of their Colours, and partly because |
| when they wither some of them turn to a greenish yellow, and others to a |
| more perfect yellow or orange, or perhaps to red, passing first through |
| all the aforesaid intermediate Colours. Which Changes seem to be |
| effected by the exhaling of the Moisture which may leave the tinging |
| Corpuscles more dense, and something augmented by the Accretion of the |
| oily and earthy Part of that Moisture. Now the green, without doubt, is |
| of the same Order with those Colours into which it changeth, because the |
| Changes are gradual, and those Colours, though usually not very full, |
| yet are often too full and lively to be of the fourth Order. |
| |
| _Blues_ and _Purples_ may be either of the second or third Order, but |
| the best are of the third. Thus the Colour of Violets seems to be of |
| that Order, because their Syrup by acid Liquors turns red, and by |
| urinous and alcalizate turns green. For since it is of the Nature of |
| Acids to dissolve or attenuate, and of Alcalies to precipitate or |
| incrassate, if the Purple Colour of the Syrup was of the second Order, |
| an acid Liquor by attenuating its tinging Corpuscles would change it to |
| a red of the first Order, and an Alcali by incrassating them would |
| change it to a green of the second Order; which red and green, |
| especially the green, seem too imperfect to be the Colours produced by |
| these Changes. But if the said Purple be supposed of the third Order, |
| its Change to red of the second, and green of the third, may without any |
| Inconvenience be allow'd. |
| |
| If there be found any Body of a deeper and less reddish Purple than that |
| of the Violets, its Colour most probably is of the second Order. But yet |
| there being no Body commonly known whose Colour is constantly more deep |
| than theirs, I have made use of their Name to denote the deepest and |
| least reddish Purples, such as manifestly transcend their Colour in |
| purity. |
| |
| The _blue_ of the first Order, though very faint and little, may |
| possibly be the Colour of some Substances; and particularly the azure |
| Colour of the Skies seems to be of this Order. For all Vapours when they |
| begin to condense and coalesce into small Parcels, become first of that |
| Bigness, whereby such an Azure must be reflected before they can |
| constitute Clouds of other Colours. And so this being the first Colour |
| which Vapours begin to reflect, it ought to be the Colour of the finest |
| and most transparent Skies, in which Vapours are not arrived to that |
| Grossness requisite to reflect other Colours, as we find it is by |
| Experience. |
| |
| _Whiteness_, if most intense and luminous, is that of the first Order, |
| if less strong and luminous, a Mixture of the Colours of several Orders. |
| Of this last kind is the Whiteness of Froth, Paper, Linnen, and most |
| white Substances; of the former I reckon that of white Metals to be. For |
| whilst the densest of Metals, Gold, if foliated, is transparent, and all |
| Metals become transparent if dissolved in Menstruums or vitrified, the |
| Opacity of white Metals ariseth not from their Density alone. They being |
| less dense than Gold would be more transparent than it, did not some |
| other Cause concur with their Density to make them opake. And this Cause |
| I take to be such a Bigness of their Particles as fits them to reflect |
| the white of the first order. For, if they be of other Thicknesses they |
| may reflect other Colours, as is manifest by the Colours which appear |
| upon hot Steel in tempering it, and sometimes upon the Surface of melted |
| Metals in the Skin or Scoria which arises upon them in their cooling. |
| And as the white of the first order is the strongest which can be made |
| by Plates of transparent Substances, so it ought to be stronger in the |
| denser Substances of Metals than in the rarer of Air, Water, and Glass. |
| Nor do I see but that metallick Substances of such a Thickness as may |
| fit them to reflect the white of the first order, may, by reason of |
| their great Density (according to the Tenor of the first of these |
| Propositions) reflect all the Light incident upon them, and so be as |
| opake and splendent as it's possible for any Body to be. Gold, or Copper |
| mix'd with less than half their Weight of Silver, or Tin, or Regulus of |
| Antimony, in fusion, or amalgamed with a very little Mercury, become |
| white; which shews both that the Particles of white Metals have much |
| more Superficies, and so are smaller, than those of Gold and Copper, and |
| also that they are so opake as not to suffer the Particles of Gold or |
| Copper to shine through them. Now it is scarce to be doubted but that |
| the Colours of Gold and Copper are of the second and third order, and |
| therefore the Particles of white Metals cannot be much bigger than is |
| requisite to make them reflect the white of the first order. The |
| Volatility of Mercury argues that they are not much bigger, nor may they |
| be much less, lest they lose their Opacity, and become either |
| transparent as they do when attenuated by Vitrification, or by Solution |
| in Menstruums, or black as they do when ground smaller, by rubbing |
| Silver, or Tin, or Lead, upon other Substances to draw black Lines. The |
| first and only Colour which white Metals take by grinding their |
| Particles smaller, is black, and therefore their white ought to be that |
| which borders upon the black Spot in the Center of the Rings of Colours, |
| that is, the white of the first order. But, if you would hence gather |
| the Bigness of metallick Particles, you must allow for their Density. |
| For were Mercury transparent, its Density is such that the Sine of |
| Incidence upon it (by my Computation) would be to the Sine of its |
| Refraction, as 71 to 20, or 7 to 2. And therefore the Thickness of its |
| Particles, that they may exhibit the same Colours with those of Bubbles |
| of Water, ought to be less than the Thickness of the Skin of those |
| Bubbles in the Proportion of 2 to 7. Whence it's possible, that the |
| Particles of Mercury may be as little as the Particles of some |
| transparent and volatile Fluids, and yet reflect the white of the first |
| order. |
| |
| Lastly, for the production of _black_, the Corpuscles must be less than |
| any of those which exhibit Colours. For at all greater sizes there is |
| too much Light reflected to constitute this Colour. But if they be |
| supposed a little less than is requisite to reflect the white and very |
| faint blue of the first order, they will, according to the 4th, 8th, |
| 17th and 18th Observations, reflect so very little Light as to appear |
| intensely black, and yet may perhaps variously refract it to and fro |
| within themselves so long, until it happen to be stifled and lost, by |
| which means they will appear black in all positions of the Eye without |
| any transparency. And from hence may be understood why Fire, and the |
| more subtile dissolver Putrefaction, by dividing the Particles of |
| Substances, turn them to black, why small quantities of black Substances |
| impart their Colour very freely and intensely to other Substances to |
| which they are applied; the minute Particles of these, by reason of |
| their very great number, easily overspreading the gross Particles of |
| others; why Glass ground very elaborately with Sand on a Copper Plate, |
| 'till it be well polish'd, makes the Sand, together with what is worn |
| off from the Glass and Copper, become very black: why black Substances |
| do soonest of all others become hot in the Sun's Light and burn, (which |
| Effect may proceed partly from the multitude of Refractions in a little |
| room, and partly from the easy Commotion of so very small Corpuscles;) |
| and why blacks are usually a little inclined to a bluish Colour. For |
| that they are so may be seen by illuminating white Paper by Light |
| reflected from black Substances. For the Paper will usually appear of a |
| bluish white; and the reason is, that black borders in the obscure blue |
| of the order described in the 18th Observation, and therefore reflects |
| more Rays of that Colour than of any other. |
| |
| In these Descriptions I have been the more particular, because it is not |
| impossible but that Microscopes may at length be improved to the |
| discovery of the Particles of Bodies on which their Colours depend, if |
| they are not already in some measure arrived to that degree of |
| perfection. For if those Instruments are or can be so far improved as |
| with sufficient distinctness to represent Objects five or six hundred |
| times bigger than at a Foot distance they appear to our naked Eyes, I |
| should hope that we might be able to discover some of the greatest of |
| those Corpuscles. And by one that would magnify three or four thousand |
| times perhaps they might all be discover'd, but those which produce |
| blackness. In the mean while I see nothing material in this Discourse |
| that may rationally be doubted of, excepting this Position: That |
| transparent Corpuscles of the same thickness and density with a Plate, |
| do exhibit the same Colour. And this I would have understood not without |
| some Latitude, as well because those Corpuscles may be of irregular |
| Figures, and many Rays must be obliquely incident on them, and so have |
| a shorter way through them than the length of their Diameters, as |
| because the straitness of the Medium put in on all sides within such |
| Corpuscles may a little alter its Motions or other qualities on which |
| the Reflexion depends. But yet I cannot much suspect the last, because I |
| have observed of some small Plates of Muscovy Glass which were of an |
| even thickness, that through a Microscope they have appeared of the same |
| Colour at their edges and corners where the included Medium was |
| terminated, which they appeared of in other places. However it will add |
| much to our Satisfaction, if those Corpuscles can be discover'd with |
| Microscopes; which if we shall at length attain to, I fear it will be |
| the utmost improvement of this Sense. For it seems impossible to see the |
| more secret and noble Works of Nature within the Corpuscles by reason of |
| their transparency. |
| |
| |
| PROP. VIII. |
| |
| _The Cause of Reflexion is not the impinging of Light on the solid or |
| impervious parts of Bodies, as is commonly believed._ |
| |
| This will appear by the following Considerations. First, That in the |
| passage of Light out of Glass into Air there is a Reflexion as strong as |
| in its passage out of Air into Glass, or rather a little stronger, and |
| by many degrees stronger than in its passage out of Glass into Water. |
| And it seems not probable that Air should have more strongly reflecting |
| parts than Water or Glass. But if that should possibly be supposed, yet |
| it will avail nothing; for the Reflexion is as strong or stronger when |
| the Air is drawn away from the Glass, (suppose by the Air-Pump invented |
| by _Otto Gueriet_, and improved and made useful by Mr. _Boyle_) as when |
| it is adjacent to it. Secondly, If Light in its passage out of Glass |
| into Air be incident more obliquely than at an Angle of 40 or 41 Degrees |
| it is wholly reflected, if less obliquely it is in great measure |
| transmitted. Now it is not to be imagined that Light at one degree of |
| obliquity should meet with Pores enough in the Air to transmit the |
| greater part of it, and at another degree of obliquity should meet with |
| nothing but parts to reflect it wholly, especially considering that in |
| its passage out of Air into Glass, how oblique soever be its Incidence, |
| it finds Pores enough in the Glass to transmit a great part of it. If |
| any Man suppose that it is not reflected by the Air, but by the outmost |
| superficial parts of the Glass, there is still the same difficulty: |
| Besides, that such a Supposition is unintelligible, and will also appear |
| to be false by applying Water behind some part of the Glass instead of |
| Air. For so in a convenient obliquity of the Rays, suppose of 45 or 46 |
| Degrees, at which they are all reflected where the Air is adjacent to |
| the Glass, they shall be in great measure transmitted where the Water is |
| adjacent to it; which argues, that their Reflexion or Transmission |
| depends on the constitution of the Air and Water behind the Glass, and |
| not on the striking of the Rays upon the parts of the Glass. Thirdly, |
| If the Colours made by a Prism placed at the entrance of a Beam of Light |
| into a darken'd Room be successively cast on a second Prism placed at a |
| greater distance from the former, in such manner that they are all alike |
| incident upon it, the second Prism may be so inclined to the incident |
| Rays, that those which are of a blue Colour shall be all reflected by |
| it, and yet those of a red Colour pretty copiously transmitted. Now if |
| the Reflexion be caused by the parts of Air or Glass, I would ask, why |
| at the same Obliquity of Incidence the blue should wholly impinge on |
| those parts, so as to be all reflected, and yet the red find Pores |
| enough to be in a great measure transmitted. Fourthly, Where two Glasses |
| touch one another, there is no sensible Reflexion, as was declared in |
| the first Observation; and yet I see no reason why the Rays should not |
| impinge on the parts of Glass, as much when contiguous to other Glass as |
| when contiguous to Air. Fifthly, When the top of a Water-Bubble (in the |
| 17th Observation,) by the continual subsiding and exhaling of the Water |
| grew very thin, there was such a little and almost insensible quantity |
| of Light reflected from it, that it appeared intensely black; whereas |
| round about that black Spot, where the Water was thicker, the Reflexion |
| was so strong as to make the Water seem very white. Nor is it only at |
| the least thickness of thin Plates or Bubbles, that there is no manifest |
| Reflexion, but at many other thicknesses continually greater and |
| greater. For in the 15th Observation the Rays of the same Colour were by |
| turns transmitted at one thickness, and reflected at another thickness, |
| for an indeterminate number of Successions. And yet in the Superficies |
| of the thinned Body, where it is of any one thickness, there are as many |
| parts for the Rays to impinge on, as where it is of any other thickness. |
| Sixthly, If Reflexion were caused by the parts of reflecting Bodies, it |
| would be impossible for thin Plates or Bubbles, at one and the same |
| place, to reflect the Rays of one Colour, and transmit those of another, |
| as they do according to the 13th and 15th Observations. For it is not to |
| be imagined that at one place the Rays which, for instance, exhibit a |
| blue Colour, should have the fortune to dash upon the parts, and those |
| which exhibit a red to hit upon the Pores of the Body; and then at |
| another place, where the Body is either a little thicker or a little |
| thinner, that on the contrary the blue should hit upon its pores, and |
| the red upon its parts. Lastly, Were the Rays of Light reflected by |
| impinging on the solid parts of Bodies, their Reflexions from polish'd |
| Bodies could not be so regular as they are. For in polishing Glass with |
| Sand, Putty, or Tripoly, it is not to be imagined that those Substances |
| can, by grating and fretting the Glass, bring all its least Particles to |
| an accurate Polish; so that all their Surfaces shall be truly plain or |
| truly spherical, and look all the same way, so as together to compose |
| one even Surface. The smaller the Particles of those Substances are, the |
| smaller will be the Scratches by which they continually fret and wear |
| away the Glass until it be polish'd; but be they never so small they can |
| wear away the Glass no otherwise than by grating and scratching it, and |
| breaking the Protuberances; and therefore polish it no otherwise than by |
| bringing its roughness to a very fine Grain, so that the Scratches and |
| Frettings of the Surface become too small to be visible. And therefore |
| if Light were reflected by impinging upon the solid parts of the Glass, |
| it would be scatter'd as much by the most polish'd Glass as by the |
| roughest. So then it remains a Problem, how Glass polish'd by fretting |
| Substances can reflect Light so regularly as it does. And this Problem |
| is scarce otherwise to be solved, than by saying, that the Reflexion of |
| a Ray is effected, not by a single point of the reflecting Body, but by |
| some power of the Body which is evenly diffused all over its Surface, |
| and by which it acts upon the Ray without immediate Contact. For that |
| the parts of Bodies do act upon Light at a distance shall be shewn |
| hereafter. |
| |
| Now if Light be reflected, not by impinging on the solid parts of |
| Bodies, but by some other principle; it's probable that as many of its |
| Rays as impinge on the solid parts of Bodies are not reflected but |
| stifled and lost in the Bodies. For otherwise we must allow two sorts of |
| Reflexions. Should all the Rays be reflected which impinge on the |
| internal parts of clear Water or Crystal, those Substances would rather |
| have a cloudy Colour than a clear Transparency. To make Bodies look |
| black, it's necessary that many Rays be stopp'd, retained, and lost in |
| them; and it seems not probable that any Rays can be stopp'd and |
| stifled in them which do not impinge on their parts. |
| |
| And hence we may understand that Bodies are much more rare and porous |
| than is commonly believed. Water is nineteen times lighter, and by |
| consequence nineteen times rarer than Gold; and Gold is so rare as very |
| readily and without the least opposition to transmit the magnetick |
| Effluvia, and easily to admit Quicksilver into its Pores, and to let |
| Water pass through it. For a concave Sphere of Gold filled with Water, |
| and solder'd up, has, upon pressing the Sphere with great force, let the |
| Water squeeze through it, and stand all over its outside in multitudes |
| of small Drops, like Dew, without bursting or cracking the Body of the |
| Gold, as I have been inform'd by an Eye witness. From all which we may |
| conclude, that Gold has more Pores than solid parts, and by consequence |
| that Water has above forty times more Pores than Parts. And he that |
| shall find out an Hypothesis, by which Water may be so rare, and yet not |
| be capable of compression by force, may doubtless by the same Hypothesis |
| make Gold, and Water, and all other Bodies, as much rarer as he pleases; |
| so that Light may find a ready passage through transparent Substances. |
| |
| The Magnet acts upon Iron through all dense Bodies not magnetick nor red |
| hot, without any diminution of its Virtue; as for instance, through |
| Gold, Silver, Lead, Glass, Water. The gravitating Power of the Sun is |
| transmitted through the vast Bodies of the Planets without any |
| diminution, so as to act upon all their parts to their very centers |
| with the same Force and according to the same Laws, as if the part upon |
| which it acts were not surrounded with the Body of the Planet, The Rays |
| of Light, whether they be very small Bodies projected, or only Motion or |
| Force propagated, are moved in right Lines; and whenever a Ray of Light |
| is by any Obstacle turned out of its rectilinear way, it will never |
| return into the same rectilinear way, unless perhaps by very great |
| accident. And yet Light is transmitted through pellucid solid Bodies in |
| right Lines to very great distances. How Bodies can have a sufficient |
| quantity of Pores for producing these Effects is very difficult to |
| conceive, but perhaps not altogether impossible. For the Colours of |
| Bodies arise from the Magnitudes of the Particles which reflect them, as |
| was explained above. Now if we conceive these Particles of Bodies to be |
| so disposed amongst themselves, that the Intervals or empty Spaces |
| between them may be equal in magnitude to them all; and that these |
| Particles may be composed of other Particles much smaller, which have as |
| much empty Space between them as equals all the Magnitudes of these |
| smaller Particles: And that in like manner these smaller Particles are |
| again composed of others much smaller, all which together are equal to |
| all the Pores or empty Spaces between them; and so on perpetually till |
| you come to solid Particles, such as have no Pores or empty Spaces |
| within them: And if in any gross Body there be, for instance, three such |
| degrees of Particles, the least of which are solid; this Body will have |
| seven times more Pores than solid Parts. But if there be four such |
| degrees of Particles, the least of which are solid, the Body will have |
| fifteen times more Pores than solid Parts. If there be five degrees, the |
| Body will have one and thirty times more Pores than solid Parts. If six |
| degrees, the Body will have sixty and three times more Pores than solid |
| Parts. And so on perpetually. And there are other ways of conceiving how |
| Bodies may be exceeding porous. But what is really their inward Frame is |
| not yet known to us. |
| |
| |
| PROP. IX. |
| |
| _Bodies reflect and refract Light by one and the same power, variously |
| exercised in various Circumstances._ |
| |
| This appears by several Considerations. First, Because when Light goes |
| out of Glass into Air, as obliquely as it can possibly do. If its |
| Incidence be made still more oblique, it becomes totally reflected. For |
| the power of the Glass after it has refracted the Light as obliquely as |
| is possible, if the Incidence be still made more oblique, becomes too |
| strong to let any of its Rays go through, and by consequence causes |
| total Reflexions. Secondly, Because Light is alternately reflected and |
| transmitted by thin Plates of Glass for many Successions, accordingly as |
| the thickness of the Plate increases in an arithmetical Progression. For |
| here the thickness of the Glass determines whether that Power by which |
| Glass acts upon Light shall cause it to be reflected, or suffer it to |
| be transmitted. And, Thirdly, because those Surfaces of transparent |
| Bodies which have the greatest refracting power, reflect the greatest |
| quantity of Light, as was shewn in the first Proposition. |
| |
| |
| PROP. X. |
| |
| _If Light be swifter in Bodies than in Vacuo, in the proportion of the |
| Sines which measure the Refraction of the Bodies, the Forces of the |
| Bodies to reflect and refract Light, are very nearly proportional to the |
| densities of the same Bodies; excepting that unctuous and sulphureous |
| Bodies refract more than others of this same density._ |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 8.] |
| |
| Let AB represent the refracting plane Surface of any Body, and IC a Ray |
| incident very obliquely upon the Body in C, so that the Angle ACI may be |
| infinitely little, and let CR be the refracted Ray. From a given Point B |
| perpendicular to the refracting Surface erect BR meeting with the |
| refracting Ray CR in R, and if CR represent the Motion of the refracted |
| Ray, and this Motion be distinguish'd into two Motions CB and BR, |
| whereof CB is parallel to the refracting Plane, and BR perpendicular to |
| it: CB shall represent the Motion of the incident Ray, and BR the |
| Motion generated by the Refraction, as Opticians have of late explain'd. |
| |
| Now if any Body or Thing, in moving through any Space of a given breadth |
| terminated on both sides by two parallel Planes, be urged forward in all |
| parts of that Space by Forces tending directly forwards towards the last |
| Plane, and before its Incidence on the first Plane, had no Motion |
| towards it, or but an infinitely little one; and if the Forces in all |
| parts of that Space, between the Planes, be at equal distances from the |
| Planes equal to one another, but at several distances be bigger or less |
| in any given Proportion, the Motion generated by the Forces in the whole |
| passage of the Body or thing through that Space shall be in a |
| subduplicate Proportion of the Forces, as Mathematicians will easily |
| understand. And therefore, if the Space of activity of the refracting |
| Superficies of the Body be consider'd as such a Space, the Motion of the |
| Ray generated by the refracting Force of the Body, during its passage |
| through that Space, that is, the Motion BR, must be in subduplicate |
| Proportion of that refracting Force. I say therefore, that the Square of |
| the Line BR, and by consequence the refracting Force of the Body, is |
| very nearly as the density of the same Body. For this will appear by the |
| following Table, wherein the Proportion of the Sines which measure the |
| Refractions of several Bodies, the Square of BR, supposing CB an unite, |
| the Densities of the Bodies estimated by their Specifick Gravities, and |
| their Refractive Power in respect of their Densities are set down in |
| several Columns. |
| |
| ---------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+----------- |
| | | | | |
| | | The Square | The | The |
| | | of BR, to | density | refractive |
| | The Proportion | which the | and | Power of |
| | of the Sines of| refracting | specifick| the Body |
| | Incidence and | force of the | gravity | in respect |
| The refracting | Refraction of | Body is | of the | of its |
| Bodies. | yellow Light. | proportionate. | Body. | density. |
| ---------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+----------- |
| A Pseudo-Topazius, | | | | |
| being a natural, | | | | |
| pellucid, brittle, | 23 to 14 | 1'699 | 4'27 | 3979 |
| hairy Stone, of a | | | | |
| yellow Colour. | | | | |
| Air. | 3201 to 3200 | 0'000625 | 0'0012 | 5208 |
| Glass of Antimony. | 17 to 9 | 2'568 | 5'28 | 4864 |
| A Selenitis. | 61 to 41 | 1'213 | 2'252 | 5386 |
| Glass vulgar. | 31 to 20 | 1'4025 | 2'58 | 5436 |
| Crystal of the Rock. | 25 to 16 | 1'445 | 2'65 | 5450 |
| Island Crystal. | 5 to 3 | 1'778 | 2'72 | 6536 |
| Sal Gemmæ. | 17 to 11 | 1'388 | 2'143 | 6477 |
| Alume. | 35 to 24 | 1'1267 | 1'714 | 6570 |
| Borax. | 22 to 15 | 1'1511 | 1'714 | 6716 |
| Niter. | 32 to 21 | 1'345 | 1'9 | 7079 |
| Dantzick Vitriol. | 303 to 200 | 1'295 | 1'715 | 7551 |
| Oil of Vitriol. | 10 to 7 | 1'041 | 1'7 | 6124 |
| Rain Water. | 529 to 396 | 0'7845 | 1' | 7845 |
| Gum Arabick. | 31 to 21 | 1'179 | 1'375 | 8574 |
| Spirit of Wine well | | | | |
| rectified. | 100 to 73 | 0'8765 | 0'866 | 10121 |
| Camphire. | 3 to 2 | 1'25 | 0'996 | 12551 |
| Oil Olive. | 22 to 15 | 1'1511 | 0'913 | 12607 |
| Linseed Oil. | 40 to 27 | 1'1948 | 0'932 | 12819 |
| Spirit of Turpentine.| 25 to 17 | 1'1626 | 0'874 | 13222 |
| Amber. | 14 to 9 | 1'42 | 1'04 | 13654 |
| A Diamond. | 100 to 41 | 4'949 | 3'4 | 14556 |
| ---------------------+----------------+----------------+----------+----------- |
| |
| The Refraction of the Air in this Table is determin'd by that of the |
| Atmosphere observed by Astronomers. For, if Light pass through many |
| refracting Substances or Mediums gradually denser and denser, and |
| terminated with parallel Surfaces, the Sum of all the Refractions will |
| be equal to the single Refraction which it would have suffer'd in |
| passing immediately out of the first Medium into the last. And this |
| holds true, though the Number of the refracting Substances be increased |
| to Infinity, and the Distances from one another as much decreased, so |
| that the Light may be refracted in every Point of its Passage, and by |
| continual Refractions bent into a Curve-Line. And therefore the whole |
| Refraction of Light in passing through the Atmosphere from the highest |
| and rarest Part thereof down to the lowest and densest Part, must be |
| equal to the Refraction which it would suffer in passing at like |
| Obliquity out of a Vacuum immediately into Air of equal Density with |
| that in the lowest Part of the Atmosphere. |
| |
| Now, although a Pseudo-Topaz, a Selenitis, Rock Crystal, Island Crystal, |
| Vulgar Glass (that is, Sand melted together) and Glass of Antimony, |
| which are terrestrial stony alcalizate Concretes, and Air which probably |
| arises from such Substances by Fermentation, be Substances very |
| differing from one another in Density, yet by this Table, they have |
| their refractive Powers almost in the same Proportion to one another as |
| their Densities are, excepting that the Refraction of that strange |
| Substance, Island Crystal is a little bigger than the rest. And |
| particularly Air, which is 3500 Times rarer than the Pseudo-Topaz, and |
| 4400 Times rarer than Glass of Antimony, and 2000 Times rarer than the |
| Selenitis, Glass vulgar, or Crystal of the Rock, has notwithstanding its |
| rarity the same refractive Power in respect of its Density which those |
| very dense Substances have in respect of theirs, excepting so far as |
| those differ from one another. |
| |
| Again, the Refraction of Camphire, Oil Olive, Linseed Oil, Spirit of |
| Turpentine and Amber, which are fat sulphureous unctuous Bodies, and a |
| Diamond, which probably is an unctuous Substance coagulated, have their |
| refractive Powers in Proportion to one another as their Densities |
| without any considerable Variation. But the refractive Powers of these |
| unctuous Substances are two or three Times greater in respect of their |
| Densities than the refractive Powers of the former Substances in respect |
| of theirs. |
| |
| Water has a refractive Power in a middle degree between those two sorts |
| of Substances, and probably is of a middle nature. For out of it grow |
| all vegetable and animal Substances, which consist as well of |
| sulphureous fat and inflamable Parts, as of earthy lean and alcalizate |
| ones. |
| |
| Salts and Vitriols have refractive Powers in a middle degree between |
| those of earthy Substances and Water, and accordingly are composed of |
| those two sorts of Substances. For by distillation and rectification of |
| their Spirits a great Part of them goes into Water, and a great Part |
| remains behind in the form of a dry fix'd Earth capable of |
| Vitrification. |
| |
| Spirit of Wine has a refractive Power in a middle degree between those |
| of Water and oily Substances, and accordingly seems to be composed of |
| both, united by Fermentation; the Water, by means of some saline Spirits |
| with which 'tis impregnated, dissolving the Oil, and volatizing it by |
| the Action. For Spirit of Wine is inflamable by means of its oily Parts, |
| and being distilled often from Salt of Tartar, grow by every |
| distillation more and more aqueous and phlegmatick. And Chymists |
| observe, that Vegetables (as Lavender, Rue, Marjoram, &c.) distilled |
| _per se_, before fermentation yield Oils without any burning Spirits, |
| but after fermentation yield ardent Spirits without Oils: Which shews, |
| that their Oil is by fermentation converted into Spirit. They find also, |
| that if Oils be poured in a small quantity upon fermentating Vegetables, |
| they distil over after fermentation in the form of Spirits. |
| |
| So then, by the foregoing Table, all Bodies seem to have their |
| refractive Powers proportional to their Densities, (or very nearly;) |
| excepting so far as they partake more or less of sulphureous oily |
| Particles, and thereby have their refractive Power made greater or less. |
| Whence it seems rational to attribute the refractive Power of all Bodies |
| chiefly, if not wholly, to the sulphureous Parts with which they abound. |
| For it's probable that all Bodies abound more or less with Sulphurs. And |
| as Light congregated by a Burning-glass acts most upon sulphureous |
| Bodies, to turn them into Fire and Flame; so, since all Action is |
| mutual, Sulphurs ought to act most upon Light. For that the action |
| between Light and Bodies is mutual, may appear from this Consideration; |
| That the densest Bodies which refract and reflect Light most strongly, |
| grow hottest in the Summer Sun, by the action of the refracted or |
| reflected Light. |
| |
| I have hitherto explain'd the power of Bodies to reflect and refract, |
| and shew'd, that thin transparent Plates, Fibres, and Particles, do, |
| according to their several thicknesses and densities, reflect several |
| sorts of Rays, and thereby appear of several Colours; and by consequence |
| that nothing more is requisite for producing all the Colours of natural |
| Bodies, than the several sizes and densities of their transparent |
| Particles. But whence it is that these Plates, Fibres, and Particles, |
| do, according to their several thicknesses and densities, reflect |
| several sorts of Rays, I have not yet explain'd. To give some insight |
| into this matter, and make way for understanding the next part of this |
| Book, I shall conclude this part with a few more Propositions. Those |
| which preceded respect the nature of Bodies, these the nature of Light: |
| For both must be understood, before the reason of their Actions upon one |
| another can be known. And because the last Proposition depended upon the |
| velocity of Light, I will begin with a Proposition of that kind. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XI. |
| |
| _Light is propagated from luminous Bodies in time, and spends about |
| seven or eight Minutes of an Hour in passing from the Sun to the Earth._ |
| |
| This was observed first by _Roemer_, and then by others, by means of the |
| Eclipses of the Satellites of _Jupiter_. For these Eclipses, when the |
| Earth is between the Sun and _Jupiter_, happen about seven or eight |
| Minutes sooner than they ought to do by the Tables, and when the Earth |
| is beyond the Sun they happen about seven or eight Minutes later than |
| they ought to do; the reason being, that the Light of the Satellites has |
| farther to go in the latter case than in the former by the Diameter of |
| the Earth's Orbit. Some inequalities of time may arise from the |
| Excentricities of the Orbs of the Satellites; but those cannot answer in |
| all the Satellites, and at all times to the Position and Distance of the |
| Earth from the Sun. The mean motions of _Jupiter_'s Satellites is also |
| swifter in his descent from his Aphelium to his Perihelium, than in his |
| ascent in the other half of his Orb. But this inequality has no respect |
| to the position of the Earth, and in the three interior Satellites is |
| insensible, as I find by computation from the Theory of their Gravity. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XII. |
| |
| _Every Ray of Light in its passage through any refracting Surface is put |
| into a certain transient Constitution or State, which in the progress of |
| the Ray returns at equal Intervals, and disposes the Ray at every return |
| to be easily transmitted through the next refracting Surface, and |
| between the returns to be easily reflected by it._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the 5th, 9th, 12th, and 15th Observations. For by |
| those Observations it appears, that one and the same sort of Rays at |
| equal Angles of Incidence on any thin transparent Plate, is alternately |
| reflected and transmitted for many Successions accordingly as the |
| thickness of the Plate increases in arithmetical Progression of the |
| Numbers, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, &c. so that if the first Reflexion |
| (that which makes the first or innermost of the Rings of Colours there |
| described) be made at the thickness 1, the Rays shall be transmitted at |
| the thicknesses 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, &c. and thereby make the central |
| Spot and Rings of Light, which appear by transmission, and be reflected |
| at the thickness 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, &c. and thereby make the Rings which |
| appear by Reflexion. And this alternate Reflexion and Transmission, as I |
| gather by the 24th Observation, continues for above an hundred |
| vicissitudes, and by the Observations in the next part of this Book, for |
| many thousands, being propagated from one Surface of a Glass Plate to |
| the other, though the thickness of the Plate be a quarter of an Inch or |
| above: So that this alternation seems to be propagated from every |
| refracting Surface to all distances without end or limitation. |
| |
| This alternate Reflexion and Refraction depends on both the Surfaces of |
| every thin Plate, because it depends on their distance. By the 21st |
| Observation, if either Surface of a thin Plate of _Muscovy_ Glass be |
| wetted, the Colours caused by the alternate Reflexion and Refraction |
| grow faint, and therefore it depends on them both. |
| |
| It is therefore perform'd at the second Surface; for if it were |
| perform'd at the first, before the Rays arrive at the second, it would |
| not depend on the second. |
| |
| It is also influenced by some action or disposition, propagated from the |
| first to the second, because otherwise at the second it would not depend |
| on the first. And this action or disposition, in its propagation, |
| intermits and returns by equal Intervals, because in all its progress it |
| inclines the Ray at one distance from the first Surface to be reflected |
| by the second, at another to be transmitted by it, and that by equal |
| Intervals for innumerable vicissitudes. And because the Ray is disposed |
| to Reflexion at the distances 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, &c. and to Transmission at |
| the distances 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, &c. (for its transmission through the |
| first Surface, is at the distance 0, and it is transmitted through both |
| together, if their distance be infinitely little or much less than 1) |
| the disposition to be transmitted at the distances 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, &c. |
| is to be accounted a return of the same disposition which the Ray first |
| had at the distance 0, that is at its transmission through the first |
| refracting Surface. All which is the thing I would prove. |
| |
| What kind of action or disposition this is; Whether it consists in a |
| circulating or a vibrating motion of the Ray, or of the Medium, or |
| something else, I do not here enquire. Those that are averse from |
| assenting to any new Discoveries, but such as they can explain by an |
| Hypothesis, may for the present suppose, that as Stones by falling upon |
| Water put the Water into an undulating Motion, and all Bodies by |
| percussion excite vibrations in the Air; so the Rays of Light, by |
| impinging on any refracting or reflecting Surface, excite vibrations in |
| the refracting or reflecting Medium or Substance, and by exciting them |
| agitate the solid parts of the refracting or reflecting Body, and by |
| agitating them cause the Body to grow warm or hot; that the vibrations |
| thus excited are propagated in the refracting or reflecting Medium or |
| Substance, much after the manner that vibrations are propagated in the |
| Air for causing Sound, and move faster than the Rays so as to overtake |
| them; and that when any Ray is in that part of the vibration which |
| conspires with its Motion, it easily breaks through a refracting |
| Surface, but when it is in the contrary part of the vibration which |
| impedes its Motion, it is easily reflected; and, by consequence, that |
| every Ray is successively disposed to be easily reflected, or easily |
| transmitted, by every vibration which overtakes it. But whether this |
| Hypothesis be true or false I do not here consider. I content my self |
| with the bare Discovery, that the Rays of Light are by some cause or |
| other alternately disposed to be reflected or refracted for many |
| vicissitudes. |
| |
| |
| DEFINITION. |
| |
| _The returns of the disposition of any Ray to be reflected I will call |
| its_ Fits of easy Reflexion, _and those of its disposition to be |
| transmitted its_ Fits of easy Transmission, _and the space it passes |
| between every return and the next return, the_ Interval of its Fits. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XIII. |
| |
| _The reason why the Surfaces of all thick transparent Bodies reflect |
| part of the Light incident on them, and refract the rest, is, that some |
| Rays at their Incidence are in Fits of easy Reflexion, and others in |
| Fits of easy Transmission._ |
| |
| This may be gather'd from the 24th Observation, where the Light |
| reflected by thin Plates of Air and Glass, which to the naked Eye |
| appear'd evenly white all over the Plate, did through a Prism appear |
| waved with many Successions of Light and Darkness made by alternate Fits |
| of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission, the Prism severing and |
| distinguishing the Waves of which the white reflected Light was |
| composed, as was explain'd above. |
| |
| And hence Light is in Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission, |
| before its Incidence on transparent Bodies. And probably it is put into |
| such fits at its first emission from luminous Bodies, and continues in |
| them during all its progress. For these Fits are of a lasting nature, as |
| will appear by the next part of this Book. |
| |
| In this Proposition I suppose the transparent Bodies to be thick; |
| because if the thickness of the Body be much less than the Interval of |
| the Fits of easy Reflexion and Transmission of the Rays, the Body loseth |
| its reflecting power. For if the Rays, which at their entering into the |
| Body are put into Fits of easy Transmission, arrive at the farthest |
| Surface of the Body before they be out of those Fits, they must be |
| transmitted. And this is the reason why Bubbles of Water lose their |
| reflecting power when they grow very thin; and why all opake Bodies, |
| when reduced into very small parts, become transparent. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XIV. |
| |
| _Those Surfaces of transparent Bodies, which if the Ray be in a Fit of |
| Refraction do refract it most strongly, if the Ray be in a Fit of |
| Reflexion do reflect it most easily._ |
| |
| For we shewed above, in _Prop._ 8. that the cause of Reflexion is not |
| the impinging of Light on the solid impervious parts of Bodies, but some |
| other power by which those solid parts act on Light at a distance. We |
| shewed also in _Prop._ 9. that Bodies reflect and refract Light by one |
| and the same power, variously exercised in various circumstances; and in |
| _Prop._ 1. that the most strongly refracting Surfaces reflect the most |
| Light: All which compared together evince and rarify both this and the |
| last Proposition. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XV. |
| |
| _In any one and the same sort of Rays, emerging in any Angle out of any |
| refracting Surface into one and the same Medium, the Interval of the |
| following Fits of easy Reflexion and Transmission are either accurately |
| or very nearly, as the Rectangle of the Secant of the Angle of |
| Refraction, and of the Secant of another Angle, whose Sine is the first |
| of 106 arithmetical mean Proportionals, between the Sines of Incidence |
| and Refraction, counted from the Sine of Refraction._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the 7th and 19th Observations. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XVI. |
| |
| _In several sorts of Rays emerging in equal Angles out of any refracting |
| Surface into the same Medium, the Intervals of the following Fits of |
| easy Reflexion and easy Transmission are either accurately, or very |
| nearly, as the Cube-Roots of the Squares of the lengths of a Chord, |
| which found the Notes in an Eight_, sol, la, fa, sol, la, mi, fa, sol, |
| _with all their intermediate degrees answering to the Colours of those |
| Rays, according to the Analogy described in the seventh Experiment of |
| the second Part of the first Book._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the 13th and 14th Observations. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XVII. |
| |
| _If Rays of any sort pass perpendicularly into several Mediums, the |
| Intervals of the Fits of easy Reflexion and Transmission in any one |
| Medium, are to those Intervals in any other, as the Sine of Incidence to |
| the Sine of Refraction, when the Rays pass out of the first of those two |
| Mediums into the second._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the 10th Observation. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XVIII. |
| |
| _If the Rays which paint the Colour in the Confine of yellow and orange |
| pass perpendicularly out of any Medium into Air, the Intervals of their |
| Fits of easy Reflexion are the 1/89000th part of an Inch. And of the |
| same length are the Intervals of their Fits of easy Transmission._ |
| |
| This is manifest by the 6th Observation. From these Propositions it is |
| easy to collect the Intervals of the Fits of easy Reflexion and easy |
| Transmission of any sort of Rays refracted in any angle into any Medium; |
| and thence to know, whether the Rays shall be reflected or transmitted |
| at their subsequent Incidence upon any other pellucid Medium. Which |
| thing, being useful for understanding the next part of this Book, was |
| here to be set down. And for the same reason I add the two following |
| Propositions. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XIX. |
| |
| _If any sort of Rays falling on the polite Surface of any pellucid |
| Medium be reflected back, the Fits of easy Reflexion, which they have at |
| the point of Reflexion, shall still continue to return; and the Returns |
| shall be at distances from the point of Reflexion in the arithmetical |
| progression of the Numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, &c. and between these |
| Fits the Rays shall be in Fits of easy Transmission._ |
| |
| For since the Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission are of a |
| returning nature, there is no reason why these Fits, which continued |
| till the Ray arrived at the reflecting Medium, and there inclined the |
| Ray to Reflexion, should there cease. And if the Ray at the point of |
| Reflexion was in a Fit of easy Reflexion, the progression of the |
| distances of these Fits from that point must begin from 0, and so be of |
| the Numbers 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, &c. And therefore the progression of the |
| distances of the intermediate Fits of easy Transmission, reckon'd from |
| the same point, must be in the progression of the odd Numbers 1, 3, 5, |
| 7, 9, &c. contrary to what happens when the Fits are propagated from |
| points of Refraction. |
| |
| |
| PROP. XX. |
| |
| _The Intervals of the Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission, |
| propagated from points of Reflexion into any Medium, are equal to the |
| Intervals of the like Fits, which the same Rays would have, if refracted |
| into the same Medium in Angles of Refraction equal to their Angles of |
| Reflexion._ |
| |
| For when Light is reflected by the second Surface of thin Plates, it |
| goes out afterwards freely at the first Surface to make the Rings of |
| Colours which appear by Reflexion; and, by the freedom of its egress, |
| makes the Colours of these Rings more vivid and strong than those which |
| appear on the other side of the Plates by the transmitted Light. The |
| reflected Rays are therefore in Fits of easy Transmission at their |
| egress; which would not always happen, if the Intervals of the Fits |
| within the Plate after Reflexion were not equal, both in length and |
| number, to their Intervals before it. And this confirms also the |
| proportions set down in the former Proposition. For if the Rays both in |
| going in and out at the first Surface be in Fits of easy Transmission, |
| and the Intervals and Numbers of those Fits between the first and second |
| Surface, before and after Reflexion, be equal, the distances of the Fits |
| of easy Transmission from either Surface, must be in the same |
| progression after Reflexion as before; that is, from the first Surface |
| which transmitted them in the progression of the even Numbers 0, 2, 4, |
| 6, 8, &c. and from the second which reflected them, in that of the odd |
| Numbers 1, 3, 5, 7, &c. But these two Propositions will become much more |
| evident by the Observations in the following part of this Book. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE |
| |
| SECOND BOOK |
| |
| OF |
| |
| OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| _PART IV._ |
| |
| _Observations concerning the Reflexions and Colours of thick transparent |
| polish'd Plates._ |
| |
| There is no Glass or Speculum how well soever polished, but, besides the |
| Light which it refracts or reflects regularly, scatters every way |
| irregularly a faint Light, by means of which the polish'd Surface, when |
| illuminated in a dark room by a beam of the Sun's Light, may be easily |
| seen in all positions of the Eye. There are certain Phænomena of this |
| scatter'd Light, which when I first observed them, seem'd very strange |
| and surprizing to me. My Observations were as follows. |
| |
| _Obs._ 1. The Sun shining into my darken'd Chamber through a hole one |
| third of an Inch wide, I let the intromitted beam of Light fall |
| perpendicularly upon a Glass Speculum ground concave on one side and |
| convex on the other, to a Sphere of five Feet and eleven Inches Radius, |
| and Quick-silver'd over on the convex side. And holding a white opake |
| Chart, or a Quire of Paper at the center of the Spheres to which the |
| Speculum was ground, that is, at the distance of about five Feet and |
| eleven Inches from the Speculum, in such manner, that the beam of Light |
| might pass through a little hole made in the middle of the Chart to the |
| Speculum, and thence be reflected back to the same hole: I observed upon |
| the Chart four or five concentric Irises or Rings of Colours, like |
| Rain-bows, encompassing the hole much after the manner that those, which |
| in the fourth and following Observations of the first part of this Book |
| appear'd between the Object-glasses, encompassed the black Spot, but yet |
| larger and fainter than those. These Rings as they grew larger and |
| larger became diluter and fainter, so that the fifth was scarce visible. |
| Yet sometimes, when the Sun shone very clear, there appear'd faint |
| Lineaments of a sixth and seventh. If the distance of the Chart from the |
| Speculum was much greater or much less than that of six Feet, the Rings |
| became dilute and vanish'd. And if the distance of the Speculum from the |
| Window was much greater than that of six Feet, the reflected beam of |
| Light would be so broad at the distance of six Feet from the Speculum |
| where the Rings appear'd, as to obscure one or two of the innermost |
| Rings. And therefore I usually placed the Speculum at about six Feet |
| from the Window; so that its Focus might there fall in with the center |
| of its concavity at the Rings upon the Chart. And this Posture is always |
| to be understood in the following Observations where no other is |
| express'd. |
| |
| _Obs._ 2. The Colours of these Rain-bows succeeded one another from the |
| center outwards, in the same form and order with those which were made |
| in the ninth Observation of the first Part of this Book by Light not |
| reflected, but transmitted through the two Object-glasses. For, first, |
| there was in their common center a white round Spot of faint Light, |
| something broader than the reflected beam of Light, which beam sometimes |
| fell upon the middle of the Spot, and sometimes by a little inclination |
| of the Speculum receded from the middle, and left the Spot white to the |
| center. |
| |
| This white Spot was immediately encompassed with a dark grey or russet, |
| and that dark grey with the Colours of the first Iris; which Colours on |
| the inside next the dark grey were a little violet and indigo, and next |
| to that a blue, which on the outside grew pale, and then succeeded a |
| little greenish yellow, and after that a brighter yellow, and then on |
| the outward edge of the Iris a red which on the outside inclined to |
| purple. |
| |
| This Iris was immediately encompassed with a second, whose Colours were |
| in order from the inside outwards, purple, blue, green, yellow, light |
| red, a red mix'd with purple. |
| |
| Then immediately follow'd the Colours of the third Iris, which were in |
| order outwards a green inclining to purple, a good green, and a red more |
| bright than that of the former Iris. |
| |
| The fourth and fifth Iris seem'd of a bluish green within, and red |
| without, but so faintly that it was difficult to discern the Colours. |
| |
| _Obs._ 3. Measuring the Diameters of these Rings upon the Chart as |
| accurately as I could, I found them also in the same proportion to one |
| another with the Rings made by Light transmitted through the two |
| Object-glasses. For the Diameters of the four first of the bright Rings |
| measured between the brightest parts of their Orbits, at the distance of |
| six Feet from the Speculum were 1-11/16, 2-3/8, 2-11/12, 3-3/8 Inches, |
| whose Squares are in arithmetical progression of the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4. |
| If the white circular Spot in the middle be reckon'd amongst the Rings, |
| and its central Light, where it seems to be most luminous, be put |
| equipollent to an infinitely little Ring; the Squares of the Diameters |
| of the Rings will be in the progression 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, &c. I measured |
| also the Diameters of the dark Circles between these luminous ones, and |
| found their Squares in the progression of the numbers 1/2, 1-1/2, 2-1/2, |
| 3-1/2, &c. the Diameters of the first four at the distance of six Feet |
| from the Speculum, being 1-3/16, 2-1/16, 2-2/3, 3-3/20 Inches. If the |
| distance of the Chart from the Speculum was increased or diminished, the |
| Diameters of the Circles were increased or diminished proportionally. |
| |
| _Obs._ 4. By the analogy between these Rings and those described in the |
| Observations of the first Part of this Book, I suspected that there |
| were many more of them which spread into one another, and by interfering |
| mix'd their Colours, and diluted one another so that they could not be |
| seen apart. I viewed them therefore through a Prism, as I did those in |
| the 24th Observation of the first Part of this Book. And when the Prism |
| was so placed as by refracting the Light of their mix'd Colours to |
| separate them, and distinguish the Rings from one another, as it did |
| those in that Observation, I could then see them distincter than before, |
| and easily number eight or nine of them, and sometimes twelve or |
| thirteen. And had not their Light been so very faint, I question not but |
| that I might have seen many more. |
| |
| _Obs._ 5. Placing a Prism at the Window to refract the intromitted beam |
| of Light, and cast the oblong Spectrum of Colours on the Speculum: I |
| covered the Speculum with a black Paper which had in the middle of it a |
| hole to let any one of the Colours pass through to the Speculum, whilst |
| the rest were intercepted by the Paper. And now I found Rings of that |
| Colour only which fell upon the Speculum. If the Speculum was |
| illuminated with red, the Rings were totally red with dark Intervals, if |
| with blue they were totally blue, and so of the other Colours. And when |
| they were illuminated with any one Colour, the Squares of their |
| Diameters measured between their most luminous Parts, were in the |
| arithmetical Progression of the Numbers, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 and the Squares |
| of the Diameters of their dark Intervals in the Progression of the |
| intermediate Numbers 1/2, 1-1/2, 2-1/2, 3-1/2. But if the Colour was |
| varied, they varied their Magnitude. In the red they were largest, in |
| the indigo and violet least, and in the intermediate Colours yellow, |
| green, and blue, they were of several intermediate Bignesses answering |
| to the Colour, that is, greater in yellow than in green, and greater in |
| green than in blue. And hence I knew, that when the Speculum was |
| illuminated with white Light, the red and yellow on the outside of the |
| Rings were produced by the least refrangible Rays, and the blue and |
| violet by the most refrangible, and that the Colours of each Ring spread |
| into the Colours of the neighbouring Rings on either side, after the |
| manner explain'd in the first and second Part of this Book, and by |
| mixing diluted one another so that they could not be distinguish'd, |
| unless near the Center where they were least mix'd. For in this |
| Observation I could see the Rings more distinctly, and to a greater |
| Number than before, being able in the yellow Light to number eight or |
| nine of them, besides a faint shadow of a tenth. To satisfy my self how |
| much the Colours of the several Rings spread into one another, I |
| measured the Diameters of the second and third Rings, and found them |
| when made by the Confine of the red and orange to be to the same |
| Diameters when made by the Confine of blue and indigo, as 9 to 8, or |
| thereabouts. For it was hard to determine this Proportion accurately. |
| Also the Circles made successively by the red, yellow, and green, |
| differ'd more from one another than those made successively by the |
| green, blue, and indigo. For the Circle made by the violet was too dark |
| to be seen. To carry on the Computation, let us therefore suppose that |
| the Differences of the Diameters of the Circles made by the outmost red, |
| the Confine of red and orange, the Confine of orange and yellow, the |
| Confine of yellow and green, the Confine of green and blue, the Confine |
| of blue and indigo, the Confine of indigo and violet, and outmost |
| violet, are in proportion as the Differences of the Lengths of a |
| Monochord which sound the Tones in an Eight; _sol_, _la_, _fa_, _sol_, |
| _la_, _mi_, _fa_, _sol_, that is, as the Numbers 1/9, 1/18, 1/12, 1/12, |
| 2/27, 1/27, 1/18. And if the Diameter of the Circle made by the Confine |
| of red and orange be 9A, and that of the Circle made by the Confine of |
| blue and indigo be 8A as above; their difference 9A-8A will be to the |
| difference of the Diameters of the Circles made by the outmost red, and |
| by the Confine of red and orange, as 1/18 + 1/12 + 1/12 + 2/27 to 1/9, |
| that is as 8/27 to 1/9, or 8 to 3, and to the difference of the Circles |
| made by the outmost violet, and by the Confine of blue and indigo, as |
| 1/18 + 1/12 + 1/12 + 2/27 to 1/27 + 1/18, that is, as 8/27 to 5/54, or |
| as 16 to 5. And therefore these differences will be 3/8A and 5/16A. Add |
| the first to 9A and subduct the last from 8A, and you will have the |
| Diameters of the Circles made by the least and most refrangible Rays |
| 75/8A and ((61-1/2)/8)A. These diameters are therefore to one another as |
| 75 to 61-1/2 or 50 to 41, and their Squares as 2500 to 1681, that is, as |
| 3 to 2 very nearly. Which proportion differs not much from the |
| proportion of the Diameters of the Circles made by the outmost red and |
| outmost violet, in the 13th Observation of the first part of this Book. |
| |
| _Obs._ 6. Placing my Eye where these Rings appear'd plainest, I saw the |
| Speculum tinged all over with Waves of Colours, (red, yellow, green, |
| blue;) like those which in the Observations of the first part of this |
| Book appeared between the Object-glasses, and upon Bubbles of Water, but |
| much larger. And after the manner of those, they were of various |
| magnitudes in various Positions of the Eye, swelling and shrinking as I |
| moved my Eye this way and that way. They were formed like Arcs of |
| concentrick Circles, as those were; and when my Eye was over against the |
| center of the concavity of the Speculum, (that is, 5 Feet and 10 Inches |
| distant from the Speculum,) their common center was in a right Line with |
| that center of concavity, and with the hole in the Window. But in other |
| postures of my Eye their center had other positions. They appear'd by |
| the Light of the Clouds propagated to the Speculum through the hole in |
| the Window; and when the Sun shone through that hole upon the Speculum, |
| his Light upon it was of the Colour of the Ring whereon it fell, but by |
| its splendor obscured the Rings made by the Light of the Clouds, unless |
| when the Speculum was removed to a great distance from the Window, so |
| that his Light upon it might be broad and faint. By varying the position |
| of my Eye, and moving it nearer to or farther from the direct beam of |
| the Sun's Light, the Colour of the Sun's reflected Light constantly |
| varied upon the Speculum, as it did upon my Eye, the same Colour always |
| appearing to a Bystander upon my Eye which to me appear'd upon the |
| Speculum. And thence I knew that the Rings of Colours upon the Chart |
| were made by these reflected Colours, propagated thither from the |
| Speculum in several Angles, and that their production depended not upon |
| the termination of Light and Shadow. |
| |
| _Obs._ 7. By the Analogy of all these Phænomena with those of the like |
| Rings of Colours described in the first part of this Book, it seemed to |
| me that these Colours were produced by this thick Plate of Glass, much |
| after the manner that those were produced by very thin Plates. For, upon |
| trial, I found that if the Quick-silver were rubb'd off from the |
| backside of the Speculum, the Glass alone would cause the same Rings of |
| Colours, but much more faint than before; and therefore the Phænomenon |
| depends not upon the Quick-silver, unless so far as the Quick-silver by |
| increasing the Reflexion of the backside of the Glass increases the |
| Light of the Rings of Colours. I found also that a Speculum of Metal |
| without Glass made some Years since for optical uses, and very well |
| wrought, produced none of those Rings; and thence I understood that |
| these Rings arise not from one specular Surface alone, but depend upon |
| the two Surfaces of the Plate of Glass whereof the Speculum was made, |
| and upon the thickness of the Glass between them. For as in the 7th and |
| 19th Observations of the first part of this Book a thin Plate of Air, |
| Water, or Glass of an even thickness appeared of one Colour when the |
| Rays were perpendicular to it, of another when they were a little |
| oblique, of another when more oblique, of another when still more |
| oblique, and so on; so here, in the sixth Observation, the Light which |
| emerged out of the Glass in several Obliquities, made the Glass appear |
| of several Colours, and being propagated in those Obliquities to the |
| Chart, there painted Rings of those Colours. And as the reason why a |
| thin Plate appeared of several Colours in several Obliquities of the |
| Rays, was, that the Rays of one and the same sort are reflected by the |
| thin Plate at one obliquity and transmitted at another, and those of |
| other sorts transmitted where these are reflected, and reflected where |
| these are transmitted: So the reason why the thick Plate of Glass |
| whereof the Speculum was made did appear of various Colours in various |
| Obliquities, and in those Obliquities propagated those Colours to the |
| Chart, was, that the Rays of one and the same sort did at one Obliquity |
| emerge out of the Glass, at another did not emerge, but were reflected |
| back towards the Quick-silver by the hither Surface of the Glass, and |
| accordingly as the Obliquity became greater and greater, emerged and |
| were reflected alternately for many Successions; and that in one and the |
| same Obliquity the Rays of one sort were reflected, and those of another |
| transmitted. This is manifest by the fifth Observation of this part of |
| this Book. For in that Observation, when the Speculum was illuminated by |
| any one of the prismatick Colours, that Light made many Rings of the |
| same Colour upon the Chart with dark Intervals, and therefore at its |
| emergence out of the Speculum was alternately transmitted and not |
| transmitted from the Speculum to the Chart for many Successions, |
| according to the various Obliquities of its Emergence. And when the |
| Colour cast on the Speculum by the Prism was varied, the Rings became of |
| the Colour cast on it, and varied their bigness with their Colour, and |
| therefore the Light was now alternately transmitted and not transmitted |
| from the Speculum to the Chart at other Obliquities than before. It |
| seemed to me therefore that these Rings were of one and the same |
| original with those of thin Plates, but yet with this difference, that |
| those of thin Plates are made by the alternate Reflexions and |
| Transmissions of the Rays at the second Surface of the Plate, after one |
| passage through it; but here the Rays go twice through the Plate before |
| they are alternately reflected and transmitted. First, they go through |
| it from the first Surface to the Quick-silver, and then return through |
| it from the Quick-silver to the first Surface, and there are either |
| transmitted to the Chart or reflected back to the Quick-silver, |
| accordingly as they are in their Fits of easy Reflexion or Transmission |
| when they arrive at that Surface. For the Intervals of the Fits of the |
| Rays which fall perpendicularly on the Speculum, and are reflected back |
| in the same perpendicular Lines, by reason of the equality of these |
| Angles and Lines, are of the same length and number within the Glass |
| after Reflexion as before, by the 19th Proposition of the third part of |
| this Book. And therefore since all the Rays that enter through the |
| first Surface are in their Fits of easy Transmission at their entrance, |
| and as many of these as are reflected by the second are in their Fits of |
| easy Reflexion there, all these must be again in their Fits of easy |
| Transmission at their return to the first, and by consequence there go |
| out of the Glass to the Chart, and form upon it the white Spot of Light |
| in the center of the Rings. For the reason holds good in all sorts of |
| Rays, and therefore all sorts must go out promiscuously to that Spot, |
| and by their mixture cause it to be white. But the Intervals of the Fits |
| of those Rays which are reflected more obliquely than they enter, must |
| be greater after Reflexion than before, by the 15th and 20th |
| Propositions. And thence it may happen that the Rays at their return to |
| the first Surface, may in certain Obliquities be in Fits of easy |
| Reflexion, and return back to the Quick-silver, and in other |
| intermediate Obliquities be again in Fits of easy Transmission, and so |
| go out to the Chart, and paint on it the Rings of Colours about the |
| white Spot. And because the Intervals of the Fits at equal obliquities |
| are greater and fewer in the less refrangible Rays, and less and more |
| numerous in the more refrangible, therefore the less refrangible at |
| equal obliquities shall make fewer Rings than the more refrangible, and |
| the Rings made by those shall be larger than the like number of Rings |
| made by these; that is, the red Rings shall be larger than the yellow, |
| the yellow than the green, the green than the blue, and the blue than |
| the violet, as they were really found to be in the fifth Observation. |
| And therefore the first Ring of all Colours encompassing the white Spot |
| of Light shall be red without any violet within, and yellow, and green, |
| and blue in the middle, as it was found in the second Observation; and |
| these Colours in the second Ring, and those that follow, shall be more |
| expanded, till they spread into one another, and blend one another by |
| interfering. |
| |
| These seem to be the reasons of these Rings in general; and this put me |
| upon observing the thickness of the Glass, and considering whether the |
| dimensions and proportions of the Rings may be truly derived from it by |
| computation. |
| |
| _Obs._ 8. I measured therefore the thickness of this concavo-convex |
| Plate of Glass, and found it every where 1/4 of an Inch precisely. Now, |
| by the sixth Observation of the first Part of this Book, a thin Plate of |
| Air transmits the brightest Light of the first Ring, that is, the bright |
| yellow, when its thickness is the 1/89000th part of an Inch; and by the |
| tenth Observation of the same Part, a thin Plate of Glass transmits the |
| same Light of the same Ring, when its thickness is less in proportion of |
| the Sine of Refraction to the Sine of Incidence, that is, when its |
| thickness is the 11/1513000th or 1/137545th part of an Inch, supposing |
| the Sines are as 11 to 17. And if this thickness be doubled, it |
| transmits the same bright Light of the second Ring; if tripled, it |
| transmits that of the third, and so on; the bright yellow Light in all |
| these cases being in its Fits of Transmission. And therefore if its |
| thickness be multiplied 34386 times, so as to become 1/4 of an Inch, it |
| transmits the same bright Light of the 34386th Ring. Suppose this be the |
| bright yellow Light transmitted perpendicularly from the reflecting |
| convex side of the Glass through the concave side to the white Spot in |
| the center of the Rings of Colours on the Chart: And by a Rule in the |
| 7th and 19th Observations in the first Part of this Book, and by the |
| 15th and 20th Propositions of the third Part of this Book, if the Rays |
| be made oblique to the Glass, the thickness of the Glass requisite to |
| transmit the same bright Light of the same Ring in any obliquity, is to |
| this thickness of 1/4 of an Inch, as the Secant of a certain Angle to |
| the Radius, the Sine of which Angle is the first of an hundred and six |
| arithmetical Means between the Sines of Incidence and Refraction, |
| counted from the Sine of Incidence when the Refraction is made out of |
| any plated Body into any Medium encompassing it; that is, in this case, |
| out of Glass into Air. Now if the thickness of the Glass be increased by |
| degrees, so as to bear to its first thickness, (_viz._ that of a quarter |
| of an Inch,) the Proportions which 34386 (the number of Fits of the |
| perpendicular Rays in going through the Glass towards the white Spot in |
| the center of the Rings,) hath to 34385, 34384, 34383, and 34382, (the |
| numbers of the Fits of the oblique Rays in going through the Glass |
| towards the first, second, third, and fourth Rings of Colours,) and if |
| the first thickness be divided into 100000000 equal parts, the increased |
| thicknesses will be 100002908, 100005816, 100008725, and 100011633, and |
| the Angles of which these thicknesses are Secants will be 26´ 13´´, 37´ |
| 5´´, 45´ 6´´, and 52´ 26´´, the Radius being 100000000; and the Sines of |
| these Angles are 762, 1079, 1321, and 1525, and the proportional Sines |
| of Refraction 1172, 1659, 2031, and 2345, the Radius being 100000. For |
| since the Sines of Incidence out of Glass into Air are to the Sines of |
| Refraction as 11 to 17, and to the above-mentioned Secants as 11 to the |
| first of 106 arithmetical Means between 11 and 17, that is, as 11 to |
| 11-6/106, those Secants will be to the Sines of Refraction as 11-6/106, |
| to 17, and by this Analogy will give these Sines. So then, if the |
| obliquities of the Rays to the concave Surface of the Glass be such that |
| the Sines of their Refraction in passing out of the Glass through that |
| Surface into the Air be 1172, 1659, 2031, 2345, the bright Light of the |
| 34386th Ring shall emerge at the thicknesses of the Glass, which are to |
| 1/4 of an Inch as 34386 to 34385, 34384, 34383, 34382, respectively. And |
| therefore, if the thickness in all these Cases be 1/4 of an Inch (as it |
| is in the Glass of which the Speculum was made) the bright Light of the |
| 34385th Ring shall emerge where the Sine of Refraction is 1172, and that |
| of the 34384th, 34383th, and 34382th Ring where the Sine is 1659, 2031, |
| and 2345 respectively. And in these Angles of Refraction the Light of |
| these Rings shall be propagated from the Speculum to the Chart, and |
| there paint Rings about the white central round Spot of Light which we |
| said was the Light of the 34386th Ring. And the Semidiameters of these |
| Rings shall subtend the Angles of Refraction made at the |
| Concave-Surface of the Speculum, and by consequence their Diameters |
| shall be to the distance of the Chart from the Speculum as those Sines |
| of Refraction doubled are to the Radius, that is, as 1172, 1659, 2031, |
| and 2345, doubled are to 100000. And therefore, if the distance of the |
| Chart from the Concave-Surface of the Speculum be six Feet (as it was in |
| the third of these Observations) the Diameters of the Rings of this |
| bright yellow Light upon the Chart shall be 1'688, 2'389, 2'925, 3'375 |
| Inches: For these Diameters are to six Feet, as the above-mention'd |
| Sines doubled are to the Radius. Now, these Diameters of the bright |
| yellow Rings, thus found by Computation are the very same with those |
| found in the third of these Observations by measuring them, _viz._ with |
| 1-11/16, 2-3/8, 2-11/12, and 3-3/8 Inches, and therefore the Theory of |
| deriving these Rings from the thickness of the Plate of Glass of which |
| the Speculum was made, and from the Obliquity of the emerging Rays |
| agrees with the Observation. In this Computation I have equalled the |
| Diameters of the bright Rings made by Light of all Colours, to the |
| Diameters of the Rings made by the bright yellow. For this yellow makes |
| the brightest Part of the Rings of all Colours. If you desire the |
| Diameters of the Rings made by the Light of any other unmix'd Colour, |
| you may find them readily by putting them to the Diameters of the bright |
| yellow ones in a subduplicate Proportion of the Intervals of the Fits of |
| the Rays of those Colours when equally inclined to the refracting or |
| reflecting Surface which caused those Fits, that is, by putting the |
| Diameters of the Rings made by the Rays in the Extremities and Limits of |
| the seven Colours, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet, |
| proportional to the Cube-roots of the Numbers, 1, 8/9, 5/6, 3/4, 2/3, |
| 3/5, 9/16, 1/2, which express the Lengths of a Monochord sounding the |
| Notes in an Eighth: For by this means the Diameters of the Rings of |
| these Colours will be found pretty nearly in the same Proportion to one |
| another, which they ought to have by the fifth of these Observations. |
| |
| And thus I satisfy'd my self, that these Rings were of the same kind and |
| Original with those of thin Plates, and by consequence that the Fits or |
| alternate Dispositions of the Rays to be reflected and transmitted are |
| propagated to great distances from every reflecting and refracting |
| Surface. But yet to put the matter out of doubt, I added the following |
| Observation. |
| |
| _Obs._ 9. If these Rings thus depend on the thickness of the Plate of |
| Glass, their Diameters at equal distances from several Speculums made of |
| such concavo-convex Plates of Glass as are ground on the same Sphere, |
| ought to be reciprocally in a subduplicate Proportion of the thicknesses |
| of the Plates of Glass. And if this Proportion be found true by |
| experience it will amount to a demonstration that these Rings (like |
| those formed in thin Plates) do depend on the thickness of the Glass. I |
| procured therefore another concavo-convex Plate of Glass ground on both |
| sides to the same Sphere with the former Plate. Its thickness was 5/62 |
| Parts of an Inch; and the Diameters of the three first bright Rings |
| measured between the brightest Parts of their Orbits at the distance of |
| six Feet from the Glass were 3·4-1/6·5-1/8· Inches. Now, the thickness |
| of the other Glass being 1/4 of an Inch was to the thickness of this |
| Glass as 1/4 to 5/62, that is as 31 to 10, or 310000000 to 100000000, |
| and the Roots of these Numbers are 17607 and 10000, and in the |
| Proportion of the first of these Roots to the second are the Diameters |
| of the bright Rings made in this Observation by the thinner Glass, |
| 3·4-1/6·5-1/8, to the Diameters of the same Rings made in the third of |
| these Observations by the thicker Glass 1-11/16, 2-3/8. 2-11/12, that |
| is, the Diameters of the Rings are reciprocally in a subduplicate |
| Proportion of the thicknesses of the Plates of Glass. |
| |
| So then in Plates of Glass which are alike concave on one side, and |
| alike convex on the other side, and alike quick-silver'd on the convex |
| sides, and differ in nothing but their thickness, the Diameters of the |
| Rings are reciprocally in a subduplicate Proportion of the thicknesses |
| of the Plates. And this shews sufficiently that the Rings depend on both |
| the Surfaces of the Glass. They depend on the convex Surface, because |
| they are more luminous when that Surface is quick-silver'd over than |
| when it is without Quick-silver. They depend also upon the concave |
| Surface, because without that Surface a Speculum makes them not. They |
| depend on both Surfaces, and on the distances between them, because |
| their bigness is varied by varying only that distance. And this |
| dependence is of the same kind with that which the Colours of thin |
| Plates have on the distance of the Surfaces of those Plates, because the |
| bigness of the Rings, and their Proportion to one another, and the |
| variation of their bigness arising from the variation of the thickness |
| of the Glass, and the Orders of their Colours, is such as ought to |
| result from the Propositions in the end of the third Part of this Book, |
| derived from the Phænomena of the Colours of thin Plates set down in the |
| first Part. |
| |
| There are yet other Phænomena of these Rings of Colours, but such as |
| follow from the same Propositions, and therefore confirm both the Truth |
| of those Propositions, and the Analogy between these Rings and the Rings |
| of Colours made by very thin Plates. I shall subjoin some of them. |
| |
| _Obs._ 10. When the beam of the Sun's Light was reflected back from the |
| Speculum not directly to the hole in the Window, but to a place a little |
| distant from it, the common center of that Spot, and of all the Rings of |
| Colours fell in the middle way between the beam of the incident Light, |
| and the beam of the reflected Light, and by consequence in the center of |
| the spherical concavity of the Speculum, whenever the Chart on which the |
| Rings of Colours fell was placed at that center. And as the beam of |
| reflected Light by inclining the Speculum receded more and more from the |
| beam of incident Light and from the common center of the colour'd Rings |
| between them, those Rings grew bigger and bigger, and so also did the |
| white round Spot, and new Rings of Colours emerged successively out of |
| their common center, and the white Spot became a white Ring |
| encompassing them; and the incident and reflected beams of Light always |
| fell upon the opposite parts of this white Ring, illuminating its |
| Perimeter like two mock Suns in the opposite parts of an Iris. So then |
| the Diameter of this Ring, measured from the middle of its Light on one |
| side to the middle of its Light on the other side, was always equal to |
| the distance between the middle of the incident beam of Light, and the |
| middle of the reflected beam measured at the Chart on which the Rings |
| appeared: And the Rays which form'd this Ring were reflected by the |
| Speculum in Angles equal to their Angles of Incidence, and by |
| consequence to their Angles of Refraction at their entrance into the |
| Glass, but yet their Angles of Reflexion were not in the same Planes |
| with their Angles of Incidence. |
| |
| _Obs._ 11. The Colours of the new Rings were in a contrary order to |
| those of the former, and arose after this manner. The white round Spot |
| of Light in the middle of the Rings continued white to the center till |
| the distance of the incident and reflected beams at the Chart was about |
| 7/8 parts of an Inch, and then it began to grow dark in the middle. And |
| when that distance was about 1-3/16 of an Inch, the white Spot was |
| become a Ring encompassing a dark round Spot which in the middle |
| inclined to violet and indigo. And the luminous Rings encompassing it |
| were grown equal to those dark ones which in the four first Observations |
| encompassed them, that is to say, the white Spot was grown a white Ring |
| equal to the first of those dark Rings, and the first of those luminous |
| Rings was now grown equal to the second of those dark ones, and the |
| second of those luminous ones to the third of those dark ones, and so |
| on. For the Diameters of the luminous Rings were now 1-3/16, 2-1/16, |
| 2-2/3, 3-3/20, &c. Inches. |
| |
| When the distance between the incident and reflected beams of Light |
| became a little bigger, there emerged out of the middle of the dark Spot |
| after the indigo a blue, and then out of that blue a pale green, and |
| soon after a yellow and red. And when the Colour at the center was |
| brightest, being between yellow and red, the bright Rings were grown |
| equal to those Rings which in the four first Observations next |
| encompassed them; that is to say, the white Spot in the middle of those |
| Rings was now become a white Ring equal to the first of those bright |
| Rings, and the first of those bright ones was now become equal to the |
| second of those, and so on. For the Diameters of the white Ring, and of |
| the other luminous Rings encompassing it, were now 1-11/16, 2-3/8, |
| 2-11/12, 3-3/8, &c. or thereabouts. |
| |
| When the distance of the two beams of Light at the Chart was a little |
| more increased, there emerged out of the middle in order after the red, |
| a purple, a blue, a green, a yellow, and a red inclining much to purple, |
| and when the Colour was brightest being between yellow and red, the |
| former indigo, blue, green, yellow and red, were become an Iris or Ring |
| of Colours equal to the first of those luminous Rings which appeared in |
| the four first Observations, and the white Ring which was now become |
| the second of the luminous Rings was grown equal to the second of those, |
| and the first of those which was now become the third Ring was become |
| equal to the third of those, and so on. For their Diameters were |
| 1-11/16, 2-3/8, 2-11/12, 3-3/8 Inches, the distance of the two beams of |
| Light, and the Diameter of the white Ring being 2-3/8 Inches. |
| |
| When these two beams became more distant there emerged out of the middle |
| of the purplish red, first a darker round Spot, and then out of the |
| middle of that Spot a brighter. And now the former Colours (purple, |
| blue, green, yellow, and purplish red) were become a Ring equal to the |
| first of the bright Rings mentioned in the four first Observations, and |
| the Rings about this Ring were grown equal to the Rings about that |
| respectively; the distance between the two beams of Light and the |
| Diameter of the white Ring (which was now become the third Ring) being |
| about 3 Inches. |
| |
| The Colours of the Rings in the middle began now to grow very dilute, |
| and if the distance between the two Beams was increased half an Inch, or |
| an Inch more, they vanish'd whilst the white Ring, with one or two of |
| the Rings next it on either side, continued still visible. But if the |
| distance of the two beams of Light was still more increased, these also |
| vanished: For the Light which coming from several parts of the hole in |
| the Window fell upon the Speculum in several Angles of Incidence, made |
| Rings of several bignesses, which diluted and blotted out one another, |
| as I knew by intercepting some part of that Light. For if I intercepted |
| that part which was nearest to the Axis of the Speculum the Rings would |
| be less, if the other part which was remotest from it they would be |
| bigger. |
| |
| _Obs._ 12. When the Colours of the Prism were cast successively on the |
| Speculum, that Ring which in the two last Observations was white, was of |
| the same bigness in all the Colours, but the Rings without it were |
| greater in the green than in the blue, and still greater in the yellow, |
| and greatest in the red. And, on the contrary, the Rings within that |
| white Circle were less in the green than in the blue, and still less in |
| the yellow, and least in the red. For the Angles of Reflexion of those |
| Rays which made this Ring, being equal to their Angles of Incidence, the |
| Fits of every reflected Ray within the Glass after Reflexion are equal |
| in length and number to the Fits of the same Ray within the Glass before |
| its Incidence on the reflecting Surface. And therefore since all the |
| Rays of all sorts at their entrance into the Glass were in a Fit of |
| Transmission, they were also in a Fit of Transmission at their returning |
| to the same Surface after Reflexion; and by consequence were |
| transmitted, and went out to the white Ring on the Chart. This is the |
| reason why that Ring was of the same bigness in all the Colours, and why |
| in a mixture of all it appears white. But in Rays which are reflected in |
| other Angles, the Intervals of the Fits of the least refrangible being |
| greatest, make the Rings of their Colour in their progress from this |
| white Ring, either outwards or inwards, increase or decrease by the |
| greatest steps; so that the Rings of this Colour without are greatest, |
| and within least. And this is the reason why in the last Observation, |
| when the Speculum was illuminated with white Light, the exterior Rings |
| made by all Colours appeared red without and blue within, and the |
| interior blue without and red within. |
| |
| These are the Phænomena of thick convexo-concave Plates of Glass, which |
| are every where of the same thickness. There are yet other Phænomena |
| when these Plates are a little thicker on one side than on the other, |
| and others when the Plates are more or less concave than convex, or |
| plano-convex, or double-convex. For in all these cases the Plates make |
| Rings of Colours, but after various manners; all which, so far as I have |
| yet observed, follow from the Propositions in the end of the third part |
| of this Book, and so conspire to confirm the truth of those |
| Propositions. But the Phænomena are too various, and the Calculations |
| whereby they follow from those Propositions too intricate to be here |
| prosecuted. I content my self with having prosecuted this kind of |
| Phænomena so far as to discover their Cause, and by discovering it to |
| ratify the Propositions in the third Part of this Book. |
| |
| _Obs._ 13. As Light reflected by a Lens quick-silver'd on the backside |
| makes the Rings of Colours above described, so it ought to make the like |
| Rings of Colours in passing through a drop of Water. At the first |
| Reflexion of the Rays within the drop, some Colours ought to be |
| transmitted, as in the case of a Lens, and others to be reflected back |
| to the Eye. For instance, if the Diameter of a small drop or globule of |
| Water be about the 500th part of an Inch, so that a red-making Ray in |
| passing through the middle of this globule has 250 Fits of easy |
| Transmission within the globule, and that all the red-making Rays which |
| are at a certain distance from this middle Ray round about it have 249 |
| Fits within the globule, and all the like Rays at a certain farther |
| distance round about it have 248 Fits, and all those at a certain |
| farther distance 247 Fits, and so on; these concentrick Circles of Rays |
| after their transmission, falling on a white Paper, will make |
| concentrick Rings of red upon the Paper, supposing the Light which |
| passes through one single globule, strong enough to be sensible. And, in |
| like manner, the Rays of other Colours will make Rings of other Colours. |
| Suppose now that in a fair Day the Sun shines through a thin Cloud of |
| such globules of Water or Hail, and that the globules are all of the |
| same bigness; and the Sun seen through this Cloud shall appear |
| encompassed with the like concentrick Rings of Colours, and the Diameter |
| of the first Ring of red shall be 7-1/4 Degrees, that of the second |
| 10-1/4 Degrees, that of the third 12 Degrees 33 Minutes. And accordingly |
| as the Globules of Water are bigger or less, the Rings shall be less or |
| bigger. This is the Theory, and Experience answers it. For in _June_ |
| 1692, I saw by reflexion in a Vessel of stagnating Water three Halos, |
| Crowns, or Rings of Colours about the Sun, like three little Rain-bows, |
| concentrick to his Body. The Colours of the first or innermost Crown |
| were blue next the Sun, red without, and white in the middle between the |
| blue and red. Those of the second Crown were purple and blue within, and |
| pale red without, and green in the middle. And those of the third were |
| pale blue within, and pale red without; these Crowns enclosed one |
| another immediately, so that their Colours proceeded in this continual |
| order from the Sun outward: blue, white, red; purple, blue, green, pale |
| yellow and red; pale blue, pale red. The Diameter of the second Crown |
| measured from the middle of the yellow and red on one side of the Sun, |
| to the middle of the same Colour on the other side was 9-1/3 Degrees, or |
| thereabouts. The Diameters of the first and third I had not time to |
| measure, but that of the first seemed to be about five or six Degrees, |
| and that of the third about twelve. The like Crowns appear sometimes |
| about the Moon; for in the beginning of the Year 1664, _Febr._ 19th at |
| Night, I saw two such Crowns about her. The Diameter of the first or |
| innermost was about three Degrees, and that of the second about five |
| Degrees and an half. Next about the Moon was a Circle of white, and next |
| about that the inner Crown, which was of a bluish green within next the |
| white, and of a yellow and red without, and next about these Colours |
| were blue and green on the inside of the outward Crown, and red on the |
| outside of it. At the same time there appear'd a Halo about 22 Degrees |
| 35´ distant from the center of the Moon. It was elliptical, and its long |
| Diameter was perpendicular to the Horizon, verging below farthest from |
| the Moon. I am told that the Moon has sometimes three or more |
| concentrick Crowns of Colours encompassing one another next about her |
| Body. The more equal the globules of Water or Ice are to one another, |
| the more Crowns of Colours will appear, and the Colours will be the more |
| lively. The Halo at the distance of 22-1/2 Degrees from the Moon is of |
| another sort. By its being oval and remoter from the Moon below than |
| above, I conclude, that it was made by Refraction in some sort of Hail |
| or Snow floating in the Air in an horizontal posture, the refracting |
| Angle being about 58 or 60 Degrees. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| THE |
| |
| THIRD BOOK |
| |
| OF |
| |
| OPTICKS |
| |
| |
| _PART I._ |
| |
| _Observations concerning the Inflexions of the Rays of Light, and the |
| Colours made thereby._ |
| |
| Grimaldo has inform'd us, that if a beam of the Sun's Light be let into |
| a dark Room through a very small hole, the Shadows of things in this |
| Light will be larger than they ought to be if the Rays went on by the |
| Bodies in straight Lines, and that these Shadows have three parallel |
| Fringes, Bands or Ranks of colour'd Light adjacent to them. But if the |
| Hole be enlarged the Fringes grow broad and run into one another, so |
| that they cannot be distinguish'd. These broad Shadows and Fringes have |
| been reckon'd by some to proceed from the ordinary refraction of the |
| Air, but without due examination of the Matter. For the circumstances of |
| the Phænomenon, so far as I have observed them, are as follows. |
| |
| _Obs._ 1. I made in a piece of Lead a small Hole with a Pin, whose |
| breadth was the 42d part of an Inch. For 21 of those Pins laid together |
| took up the breadth of half an Inch. Through this Hole I let into my |
| darken'd Chamber a beam of the Sun's Light, and found that the Shadows |
| of Hairs, Thred, Pins, Straws, and such like slender Substances placed |
| in this beam of Light, were considerably broader than they ought to be, |
| if the Rays of Light passed on by these Bodies in right Lines. And |
| particularly a Hair of a Man's Head, whose breadth was but the 280th |
| part of an Inch, being held in this Light, at the distance of about |
| twelve Feet from the Hole, did cast a Shadow which at the distance of |
| four Inches from the Hair was the sixtieth part of an Inch broad, that |
| is, above four times broader than the Hair, and at the distance of two |
| Feet from the Hair was about the eight and twentieth part of an Inch |
| broad, that is, ten times broader than the Hair, and at the distance of |
| ten Feet was the eighth part of an Inch broad, that is 35 times broader. |
| |
| Nor is it material whether the Hair be encompassed with Air, or with any |
| other pellucid Substance. For I wetted a polish'd Plate of Glass, and |
| laid the Hair in the Water upon the Glass, and then laying another |
| polish'd Plate of Glass upon it, so that the Water might fill up the |
| space between the Glasses, I held them in the aforesaid beam of Light, |
| so that the Light might pass through them perpendicularly, and the |
| Shadow of the Hair was at the same distances as big as before. The |
| Shadows of Scratches made in polish'd Plates of Glass were also much |
| broader than they ought to be, and the Veins in polish'd Plates of Glass |
| did also cast the like broad Shadows. And therefore the great breadth of |
| these Shadows proceeds from some other cause than the Refraction of the |
| Air. |
| |
| Let the Circle X [in _Fig._ 1.] represent the middle of the Hair; ADG, |
| BEH, CFI, three Rays passing by one side of the Hair at several |
| distances; KNQ, LOR, MPS, three other Rays passing by the other side of |
| the Hair at the like distances; D, E, F, and N, O, P, the places where |
| the Rays are bent in their passage by the Hair; G, H, I, and Q, R, S, |
| the places where the Rays fall on a Paper GQ; IS the breadth of the |
| Shadow of the Hair cast on the Paper, and TI, VS, two Rays passing to |
| the Points I and S without bending when the Hair is taken away. And it's |
| manifest that all the Light between these two Rays TI and VS is bent in |
| passing by the Hair, and turned aside from the Shadow IS, because if any |
| part of this Light were not bent it would fall on the Paper within the |
| Shadow, and there illuminate the Paper, contrary to experience. And |
| because when the Paper is at a great distance from the Hair, the Shadow |
| is broad, and therefore the Rays TI and VS are at a great distance from |
| one another, it follows that the Hair acts upon the Rays of Light at a |
| good distance in their passing by it. But the Action is strongest on the |
| Rays which pass by at least distances, and grows weaker and weaker |
| accordingly as the Rays pass by at distances greater and greater, as is |
| represented in the Scheme: For thence it comes to pass, that the Shadow |
| of the Hair is much broader in proportion to the distance of the Paper |
| from the Hair, when the Paper is nearer the Hair, than when it is at a |
| great distance from it. |
| |
| _Obs._ 2. The Shadows of all Bodies (Metals, Stones, Glass, Wood, Horn, |
| Ice, &c.) in this Light were border'd with three Parallel Fringes or |
| Bands of colour'd Light, whereof that which was contiguous to the Shadow |
| was broadest and most luminous, and that which was remotest from it was |
| narrowest, and so faint, as not easily to be visible. It was difficult |
| to distinguish the Colours, unless when the Light fell very obliquely |
| upon a smooth Paper, or some other smooth white Body, so as to make them |
| appear much broader than they would otherwise do. And then the Colours |
| were plainly visible in this Order: The first or innermost Fringe was |
| violet and deep blue next the Shadow, and then light blue, green, and |
| yellow in the middle, and red without. The second Fringe was almost |
| contiguous to the first, and the third to the second, and both were blue |
| within, and yellow and red without, but their Colours were very faint, |
| especially those of the third. The Colours therefore proceeded in this |
| order from the Shadow; violet, indigo, pale blue, green, yellow, red; |
| blue, yellow, red; pale blue, pale yellow and red. The Shadows made by |
| Scratches and Bubbles in polish'd Plates of Glass were border'd with the |
| like Fringes of colour'd Light. And if Plates of Looking-glass sloop'd |
| off near the edges with a Diamond-cut, be held in the same beam of |
| Light, the Light which passes through the parallel Planes of the Glass |
| will be border'd with the like Fringes of Colours where those Planes |
| meet with the Diamond-cut, and by this means there will sometimes appear |
| four or five Fringes of Colours. Let AB, CD [in _Fig._ 2.] represent the |
| parallel Planes of a Looking-glass, and BD the Plane of the Diamond-cut, |
| making at B a very obtuse Angle with the Plane AB. And let all the Light |
| between the Rays ENI and FBM pass directly through the parallel Planes |
| of the Glass, and fall upon the Paper between I and M, and all the Light |
| between the Rays GO and HD be refracted by the oblique Plane of the |
| Diamond-cut BD, and fall upon the Paper between K and L; and the Light |
| which passes directly through the parallel Planes of the Glass, and |
| falls upon the Paper between I and M, will be border'd with three or |
| more Fringes at M. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 1.] |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 2.] |
| |
| So by looking on the Sun through a Feather or black Ribband held close |
| to the Eye, several Rain-bows will appear; the Shadows which the Fibres |
| or Threds cast on the _Tunica Retina_, being border'd with the like |
| Fringes of Colours. |
| |
| _Obs._ 3. When the Hair was twelve Feet distant from this Hole, and its |
| Shadow fell obliquely upon a flat white Scale of Inches and Parts of an |
| Inch placed half a Foot beyond it, and also when the Shadow fell |
| perpendicularly upon the same Scale placed nine Feet beyond it; I |
| measured the breadth of the Shadow and Fringes as accurately as I could, |
| and found them in Parts of an Inch as follows. |
| |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| | half a | Nine |
| At the Distance of | Foot | Feet |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth of the Shadow | 1/54 | 1/9 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth between the Middles of the | 1/38 | |
| brightest Light of the innermost Fringes | or | |
| on either side the Shadow | 1/39 | 7/50 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth between the Middles of the | | |
| brightest Light of the middlemost Fringes| | |
| on either side the Shadow | 1/23-1/2 | 4/17 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth between the Middles of the | 1/18 | |
| brightest Light of the outmost Fringes | or | |
| on either side the Shadow | 1/18-1/2 | 3/10 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The distance between the Middles of the | | |
| brightest Light of the first and second | | |
| Fringes | 1/120 | 1/21 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The distance between the Middles of the | | |
| brightest Light of the second and third | | |
| Fringes | 1/170 | 1/31 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth of the luminous Part (green, | | |
| white, yellow, and red) of the first | | |
| Fringe | 1/170 | 1/32 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth of the darker Space between | | |
| the first and second Fringes | 1/240 | 1/45 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth of the luminous Part of the | | |
| second Fringe | 1/290 | 1/55 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| The breadth of the darker Space between | | |
| the second and third Fringes | 1/340 | 1/63 |
| -------------------------------------------+-----------+-------- |
| |
| These Measures I took by letting the Shadow of the Hair, at half a Foot |
| distance, fall so obliquely on the Scale, as to appear twelve times |
| broader than when it fell perpendicularly on it at the same distance, |
| and setting down in this Table the twelfth part of the Measures I then |
| took. |
| |
| _Obs._ 4. When the Shadow and Fringes were cast obliquely upon a smooth |
| white Body, and that Body was removed farther and farther from the Hair, |
| the first Fringe began to appear and look brighter than the rest of the |
| Light at the distance of less than a quarter of an Inch from the Hair, |
| and the dark Line or Shadow between that and the second Fringe began to |
| appear at a less distance from the Hair than that of the third part of |
| an Inch. The second Fringe began to appear at a distance from the Hair |
| of less than half an Inch, and the Shadow between that and the third |
| Fringe at a distance less than an inch, and the third Fringe at a |
| distance less than three Inches. At greater distances they became much |
| more sensible, but kept very nearly the same proportion of their |
| breadths and intervals which they had at their first appearing. For the |
| distance between the middle of the first, and middle of the second |
| Fringe, was to the distance between the middle of the second and middle |
| of the third Fringe, as three to two, or ten to seven. And the last of |
| these two distances was equal to the breadth of the bright Light or |
| luminous part of the first Fringe. And this breadth was to the breadth |
| of the bright Light of the second Fringe as seven to four, and to the |
| dark Interval of the first and second Fringe as three to two, and to |
| the like dark Interval between the second and third as two to one. For |
| the breadths of the Fringes seem'd to be in the progression of the |
| Numbers 1, sqrt(1/3), sqrt(1/5), and their Intervals to be in the |
| same progression with them; that is, the Fringes and their Intervals |
| together to be in the continual progression of the Numbers 1, |
| sqrt(1/2), sqrt(1/3), sqrt(1/4), sqrt(1/5), or thereabouts. And |
| these Proportions held the same very nearly at all distances from the |
| Hair; the dark Intervals of the Fringes being as broad in proportion to |
| the breadth of the Fringes at their first appearance as afterwards at |
| great distances from the Hair, though not so dark and distinct. |
| |
| _Obs._ 5. The Sun shining into my darken'd Chamber through a hole a |
| quarter of an Inch broad, I placed at the distance of two or three Feet |
| from the Hole a Sheet of Pasteboard, which was black'd all over on both |
| sides, and in the middle of it had a hole about three quarters of an |
| Inch square for the Light to pass through. And behind the hole I |
| fasten'd to the Pasteboard with Pitch the blade of a sharp Knife, to |
| intercept some part of the Light which passed through the hole. The |
| Planes of the Pasteboard and blade of the Knife were parallel to one |
| another, and perpendicular to the Rays. And when they were so placed |
| that none of the Sun's Light fell on the Pasteboard, but all of it |
| passed through the hole to the Knife, and there part of it fell upon the |
| blade of the Knife, and part of it passed by its edge; I let this part |
| of the Light which passed by, fall on a white Paper two or three Feet |
| beyond the Knife, and there saw two streams of faint Light shoot out |
| both ways from the beam of Light into the shadow, like the Tails of |
| Comets. But because the Sun's direct Light by its brightness upon the |
| Paper obscured these faint streams, so that I could scarce see them, I |
| made a little hole in the midst of the Paper for that Light to pass |
| through and fall on a black Cloth behind it; and then I saw the two |
| streams plainly. They were like one another, and pretty nearly equal in |
| length, and breadth, and quantity of Light. Their Light at that end next |
| the Sun's direct Light was pretty strong for the space of about a |
| quarter of an Inch, or half an Inch, and in all its progress from that |
| direct Light decreased gradually till it became insensible. The whole |
| length of either of these streams measured upon the paper at the |
| distance of three Feet from the Knife was about six or eight Inches; so |
| that it subtended an Angle at the edge of the Knife of about 10 or 12, |
| or at most 14 Degrees. Yet sometimes I thought I saw it shoot three or |
| four Degrees farther, but with a Light so very faint that I could scarce |
| perceive it, and suspected it might (in some measure at least) arise |
| from some other cause than the two streams did. For placing my Eye in |
| that Light beyond the end of that stream which was behind the Knife, and |
| looking towards the Knife, I could see a line of Light upon its edge, |
| and that not only when my Eye was in the line of the Streams, but also |
| when it was without that line either towards the point of the Knife, or |
| towards the handle. This line of Light appear'd contiguous to the edge |
| of the Knife, and was narrower than the Light of the innermost Fringe, |
| and narrowest when my Eye was farthest from the direct Light, and |
| therefore seem'd to pass between the Light of that Fringe and the edge |
| of the Knife, and that which passed nearest the edge to be most bent, |
| though not all of it. |
| |
| _Obs._ 6. I placed another Knife by this, so that their edges might be |
| parallel, and look towards one another, and that the beam of Light might |
| fall upon both the Knives, and some part of it pass between their edges. |
| And when the distance of their edges was about the 400th part of an |
| Inch, the stream parted in the middle, and left a Shadow between the two |
| parts. This Shadow was so black and dark that all the Light which passed |
| between the Knives seem'd to be bent, and turn'd aside to the one hand |
| or to the other. And as the Knives still approach'd one another the |
| Shadow grew broader, and the streams shorter at their inward ends which |
| were next the Shadow, until upon the contact of the Knives the whole |
| Light vanish'd, leaving its place to the Shadow. |
| |
| And hence I gather that the Light which is least bent, and goes to the |
| inward ends of the streams, passes by the edges of the Knives at the |
| greatest distance, and this distance when the Shadow begins to appear |
| between the streams, is about the 800th part of an Inch. And the Light |
| which passes by the edges of the Knives at distances still less and |
| less, is more and more bent, and goes to those parts of the streams |
| which are farther and farther from the direct Light; because when the |
| Knives approach one another till they touch, those parts of the streams |
| vanish last which are farthest from the direct Light. |
| |
| _Obs._ 7. In the fifth Observation the Fringes did not appear, but by |
| reason of the breadth of the hole in the Window became so broad as to |
| run into one another, and by joining, to make one continued Light in the |
| beginning of the streams. But in the sixth, as the Knives approached one |
| another, a little before the Shadow appeared between the two streams, |
| the Fringes began to appear on the inner ends of the Streams on either |
| side of the direct Light; three on one side made by the edge of one |
| Knife, and three on the other side made by the edge of the other Knife. |
| They were distinctest when the Knives were placed at the greatest |
| distance from the hole in the Window, and still became more distinct by |
| making the hole less, insomuch that I could sometimes see a faint |
| lineament of a fourth Fringe beyond the three above mention'd. And as |
| the Knives continually approach'd one another, the Fringes grew |
| distincter and larger, until they vanish'd. The outmost Fringe vanish'd |
| first, and the middlemost next, and the innermost last. And after they |
| were all vanish'd, and the line of Light which was in the middle between |
| them was grown very broad, enlarging it self on both sides into the |
| streams of Light described in the fifth Observation, the above-mention'd |
| Shadow began to appear in the middle of this line, and divide it along |
| the middle into two lines of Light, and increased until the whole Light |
| vanish'd. This enlargement of the Fringes was so great that the Rays |
| which go to the innermost Fringe seem'd to be bent above twenty times |
| more when this Fringe was ready to vanish, than when one of the Knives |
| was taken away. |
| |
| And from this and the former Observation compared, I gather, that the |
| Light of the first Fringe passed by the edge of the Knife at a distance |
| greater than the 800th part of an Inch, and the Light of the second |
| Fringe passed by the edge of the Knife at a greater distance than the |
| Light of the first Fringe did, and that of the third at a greater |
| distance than that of the second, and that of the streams of Light |
| described in the fifth and sixth Observations passed by the edges of the |
| Knives at less distances than that of any of the Fringes. |
| |
| _Obs._ 8. I caused the edges of two Knives to be ground truly strait, |
| and pricking their points into a Board so that their edges might look |
| towards one another, and meeting near their points contain a rectilinear |
| Angle, I fasten'd their Handles together with Pitch to make this Angle |
| invariable. The distance of the edges of the Knives from one another at |
| the distance of four Inches from the angular Point, where the edges of |
| the Knives met, was the eighth part of an Inch; and therefore the Angle |
| contain'd by the edges was about one Degree 54: The Knives thus fix'd |
| together I placed in a beam of the Sun's Light, let into my darken'd |
| Chamber through a Hole the 42d Part of an Inch wide, at the distance of |
| 10 or 15 Feet from the Hole, and let the Light which passed between |
| their edges fall very obliquely upon a smooth white Ruler at the |
| distance of half an Inch, or an Inch from the Knives, and there saw the |
| Fringes by the two edges of the Knives run along the edges of the |
| Shadows of the Knives in Lines parallel to those edges without growing |
| sensibly broader, till they met in Angles equal to the Angle contained |
| by the edges of the Knives, and where they met and joined they ended |
| without crossing one another. But if the Ruler was held at a much |
| greater distance from the Knives, the Fringes where they were farther |
| from the Place of their Meeting, were a little narrower, and became |
| something broader and broader as they approach'd nearer and nearer to |
| one another, and after they met they cross'd one another, and then |
| became much broader than before. |
| |
| Whence I gather that the distances at which the Fringes pass by the |
| Knives are not increased nor alter'd by the approach of the Knives, but |
| the Angles in which the Rays are there bent are much increased by that |
| approach; and that the Knife which is nearest any Ray determines which |
| way the Ray shall be bent, and the other Knife increases the bent. |
| |
| _Obs._ 9. When the Rays fell very obliquely upon the Ruler at the |
| distance of the third Part of an Inch from the Knives, the dark Line |
| between the first and second Fringe of the Shadow of one Knife, and the |
| dark Line between the first and second Fringe of the Shadow of the other |
| knife met with one another, at the distance of the fifth Part of an Inch |
| from the end of the Light which passed between the Knives at the |
| concourse of their edges. And therefore the distance of the edges of the |
| Knives at the meeting of these dark Lines was the 160th Part of an Inch. |
| For as four Inches to the eighth Part of an Inch, so is any Length of |
| the edges of the Knives measured from the point of their concourse to |
| the distance of the edges of the Knives at the end of that Length, and |
| so is the fifth Part of an Inch to the 160th Part. So then the dark |
| Lines above-mention'd meet in the middle of the Light which passes |
| between the Knives where they are distant the 160th Part of an Inch, and |
| the one half of that Light passes by the edge of one Knife at a distance |
| not greater than the 320th Part of an Inch, and falling upon the Paper |
| makes the Fringes of the Shadow of that Knife, and the other half passes |
| by the edge of the other Knife, at a distance not greater than the 320th |
| Part of an Inch, and falling upon the Paper makes the Fringes of the |
| Shadow of the other Knife. But if the Paper be held at a distance from |
| the Knives greater than the third Part of an Inch, the dark Lines |
| above-mention'd meet at a greater distance than the fifth Part of an |
| Inch from the end of the Light which passed between the Knives at the |
| concourse of their edges; and therefore the Light which falls upon the |
| Paper where those dark Lines meet passes between the Knives where the |
| edges are distant above the 160th part of an Inch. |
| |
| For at another time, when the two Knives were distant eight Feet and |
| five Inches from the little hole in the Window, made with a small Pin as |
| above, the Light which fell upon the Paper where the aforesaid dark |
| lines met, passed between the Knives, where the distance between their |
| edges was as in the following Table, when the distance of the Paper from |
| the Knives was also as follows. |
| |
| -----------------------------+------------------------------ |
| | Distances between the edges |
| Distances of the Paper | of the Knives in millesimal |
| from the Knives in Inches. | parts of an Inch. |
| -----------------------------+------------------------------ |
| 1-1/2. | 0'012 |
| 3-1/3. | 0'020 |
| 8-3/5. | 0'034 |
| 32. | 0'057 |
| 96. | 0'081 |
| 131. | 0'087 |
| _____________________________|______________________________ |
| |
| And hence I gather, that the Light which makes the Fringes upon the |
| Paper is not the same Light at all distances of the Paper from the |
| Knives, but when the Paper is held near the Knives, the Fringes are made |
| by Light which passes by the edges of the Knives at a less distance, and |
| is more bent than when the Paper is held at a greater distance from the |
| Knives. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 3.] |
| |
| _Obs._ 10. When the Fringes of the Shadows of the Knives fell |
| perpendicularly upon a Paper at a great distance from the Knives, they |
| were in the form of Hyperbola's, and their Dimensions were as follows. |
| Let CA, CB [in _Fig._ 3.] represent Lines drawn upon the Paper parallel |
| to the edges of the Knives, and between which all the Light would fall, |
| if it passed between the edges of the Knives without inflexion; DE a |
| Right Line drawn through C making the Angles ACD, BCE, equal to one |
| another, and terminating all the Light which falls upon the Paper from |
| the point where the edges of the Knives meet; _eis_, _fkt_, and _glv_, |
| three hyperbolical Lines representing the Terminus of the Shadow of one |
| of the Knives, the dark Line between the first and second Fringes of |
| that Shadow, and the dark Line between the second and third Fringes of |
| the same Shadow; _xip_, _ykq_, and _zlr_, three other hyperbolical Lines |
| representing the Terminus of the Shadow of the other Knife, the dark |
| Line between the first and second Fringes of that Shadow, and the dark |
| line between the second and third Fringes of the same Shadow. And |
| conceive that these three Hyperbola's are like and equal to the former |
| three, and cross them in the points _i_, _k_, and _l_, and that the |
| Shadows of the Knives are terminated and distinguish'd from the first |
| luminous Fringes by the lines _eis_ and _xip_, until the meeting and |
| crossing of the Fringes, and then those lines cross the Fringes in the |
| form of dark lines, terminating the first luminous Fringes within side, |
| and distinguishing them from another Light which begins to appear at |
| _i_, and illuminates all the triangular space _ip_DE_s_ comprehended by |
| these dark lines, and the right line DE. Of these Hyperbola's one |
| Asymptote is the line DE, and their other Asymptotes are parallel to the |
| lines CA and CB. Let _rv_ represent a line drawn any where upon the |
| Paper parallel to the Asymptote DE, and let this line cross the right |
| lines AC in _m_, and BC in _n_, and the six dark hyperbolical lines in |
| _p_, _q_, _r_; _s_, _t_, _v_; and by measuring the distances _ps_, _qt_, |
| _rv_, and thence collecting the lengths of the Ordinates _np_, _nq_, |
| _nr_ or _ms_, _mt_, _mv_, and doing this at several distances of the |
| line _rv_ from the Asymptote DD, you may find as many points of these |
| Hyperbola's as you please, and thereby know that these curve lines are |
| Hyperbola's differing little from the conical Hyperbola. And by |
| measuring the lines C_i_, C_k_, C_l_, you may find other points of these |
| Curves. |
| |
| For instance; when the Knives were distant from the hole in the Window |
| ten Feet, and the Paper from the Knives nine Feet, and the Angle |
| contained by the edges of the Knives to which the Angle ACB is equal, |
| was subtended by a Chord which was to the Radius as 1 to 32, and the |
| distance of the line _rv_ from the Asymptote DE was half an Inch: I |
| measured the lines _ps_, _qt_, _rv_, and found them 0'35, 0'65, 0'98 |
| Inches respectively; and by adding to their halfs the line 1/2 _mn_, |
| (which here was the 128th part of an Inch, or 0'0078 Inches,) the Sums |
| _np_, _nq_, _nr_, were 0'1828, 0'3328, 0'4978 Inches. I measured also |
| the distances of the brightest parts of the Fringes which run between |
| _pq_ and _st_, _qr_ and _tv_, and next beyond _r_ and _v_, and found |
| them 0'5, 0'8, and 1'17 Inches. |
| |
| _Obs._ 11. The Sun shining into my darken'd Room through a small round |
| hole made in a Plate of Lead with a slender Pin, as above; I placed at |
| the hole a Prism to refract the Light, and form on the opposite Wall the |
| Spectrum of Colours, described in the third Experiment of the first |
| Book. And then I found that the Shadows of all Bodies held in the |
| colour'd Light between the Prism and the Wall, were border'd with |
| Fringes of the Colour of that Light in which they were held. In the full |
| red Light they were totally red without any sensible blue or violet, and |
| in the deep blue Light they were totally blue without any sensible red |
| or yellow; and so in the green Light they were totally green, excepting |
| a little yellow and blue, which were mixed in the green Light of the |
| Prism. And comparing the Fringes made in the several colour'd Lights, I |
| found that those made in the red Light were largest, those made in the |
| violet were least, and those made in the green were of a middle bigness. |
| For the Fringes with which the Shadow of a Man's Hair were bordered, |
| being measured cross the Shadow at the distance of six Inches from the |
| Hair, the distance between the middle and most luminous part of the |
| first or innermost Fringe on one side of the Shadow, and that of the |
| like Fringe on the other side of the Shadow, was in the full red Light |
| 1/37-1/4 of an Inch, and in the full violet 7/46. And the like distance |
| between the middle and most luminous parts of the second Fringes on |
| either side the Shadow was in the full red Light 1/22, and in the violet |
| 1/27 of an Inch. And these distances of the Fringes held the same |
| proportion at all distances from the Hair without any sensible |
| variation. |
| |
| So then the Rays which made these Fringes in the red Light passed by the |
| Hair at a greater distance than those did which made the like Fringes in |
| the violet; and therefore the Hair in causing these Fringes acted alike |
| upon the red Light or least refrangible Rays at a greater distance, and |
| upon the violet or most refrangible Rays at a less distance, and by |
| those actions disposed the red Light into Larger Fringes, and the violet |
| into smaller, and the Lights of intermediate Colours into Fringes of |
| intermediate bignesses without changing the Colour of any sort of Light. |
| |
| When therefore the Hair in the first and second of these Observations |
| was held in the white beam of the Sun's Light, and cast a Shadow which |
| was border'd with three Fringes of coloured Light, those Colours arose |
| not from any new modifications impress'd upon the Rays of Light by the |
| Hair, but only from the various inflexions whereby the several Sorts of |
| Rays were separated from one another, which before separation, by the |
| mixture of all their Colours, composed the white beam of the Sun's |
| Light, but whenever separated compose Lights of the several Colours |
| which they are originally disposed to exhibit. In this 11th Observation, |
| where the Colours are separated before the Light passes by the Hair, the |
| least refrangible Rays, which when separated from the rest make red, |
| were inflected at a greater distance from the Hair, so as to make three |
| red Fringes at a greater distance from the middle of the Shadow of the |
| Hair; and the most refrangible Rays which when separated make violet, |
| were inflected at a less distance from the Hair, so as to make three |
| violet Fringes at a less distance from the middle of the Shadow of the |
| Hair. And other Rays of intermediate degrees of Refrangibility were |
| inflected at intermediate distances from the Hair, so as to make Fringes |
| of intermediate Colours at intermediate distances from the middle of the |
| Shadow of the Hair. And in the second Observation, where all the Colours |
| are mix'd in the white Light which passes by the Hair, these Colours are |
| separated by the various inflexions of the Rays, and the Fringes which |
| they make appear all together, and the innermost Fringes being |
| contiguous make one broad Fringe composed of all the Colours in due |
| order, the violet lying on the inside of the Fringe next the Shadow, the |
| red on the outside farthest from the Shadow, and the blue, green, and |
| yellow, in the middle. And, in like manner, the middlemost Fringes of |
| all the Colours lying in order, and being contiguous, make another broad |
| Fringe composed of all the Colours; and the outmost Fringes of all the |
| Colours lying in order, and being contiguous, make a third broad Fringe |
| composed of all the Colours. These are the three Fringes of colour'd |
| Light with which the Shadows of all Bodies are border'd in the second |
| Observation. |
| |
| When I made the foregoing Observations, I design'd to repeat most of |
| them with more care and exactness, and to make some new ones for |
| determining the manner how the Rays of Light are bent in their passage |
| by Bodies, for making the Fringes of Colours with the dark lines between |
| them. But I was then interrupted, and cannot now think of taking these |
| things into farther Consideration. And since I have not finish'd this |
| part of my Design, I shall conclude with proposing only some Queries, in |
| order to a farther search to be made by others. |
| |
| _Query_ 1. Do not Bodies act upon Light at a distance, and by their |
| action bend its Rays; and is not this action (_cæteris paribus_) |
| strongest at the least distance? |
| |
| _Qu._ 2. Do not the Rays which differ in Refrangibility differ also in |
| Flexibity; and are they not by their different Inflexions separated from |
| one another, so as after separation to make the Colours in the three |
| Fringes above described? And after what manner are they inflected to |
| make those Fringes? |
| |
| _Qu._ 3. Are not the Rays of Light in passing by the edges and sides of |
| Bodies, bent several times backwards and forwards, with a motion like |
| that of an Eel? And do not the three Fringes of colour'd Light |
| above-mention'd arise from three such bendings? |
| |
| _Qu._ 4. Do not the Rays of Light which fall upon Bodies, and are |
| reflected or refracted, begin to bend before they arrive at the Bodies; |
| and are they not reflected, refracted, and inflected, by one and the |
| same Principle, acting variously in various Circumstances? |
| |
| _Qu._ 5. Do not Bodies and Light act mutually upon one another; that is |
| to say, Bodies upon Light in emitting, reflecting, refracting and |
| inflecting it, and Light upon Bodies for heating them, and putting their |
| parts into a vibrating motion wherein heat consists? |
| |
| _Qu._ 6. Do not black Bodies conceive heat more easily from Light than |
| those of other Colours do, by reason that the Light falling on them is |
| not reflected outwards, but enters the Bodies, and is often reflected |
| and refracted within them, until it be stifled and lost? |
| |
| _Qu._ 7. Is not the strength and vigor of the action between Light and |
| sulphureous Bodies observed above, one reason why sulphureous Bodies |
| take fire more readily, and burn more vehemently than other Bodies do? |
| |
| _Qu._ 8. Do not all fix'd Bodies, when heated beyond a certain degree, |
| emit Light and shine; and is not this Emission perform'd by the |
| vibrating motions of their parts? And do not all Bodies which abound |
| with terrestrial parts, and especially with sulphureous ones, emit Light |
| as often as those parts are sufficiently agitated; whether that |
| agitation be made by Heat, or by Friction, or Percussion, or |
| Putrefaction, or by any vital Motion, or any other Cause? As for |
| instance; Sea-Water in a raging Storm; Quick-silver agitated in _vacuo_; |
| the Back of a Cat, or Neck of a Horse, obliquely struck or rubbed in a |
| dark place; Wood, Flesh and Fish while they putrefy; Vapours arising |
| from putrefy'd Waters, usually call'd _Ignes Fatui_; Stacks of moist Hay |
| or Corn growing hot by fermentation; Glow-worms and the Eyes of some |
| Animals by vital Motions; the vulgar _Phosphorus_ agitated by the |
| attrition of any Body, or by the acid Particles of the Air; Amber and |
| some Diamonds by striking, pressing or rubbing them; Scrapings of Steel |
| struck off with a Flint; Iron hammer'd very nimbly till it become so hot |
| as to kindle Sulphur thrown upon it; the Axletrees of Chariots taking |
| fire by the rapid rotation of the Wheels; and some Liquors mix'd with |
| one another whose Particles come together with an Impetus, as Oil of |
| Vitriol distilled from its weight of Nitre, and then mix'd with twice |
| its weight of Oil of Anniseeds. So also a Globe of Glass about 8 or 10 |
| Inches in diameter, being put into a Frame where it may be swiftly |
| turn'd round its Axis, will in turning shine where it rubs against the |
| palm of ones Hand apply'd to it: And if at the same time a piece of |
| white Paper or white Cloth, or the end of ones Finger be held at the |
| distance of about a quarter of an Inch or half an Inch from that part of |
| the Glass where it is most in motion, the electrick Vapour which is |
| excited by the friction of the Glass against the Hand, will by dashing |
| against the white Paper, Cloth or Finger, be put into such an agitation |
| as to emit Light, and make the white Paper, Cloth or Finger, appear |
| lucid like a Glowworm; and in rushing out of the Glass will sometimes |
| push against the finger so as to be felt. And the same things have been |
| found by rubbing a long and large Cylinder or Glass or Amber with a |
| Paper held in ones hand, and continuing the friction till the Glass grew |
| warm. |
| |
| _Qu._ 9. Is not Fire a Body heated so hot as to emit Light copiously? |
| For what else is a red hot Iron than Fire? And what else is a burning |
| Coal than red hot Wood? |
| |
| _Qu._ 10. Is not Flame a Vapour, Fume or Exhalation heated red hot, that |
| is, so hot as to shine? For Bodies do not flame without emitting a |
| copious Fume, and this Fume burns in the Flame. The _Ignis Fatuus_ is a |
| Vapour shining without heat, and is there not the same difference |
| between this Vapour and Flame, as between rotten Wood shining without |
| heat and burning Coals of Fire? In distilling hot Spirits, if the Head |
| of the Still be taken off, the Vapour which ascends out of the Still |
| will take fire at the Flame of a Candle, and turn into Flame, and the |
| Flame will run along the Vapour from the Candle to the Still. Some |
| Bodies heated by Motion, or Fermentation, if the heat grow intense, fume |
| copiously, and if the heat be great enough the Fumes will shine and |
| become Flame. Metals in fusion do not flame for want of a copious Fume, |
| except Spelter, which fumes copiously, and thereby flames. All flaming |
| Bodies, as Oil, Tallow, Wax, Wood, fossil Coals, Pitch, Sulphur, by |
| flaming waste and vanish into burning Smoke, which Smoke, if the Flame |
| be put out, is very thick and visible, and sometimes smells strongly, |
| but in the Flame loses its smell by burning, and according to the nature |
| of the Smoke the Flame is of several Colours, as that of Sulphur blue, |
| that of Copper open'd with sublimate green, that of Tallow yellow, that |
| of Camphire white. Smoke passing through Flame cannot but grow red hot, |
| and red hot Smoke can have no other appearance than that of Flame. When |
| Gun-powder takes fire, it goes away into Flaming Smoke. For the Charcoal |
| and Sulphur easily take fire, and set fire to the Nitre, and the Spirit |
| of the Nitre being thereby rarified into Vapour, rushes out with |
| Explosion much after the manner that the Vapour of Water rushes out of |
| an Æolipile; the Sulphur also being volatile is converted into Vapour, |
| and augments the Explosion. And the acid Vapour of the Sulphur (namely |
| that which distils under a Bell into Oil of Sulphur,) entring violently |
| into the fix'd Body of the Nitre, sets loose the Spirit of the Nitre, |
| and excites a great Fermentation, whereby the Heat is farther augmented, |
| and the fix'd Body of the Nitre is also rarified into Fume, and the |
| Explosion is thereby made more vehement and quick. For if Salt of Tartar |
| be mix'd with Gun-powder, and that Mixture be warm'd till it takes fire, |
| the Explosion will be more violent and quick than that of Gun-powder |
| alone; which cannot proceed from any other cause than the action of the |
| Vapour of the Gun-powder upon the Salt of Tartar, whereby that Salt is |
| rarified. The Explosion of Gun-powder arises therefore from the violent |
| action whereby all the Mixture being quickly and vehemently heated, is |
| rarified and converted into Fume and Vapour: which Vapour, by the |
| violence of that action, becoming so hot as to shine, appears in the |
| form of Flame. |
| |
| _Qu._ 11. Do not great Bodies conserve their heat the longest, their |
| parts heating one another, and may not great dense and fix'd Bodies, |
| when heated beyond a certain degree, emit Light so copiously, as by the |
| Emission and Re-action of its Light, and the Reflexions and Refractions |
| of its Rays within its Pores to grow still hotter, till it comes to a |
| certain period of heat, such as is that of the Sun? And are not the Sun |
| and fix'd Stars great Earths vehemently hot, whose heat is conserved by |
| the greatness of the Bodies, and the mutual Action and Reaction between |
| them, and the Light which they emit, and whose parts are kept from |
| fuming away, not only by their fixity, but also by the vast weight and |
| density of the Atmospheres incumbent upon them; and very strongly |
| compressing them, and condensing the Vapours and Exhalations which arise |
| from them? For if Water be made warm in any pellucid Vessel emptied of |
| Air, that Water in the _Vacuum_ will bubble and boil as vehemently as it |
| would in the open Air in a Vessel set upon the Fire till it conceives a |
| much greater heat. For the weight of the incumbent Atmosphere keeps down |
| the Vapours, and hinders the Water from boiling, until it grow much |
| hotter than is requisite to make it boil _in vacuo_. Also a mixture of |
| Tin and Lead being put upon a red hot Iron _in vacuo_ emits a Fume and |
| Flame, but the same Mixture in the open Air, by reason of the incumbent |
| Atmosphere, does not so much as emit any Fume which can be perceived by |
| Sight. In like manner the great weight of the Atmosphere which lies upon |
| the Globe of the Sun may hinder Bodies there from rising up and going |
| away from the Sun in the form of Vapours and Fumes, unless by means of a |
| far greater heat than that which on the Surface of our Earth would very |
| easily turn them into Vapours and Fumes. And the same great weight may |
| condense those Vapours and Exhalations as soon as they shall at any time |
| begin to ascend from the Sun, and make them presently fall back again |
| into him, and by that action increase his Heat much after the manner |
| that in our Earth the Air increases the Heat of a culinary Fire. And the |
| same weight may hinder the Globe of the Sun from being diminish'd, |
| unless by the Emission of Light, and a very small quantity of Vapours |
| and Exhalations. |
| |
| _Qu._ 12. Do not the Rays of Light in falling upon the bottom of the Eye |
| excite Vibrations in the _Tunica Retina_? Which Vibrations, being |
| propagated along the solid Fibres of the optick Nerves into the Brain, |
| cause the Sense of seeing. For because dense Bodies conserve their Heat |
| a long time, and the densest Bodies conserve their Heat the longest, the |
| Vibrations of their parts are of a lasting nature, and therefore may be |
| propagated along solid Fibres of uniform dense Matter to a great |
| distance, for conveying into the Brain the impressions made upon all the |
| Organs of Sense. For that Motion which can continue long in one and the |
| same part of a Body, can be propagated a long way from one part to |
| another, supposing the Body homogeneal, so that the Motion may not be |
| reflected, refracted, interrupted or disorder'd by any unevenness of the |
| Body. |
| |
| _Qu._ 13. Do not several sorts of Rays make Vibrations of several |
| bignesses, which according to their bignesses excite Sensations of |
| several Colours, much after the manner that the Vibrations of the Air, |
| according to their several bignesses excite Sensations of several |
| Sounds? And particularly do not the most refrangible Rays excite the |
| shortest Vibrations for making a Sensation of deep violet, the least |
| refrangible the largest for making a Sensation of deep red, and the |
| several intermediate sorts of Rays, Vibrations of several intermediate |
| bignesses to make Sensations of the several intermediate Colours? |
| |
| _Qu._ 14. May not the harmony and discord of Colours arise from the |
| proportions of the Vibrations propagated through the Fibres of the |
| optick Nerves into the Brain, as the harmony and discord of Sounds arise |
| from the proportions of the Vibrations of the Air? For some Colours, if |
| they be view'd together, are agreeable to one another, as those of Gold |
| and Indigo, and others disagree. |
| |
| _Qu._ 15. Are not the Species of Objects seen with both Eyes united |
| where the optick Nerves meet before they come into the Brain, the Fibres |
| on the right side of both Nerves uniting there, and after union going |
| thence into the Brain in the Nerve which is on the right side of the |
| Head, and the Fibres on the left side of both Nerves uniting in the same |
| place, and after union going into the Brain in the Nerve which is on the |
| left side of the Head, and these two Nerves meeting in the Brain in such |
| a manner that their Fibres make but one entire Species or Picture, half |
| of which on the right side of the Sensorium comes from the right side of |
| both Eyes through the right side of both optick Nerves to the place |
| where the Nerves meet, and from thence on the right side of the Head |
| into the Brain, and the other half on the left side of the Sensorium |
| comes in like manner from the left side of both Eyes. For the optick |
| Nerves of such Animals as look the same way with both Eyes (as of Men, |
| Dogs, Sheep, Oxen, &c.) meet before they come into the Brain, but the |
| optick Nerves of such Animals as do not look the same way with both Eyes |
| (as of Fishes, and of the Chameleon,) do not meet, if I am rightly |
| inform'd. |
| |
| _Qu._ 16. When a Man in the dark presses either corner of his Eye with |
| his Finger, and turns his Eye away from his Finger, he will see a Circle |
| of Colours like those in the Feather of a Peacock's Tail. If the Eye and |
| the Finger remain quiet these Colours vanish in a second Minute of Time, |
| but if the Finger be moved with a quavering Motion they appear again. Do |
| not these Colours arise from such Motions excited in the bottom of the |
| Eye by the Pressure and Motion of the Finger, as, at other times are |
| excited there by Light for causing Vision? And do not the Motions once |
| excited continue about a Second of Time before they cease? And when a |
| Man by a stroke upon his Eye sees a flash of Light, are not the like |
| Motions excited in the _Retina_ by the stroke? And when a Coal of Fire |
| moved nimbly in the circumference of a Circle, makes the whole |
| circumference appear like a Circle of Fire; is it not because the |
| Motions excited in the bottom of the Eye by the Rays of Light are of a |
| lasting nature, and continue till the Coal of Fire in going round |
| returns to its former place? And considering the lastingness of the |
| Motions excited in the bottom of the Eye by Light, are they not of a |
| vibrating nature? |
| |
| _Qu._ 17. If a stone be thrown into stagnating Water, the Waves excited |
| thereby continue some time to arise in the place where the Stone fell |
| into the Water, and are propagated from thence in concentrick Circles |
| upon the Surface of the Water to great distances. And the Vibrations or |
| Tremors excited in the Air by percussion, continue a little time to move |
| from the place of percussion in concentrick Spheres to great distances. |
| And in like manner, when a Ray of Light falls upon the Surface of any |
| pellucid Body, and is there refracted or reflected, may not Waves of |
| Vibrations, or Tremors, be thereby excited in the refracting or |
| reflecting Medium at the point of Incidence, and continue to arise |
| there, and to be propagated from thence as long as they continue to |
| arise and be propagated, when they are excited in the bottom of the Eye |
| by the Pressure or Motion of the Finger, or by the Light which comes |
| from the Coal of Fire in the Experiments above-mention'd? and are not |
| these Vibrations propagated from the point of Incidence to great |
| distances? And do they not overtake the Rays of Light, and by overtaking |
| them successively, do they not put them into the Fits of easy Reflexion |
| and easy Transmission described above? For if the Rays endeavour to |
| recede from the densest part of the Vibration, they may be alternately |
| accelerated and retarded by the Vibrations overtaking them. |
| |
| _Qu._ 18. If in two large tall cylindrical Vessels of Glass inverted, |
| two little Thermometers be suspended so as not to touch the Vessels, and |
| the Air be drawn out of one of these Vessels, and these Vessels thus |
| prepared be carried out of a cold place into a warm one; the Thermometer |
| _in vacuo_ will grow warm as much, and almost as soon as the Thermometer |
| which is not _in vacuo_. And when the Vessels are carried back into the |
| cold place, the Thermometer _in vacuo_ will grow cold almost as soon as |
| the other Thermometer. Is not the Heat of the warm Room convey'd through |
| the _Vacuum_ by the Vibrations of a much subtiler Medium than Air, which |
| after the Air was drawn out remained in the _Vacuum_? And is not this |
| Medium the same with that Medium by which Light is refracted and |
| reflected, and by whose Vibrations Light communicates Heat to Bodies, |
| and is put into Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission? And do not |
| the Vibrations of this Medium in hot Bodies contribute to the |
| intenseness and duration of their Heat? And do not hot Bodies |
| communicate their Heat to contiguous cold ones, by the Vibrations of |
| this Medium propagated from them into the cold ones? And is not this |
| Medium exceedingly more rare and subtile than the Air, and exceedingly |
| more elastick and active? And doth it not readily pervade all Bodies? |
| And is it not (by its elastick force) expanded through all the Heavens? |
| |
| _Qu._ 19. Doth not the Refraction of Light proceed from the different |
| density of this Æthereal Medium in different places, the Light receding |
| always from the denser parts of the Medium? And is not the density |
| thereof greater in free and open Spaces void of Air and other grosser |
| Bodies, than within the Pores of Water, Glass, Crystal, Gems, and other |
| compact Bodies? For when Light passes through Glass or Crystal, and |
| falling very obliquely upon the farther Surface thereof is totally |
| reflected, the total Reflexion ought to proceed rather from the density |
| and vigour of the Medium without and beyond the Glass, than from the |
| rarity and weakness thereof. |
| |
| _Qu._ 20. Doth not this Æthereal Medium in passing out of Water, Glass, |
| Crystal, and other compact and dense Bodies into empty Spaces, grow |
| denser and denser by degrees, and by that means refract the Rays of |
| Light not in a point, but by bending them gradually in curve Lines? And |
| doth not the gradual condensation of this Medium extend to some distance |
| from the Bodies, and thereby cause the Inflexions of the Rays of Light, |
| which pass by the edges of dense Bodies, at some distance from the |
| Bodies? |
| |
| _Qu._ 21. Is not this Medium much rarer within the dense Bodies of the |
| Sun, Stars, Planets and Comets, than in the empty celestial Spaces |
| between them? And in passing from them to great distances, doth it not |
| grow denser and denser perpetually, and thereby cause the gravity of |
| those great Bodies towards one another, and of their parts towards the |
| Bodies; every Body endeavouring to go from the denser parts of the |
| Medium towards the rarer? For if this Medium be rarer within the Sun's |
| Body than at its Surface, and rarer there than at the hundredth part of |
| an Inch from its Body, and rarer there than at the fiftieth part of an |
| Inch from its Body, and rarer there than at the Orb of _Saturn_; I see |
| no reason why the Increase of density should stop any where, and not |
| rather be continued through all distances from the Sun to _Saturn_, and |
| beyond. And though this Increase of density may at great distances be |
| exceeding slow, yet if the elastick force of this Medium be exceeding |
| great, it may suffice to impel Bodies from the denser parts of the |
| Medium towards the rarer, with all that power which we call Gravity. And |
| that the elastick force of this Medium is exceeding great, may be |
| gather'd from the swiftness of its Vibrations. Sounds move about 1140 |
| _English_ Feet in a second Minute of Time, and in seven or eight Minutes |
| of Time they move about one hundred _English_ Miles. Light moves from |
| the Sun to us in about seven or eight Minutes of Time, which distance is |
| about 70,000,000 _English_ Miles, supposing the horizontal Parallax of |
| the Sun to be about 12´´. And the Vibrations or Pulses of this Medium, |
| that they may cause the alternate Fits of easy Transmission and easy |
| Reflexion, must be swifter than Light, and by consequence above 700,000 |
| times swifter than Sounds. And therefore the elastick force of this |
| Medium, in proportion to its density, must be above 700000 x 700000 |
| (that is, above 490,000,000,000) times greater than the elastick force |
| of the Air is in proportion to its density. For the Velocities of the |
| Pulses of elastick Mediums are in a subduplicate _Ratio_ of the |
| Elasticities and the Rarities of the Mediums taken together. |
| |
| As Attraction is stronger in small Magnets than in great ones in |
| proportion to their Bulk, and Gravity is greater in the Surfaces of |
| small Planets than in those of great ones in proportion to their bulk, |
| and small Bodies are agitated much more by electric attraction than |
| great ones; so the smallness of the Rays of Light may contribute very |
| much to the power of the Agent by which they are refracted. And so if |
| any one should suppose that _Æther_ (like our Air) may contain Particles |
| which endeavour to recede from one another (for I do not know what this |
| _Æther_ is) and that its Particles are exceedingly smaller than those of |
| Air, or even than those of Light: The exceeding smallness of its |
| Particles may contribute to the greatness of the force by which those |
| Particles may recede from one another, and thereby make that Medium |
| exceedingly more rare and elastick than Air, and by consequence |
| exceedingly less able to resist the motions of Projectiles, and |
| exceedingly more able to press upon gross Bodies, by endeavouring to |
| expand it self. |
| |
| _Qu._ 22. May not Planets and Comets, and all gross Bodies, perform |
| their Motions more freely, and with less resistance in this Æthereal |
| Medium than in any Fluid, which fills all Space adequately without |
| leaving any Pores, and by consequence is much denser than Quick-silver |
| or Gold? And may not its resistance be so small, as to be |
| inconsiderable? For instance; If this _Æther_ (for so I will call it) |
| should be supposed 700000 times more elastick than our Air, and above |
| 700000 times more rare; its resistance would be above 600,000,000 times |
| less than that of Water. And so small a resistance would scarce make any |
| sensible alteration in the Motions of the Planets in ten thousand |
| Years. If any one would ask how a Medium can be so rare, let him tell me |
| how the Air, in the upper parts of the Atmosphere, can be above an |
| hundred thousand thousand times rarer than Gold. Let him also tell me, |
| how an electrick Body can by Friction emit an Exhalation so rare and |
| subtile, and yet so potent, as by its Emission to cause no sensible |
| Diminution of the weight of the electrick Body, and to be expanded |
| through a Sphere, whose Diameter is above two Feet, and yet to be able |
| to agitate and carry up Leaf Copper, or Leaf Gold, at the distance of |
| above a Foot from the electrick Body? And how the Effluvia of a Magnet |
| can be so rare and subtile, as to pass through a Plate of Glass without |
| any Resistance or Diminution of their Force, and yet so potent as to |
| turn a magnetick Needle beyond the Glass? |
| |
| _Qu._ 23. Is not Vision perform'd chiefly by the Vibrations of this |
| Medium, excited in the bottom of the Eye by the Rays of Light, and |
| propagated through the solid, pellucid and uniform Capillamenta of the |
| optick Nerves into the place of Sensation? And is not Hearing perform'd |
| by the Vibrations either of this or some other Medium, excited in the |
| auditory Nerves by the Tremors of the Air, and propagated through the |
| solid, pellucid and uniform Capillamenta of those Nerves into the place |
| of Sensation? And so of the other Senses. |
| |
| _Qu._ 24. Is not Animal Motion perform'd by the Vibrations of this |
| Medium, excited in the Brain by the power of the Will, and propagated |
| from thence through the solid, pellucid and uniform Capillamenta of the |
| Nerves into the Muscles, for contracting and dilating them? I suppose |
| that the Capillamenta of the Nerves are each of them solid and uniform, |
| that the vibrating Motion of the Æthereal Medium may be propagated along |
| them from one end to the other uniformly, and without interruption: For |
| Obstructions in the Nerves create Palsies. And that they may be |
| sufficiently uniform, I suppose them to be pellucid when view'd singly, |
| tho' the Reflexions in their cylindrical Surfaces may make the whole |
| Nerve (composed of many Capillamenta) appear opake and white. For |
| opacity arises from reflecting Surfaces, such as may disturb and |
| interrupt the Motions of this Medium. |
| |
| [Sidenote: _See the following Scheme, p. 356._] |
| |
| _Qu._ 25. Are there not other original Properties of the Rays of Light, |
| besides those already described? An instance of another original |
| Property we have in the Refraction of Island Crystal, described first by |
| _Erasmus Bartholine_, and afterwards more exactly by _Hugenius_, in his |
| Book _De la Lumiere_. This Crystal is a pellucid fissile Stone, clear as |
| Water or Crystal of the Rock, and without Colour; enduring a red Heat |
| without losing its transparency, and in a very strong Heat calcining |
| without Fusion. Steep'd a Day or two in Water, it loses its natural |
| Polish. Being rubb'd on Cloth, it attracts pieces of Straws and other |
| light things, like Ambar or Glass; and with _Aqua fortis_ it makes an |
| Ebullition. It seems to be a sort of Talk, and is found in form of an |
| oblique Parallelopiped, with six parallelogram Sides and eight solid |
| Angles. The obtuse Angles of the Parallelograms are each of them 101 |
| Degrees and 52 Minutes; the acute ones 78 Degrees and 8 Minutes. Two of |
| the solid Angles opposite to one another, as C and E, are compassed each |
| of them with three of these obtuse Angles, and each of the other six |
| with one obtuse and two acute ones. It cleaves easily in planes parallel |
| to any of its Sides, and not in any other Planes. It cleaves with a |
| glossy polite Surface not perfectly plane, but with some little |
| unevenness. It is easily scratch'd, and by reason of its softness it |
| takes a Polish very difficultly. It polishes better upon polish'd |
| Looking-glass than upon Metal, and perhaps better upon Pitch, Leather or |
| Parchment. Afterwards it must be rubb'd with a little Oil or white of an |
| Egg, to fill up its Scratches; whereby it will become very transparent |
| and polite. But for several Experiments, it is not necessary to polish |
| it. If a piece of this crystalline Stone be laid upon a Book, every |
| Letter of the Book seen through it will appear double, by means of a |
| double Refraction. And if any beam of Light falls either |
| perpendicularly, or in any oblique Angle upon any Surface of this |
| Crystal, it becomes divided into two beams by means of the same double |
| Refraction. Which beams are of the same Colour with the incident beam of |
| Light, and seem equal to one another in the quantity of their Light, or |
| very nearly equal. One of these Refractions is perform'd by the usual |
| Rule of Opticks, the Sine of Incidence out of Air into this Crystal |
| being to the Sine of Refraction, as five to three. The other |
| Refraction, which may be called the unusual Refraction, is perform'd by |
| the following Rule. |
| |
| [Illustration: FIG. 4.] |
| |
| Let ADBC represent the refracting Surface of the Crystal, C the biggest |
| solid Angle at that Surface, GEHF the opposite Surface, and CK a |
| perpendicular on that Surface. This perpendicular makes with the edge of |
| the Crystal CF, an Angle of 19 Degr. 3'. Join KF, and in it take KL, so |
| that the Angle KCL be 6 Degr. 40'. and the Angle LCF 12 Degr. 23'. And |
| if ST represent any beam of Light incident at T in any Angle upon the |
| refracting Surface ADBC, let TV be the refracted beam determin'd by the |
| given Portion of the Sines 5 to 3, according to the usual Rule of |
| Opticks. Draw VX parallel and equal to KL. Draw it the same way from V |
| in which L lieth from K; and joining TX, this line TX shall be the other |
| refracted beam carried from T to X, by the unusual Refraction. |
| |
| If therefore the incident beam ST be perpendicular to the refracting |
| Surface, the two beams TV and TX, into which it shall become divided, |
| shall be parallel to the lines CK and CL; one of those beams going |
| through the Crystal perpendicularly, as it ought to do by the usual Laws |
| of Opticks, and the other TX by an unusual Refraction diverging from the |
| perpendicular, and making with it an Angle VTX of about 6-2/3 Degrees, |
| as is found by Experience. And hence, the Plane VTX, and such like |
| Planes which are parallel to the Plane CFK, may be called the Planes of |
| perpendicular Refraction. And the Coast towards which the lines KL and |
| VX are drawn, may be call'd the Coast of unusual Refraction. |
| |
| In like manner Crystal of the Rock has a double Refraction: But the |
| difference of the two Refractions is not so great and manifest as in |
| Island Crystal. |
| |
| When the beam ST incident on Island Crystal is divided into two beams TV |
| and TX, and these two beams arrive at the farther Surface of the Glass; |
| the beam TV, which was refracted at the first Surface after the usual |
| manner, shall be again refracted entirely after the usual manner at the |
| second Surface; and the beam TX, which was refracted after the unusual |
| manner in the first Surface, shall be again refracted entirely after the |
| unusual manner in the second Surface; so that both these beams shall |
| emerge out of the second Surface in lines parallel to the first incident |
| beam ST. |
| |
| And if two pieces of Island Crystal be placed one after another, in such |
| manner that all the Surfaces of the latter be parallel to all the |
| corresponding Surfaces of the former: The Rays which are refracted after |
| the usual manner in the first Surface of the first Crystal, shall be |
| refracted after the usual manner in all the following Surfaces; and the |
| Rays which are refracted after the unusual manner in the first Surface, |
| shall be refracted after the unusual manner in all the following |
| Surfaces. And the same thing happens, though the Surfaces of the |
| Crystals be any ways inclined to one another, provided that their Planes |
| of perpendicular Refraction be parallel to one another. |
| |
| And therefore there is an original difference in the Rays of Light, by |
| means of which some Rays are in this Experiment constantly refracted |
| after the usual manner, and others constantly after the unusual manner: |
| For if the difference be not original, but arises from new Modifications |
| impress'd on the Rays at their first Refraction, it would be alter'd by |
| new Modifications in the three following Refractions; whereas it suffers |
| no alteration, but is constant, and has the same effect upon the Rays in |
| all the Refractions. The unusual Refraction is therefore perform'd by an |
| original property of the Rays. And it remains to be enquired, whether |
| the Rays have not more original Properties than are yet discover'd. |
| |
| _Qu._ 26. Have not the Rays of Light several sides, endued with several |
| original Properties? For if the Planes of perpendicular Refraction of |
| the second Crystal be at right Angles with the Planes of perpendicular |
| Refraction of the first Crystal, the Rays which are refracted after the |
| usual manner in passing through the first Crystal, will be all of them |
| refracted after the unusual manner in passing through the second |
| Crystal; and the Rays which are refracted after the unusual manner in |
| passing through the first Crystal, will be all of them refracted after |
| the usual manner in passing through the second Crystal. And therefore |
| there are not two sorts of Rays differing in their nature from one |
| another, one of which is constantly and in all Positions refracted after |
| the usual manner, and the other constantly and in all Positions after |
| the unusual manner. The difference between the two sorts of Rays in the |
| Experiment mention'd in the 25th Question, was only in the Positions of |
| the Sides of the Rays to the Planes of perpendicular Refraction. For one |
| and the same Ray is here refracted sometimes after the usual, and |
| sometimes after the unusual manner, according to the Position which its |
| Sides have to the Crystals. If the Sides of the Ray are posited the same |
| way to both Crystals, it is refracted after the same manner in them |
| both: But if that side of the Ray which looks towards the Coast of the |
| unusual Refraction of the first Crystal, be 90 Degrees from that side of |
| the same Ray which looks toward the Coast of the unusual Refraction of |
| the second Crystal, (which may be effected by varying the Position of |
| the second Crystal to the first, and by consequence to the Rays of |
| Light,) the Ray shall be refracted after several manners in the several |
| Crystals. There is nothing more required to determine whether the Rays |
| of Light which fall upon the second Crystal shall be refracted after |
| the usual or after the unusual manner, but to turn about this Crystal, |
| so that the Coast of this Crystal's unusual Refraction may be on this or |
| on that side of the Ray. And therefore every Ray may be consider'd as |
| having four Sides or Quarters, two of which opposite to one another |
| incline the Ray to be refracted after the unusual manner, as often as |
| either of them are turn'd towards the Coast of unusual Refraction; and |
| the other two, whenever either of them are turn'd towards the Coast of |
| unusual Refraction, do not incline it to be otherwise refracted than |
| after the usual manner. The two first may therefore be call'd the Sides |
| of unusual Refraction. And since these Dispositions were in the Rays |
| before their Incidence on the second, third, and fourth Surfaces of the |
| two Crystals, and suffered no alteration (so far as appears,) by the |
| Refraction of the Rays in their passage through those Surfaces, and the |
| Rays were refracted by the same Laws in all the four Surfaces; it |
| appears that those Dispositions were in the Rays originally, and |
| suffer'd no alteration by the first Refraction, and that by means of |
| those Dispositions the Rays were refracted at their Incidence on the |
| first Surface of the first Crystal, some of them after the usual, and |
| some of them after the unusual manner, accordingly as their Sides of |
| unusual Refraction were then turn'd towards the Coast of the unusual |
| Refraction of that Crystal, or sideways from it. |
| |
| Every Ray of Light has therefore two opposite Sides, originally endued |
| with a Property on which the unusual Refraction depends, and the other |
| two opposite Sides not endued with that Property. And it remains to be |
| enquired, whether there are not more Properties of Light by which the |
| Sides of the Rays differ, and are distinguished from one another. |
| |
| In explaining the difference of the Sides of the Rays above mention'd, I |
| have supposed that the Rays fall perpendicularly on the first Crystal. |
| But if they fall obliquely on it, the Success is the same. Those Rays |
| which are refracted after the usual manner in the first Crystal, will be |
| refracted after the unusual manner in the second Crystal, supposing the |
| Planes of perpendicular Refraction to be at right Angles with one |
| another, as above; and on the contrary. |
| |
| If the Planes of the perpendicular Refraction of the two Crystals be |
| neither parallel nor perpendicular to one another, but contain an acute |
| Angle: The two beams of Light which emerge out of the first Crystal, |
| will be each of them divided into two more at their Incidence on the |
| second Crystal. For in this case the Rays in each of the two beams will |
| some of them have their Sides of unusual Refraction, and some of them |
| their other Sides turn'd towards the Coast of the unusual Refraction of |
| the second Crystal. |
| |
| _Qu._ 27. Are not all Hypotheses erroneous which have hitherto been |
| invented for explaining the Phænomena of Light, by new Modifications of |
| the Rays? For those Phænomena depend not upon new Modifications, as has |
| been supposed, but upon the original and unchangeable Properties of the |
| Rays. |
| |
| _Qu._ 28. Are not all Hypotheses erroneous, in which Light is supposed |
| to consist in Pression or Motion, propagated through a fluid Medium? For |
| in all these Hypotheses the Phænomena of Light have been hitherto |
| explain'd by supposing that they arise from new Modifications of the |
| Rays; which is an erroneous Supposition. |
| |
| If Light consisted only in Pression propagated without actual Motion, it |
| would not be able to agitate and heat the Bodies which refract and |
| reflect it. If it consisted in Motion propagated to all distances in an |
| instant, it would require an infinite force every moment, in every |
| shining Particle, to generate that Motion. And if it consisted in |
| Pression or Motion, propagated either in an instant or in time, it would |
| bend into the Shadow. For Pression or Motion cannot be propagated in a |
| Fluid in right Lines, beyond an Obstacle which stops part of the Motion, |
| but will bend and spread every way into the quiescent Medium which lies |
| beyond the Obstacle. Gravity tends downwards, but the Pressure of Water |
| arising from Gravity tends every way with equal Force, and is propagated |
| as readily, and with as much force sideways as downwards, and through |
| crooked passages as through strait ones. The Waves on the Surface of |
| stagnating Water, passing by the sides of a broad Obstacle which stops |
| part of them, bend afterwards and dilate themselves gradually into the |
| quiet Water behind the Obstacle. The Waves, Pulses or Vibrations of the |
| Air, wherein Sounds consist, bend manifestly, though not so much as the |
| Waves of Water. For a Bell or a Cannon may be heard beyond a Hill which |
| intercepts the sight of the sounding Body, and Sounds are propagated as |
| readily through crooked Pipes as through streight ones. But Light is |
| never known to follow crooked Passages nor to bend into the Shadow. For |
| the fix'd Stars by the Interposition of any of the Planets cease to be |
| seen. And so do the Parts of the Sun by the Interposition of the Moon, |
| _Mercury_ or _Venus_. The Rays which pass very near to the edges of any |
| Body, are bent a little by the action of the Body, as we shew'd above; |
| but this bending is not towards but from the Shadow, and is perform'd |
| only in the passage of the Ray by the Body, and at a very small distance |
| from it. So soon as the Ray is past the Body, it goes right on. |
| |
| [Sidenote: _Mais pour dire comment cela se fait, je n'ay rien trove |
| jusqu' ici qui me satisfasse._ C. H. de la lumiere, c. 5, p. 91.] |
| |
| To explain the unusual Refraction of Island Crystal by Pression or |
| Motion propagated, has not hitherto been attempted (to my knowledge) |
| except by _Huygens_, who for that end supposed two several vibrating |
| Mediums within that Crystal. But when he tried the Refractions in two |
| successive pieces of that Crystal, and found them such as is mention'd |
| above; he confessed himself at a loss for explaining them. For Pressions |
| or Motions, propagated from a shining Body through an uniform Medium, |
| must be on all sides alike; whereas by those Experiments it appears, |
| that the Rays of Light have different Properties in their different |
| Sides. He suspected that the Pulses of _Æther_ in passing through the |
| first Crystal might receive certain new Modifications, which might |
| determine them to be propagated in this or that Medium within the |
| second Crystal, according to the Position of that Crystal. But what |
| Modifications those might be he could not say, nor think of any thing |
| satisfactory in that Point. And if he had known that the unusual |
| Refraction depends not on new Modifications, but on the original and |
| unchangeable Dispositions of the Rays, he would have found it as |
| difficult to explain how those Dispositions which he supposed to be |
| impress'd on the Rays by the first Crystal, could be in them before |
| their Incidence on that Crystal, and in general, how all Rays emitted by |
| shining Bodies, can have those Dispositions in them from the beginning. |
| To me, at least, this seems inexplicable, if Light be nothing else than |
| Pression or Motion propagated through _Æther_. |
| |
| And it is as difficult to explain by these Hypotheses, how Rays can be |
| alternately in Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission; unless |
| perhaps one might suppose that there are in all Space two Æthereal |
| vibrating Mediums, and that the Vibrations of one of them constitute |
| Light, and the Vibrations of the other are swifter, and as often as they |
| overtake the Vibrations of the first, put them into those Fits. But how |
| two _Æthers_ can be diffused through all Space, one of which acts upon |
| the other, and by consequence is re-acted upon, without retarding, |
| shattering, dispersing and confounding one anothers Motions, is |
| inconceivable. And against filling the Heavens with fluid Mediums, |
| unless they be exceeding rare, a great Objection arises from the regular |
| and very lasting Motions of the Planets and Comets in all manner of |
| Courses through the Heavens. For thence it is manifest, that the Heavens |
| are void of all sensible Resistance, and by consequence of all sensible |
| Matter. |
| |
| For the resisting Power of fluid Mediums arises partly from the |
| Attrition of the Parts of the Medium, and partly from the _Vis inertiæ_ |
| of the Matter. That part of the Resistance of a spherical Body which |
| arises from the Attrition of the Parts of the Medium is very nearly as |
| the Diameter, or, at the most, as the _Factum_ of the Diameter, and the |
| Velocity of the spherical Body together. And that part of the Resistance |
| which arises from the _Vis inertiæ_ of the Matter, is as the Square of |
| that _Factum_. And by this difference the two sorts of Resistance may be |
| distinguish'd from one another in any Medium; and these being |
| distinguish'd, it will be found that almost all the Resistance of Bodies |
| of a competent Magnitude moving in Air, Water, Quick-silver, and such |
| like Fluids with a competent Velocity, arises from the _Vis inertiæ_ of |
| the Parts of the Fluid. |
| |
| Now that part of the resisting Power of any Medium which arises from the |
| Tenacity, Friction or Attrition of the Parts of the Medium, may be |
| diminish'd by dividing the Matter into smaller Parts, and making the |
| Parts more smooth and slippery: But that part of the Resistance which |
| arises from the _Vis inertiæ_, is proportional to the Density of the |
| Matter, and cannot be diminish'd by dividing the Matter into smaller |
| Parts, nor by any other means than by decreasing the Density of the |
| Medium. And for these Reasons the Density of fluid Mediums is very |
| nearly proportional to their Resistance. Liquors which differ not much |
| in Density, as Water, Spirit of Wine, Spirit of Turpentine, hot Oil, |
| differ not much in Resistance. Water is thirteen or fourteen times |
| lighter than Quick-silver and by consequence thirteen or fourteen times |
| rarer, and its Resistance is less than that of Quick-silver in the same |
| Proportion, or thereabouts, as I have found by Experiments made with |
| Pendulums. The open Air in which we breathe is eight or nine hundred |
| times lighter than Water, and by consequence eight or nine hundred times |
| rarer, and accordingly its Resistance is less than that of Water in the |
| same Proportion, or thereabouts; as I have also found by Experiments |
| made with Pendulums. And in thinner Air the Resistance is still less, |
| and at length, by ratifying the Air, becomes insensible. For small |
| Feathers falling in the open Air meet with great Resistance, but in a |
| tall Glass well emptied of Air, they fall as fast as Lead or Gold, as I |
| have seen tried several times. Whence the Resistance seems still to |
| decrease in proportion to the Density of the Fluid. For I do not find by |
| any Experiments, that Bodies moving in Quick-silver, Water or Air, meet |
| with any other sensible Resistance than what arises from the Density and |
| Tenacity of those sensible Fluids, as they would do if the Pores of |
| those Fluids, and all other Spaces, were filled with a dense and |
| subtile Fluid. Now if the Resistance in a Vessel well emptied of Air, |
| was but an hundred times less than in the open Air, it would be about a |
| million of times less than in Quick-silver. But it seems to be much less |
| in such a Vessel, and still much less in the Heavens, at the height of |
| three or four hundred Miles from the Earth, or above. For Mr. _Boyle_ |
| has shew'd that Air may be rarified above ten thousand times in Vessels |
| of Glass; and the Heavens are much emptier of Air than any _Vacuum_ we |
| can make below. For since the Air is compress'd by the Weight of the |
| incumbent Atmosphere, and the Density of Air is proportional to the |
| Force compressing it, it follows by Computation, that at the height of |
| about seven and a half _English_ Miles from the Earth, the Air is four |
| times rarer than at the Surface of the Earth; and at the height of 15 |
| Miles it is sixteen times rarer than that at the Surface of the Earth; |
| and at the height of 22-1/2, 30, or 38 Miles, it is respectively 64, |
| 256, or 1024 times rarer, or thereabouts; and at the height of 76, 152, |
| 228 Miles, it is about 1000000, 1000000000000, or 1000000000000000000 |
| times rarer; and so on. |
| |
| Heat promotes Fluidity very much by diminishing the Tenacity of Bodies. |
| It makes many Bodies fluid which are not fluid in cold, and increases |
| the Fluidity of tenacious Liquids, as of Oil, Balsam, and Honey, and |
| thereby decreases their Resistance. But it decreases not the Resistance |
| of Water considerably, as it would do if any considerable part of the |
| Resistance of Water arose from the Attrition or Tenacity of its Parts. |
| And therefore the Resistance of Water arises principally and almost |
| entirely from the _Vis inertiæ_ of its Matter; and by consequence, if |
| the Heavens were as dense as Water, they would not have much less |
| Resistance than Water; if as dense as Quick-silver, they would not have |
| much less Resistance than Quick-silver; if absolutely dense, or full of |
| Matter without any _Vacuum_, let the Matter be never so subtil and |
| fluid, they would have a greater Resistance than Quick-silver. A solid |
| Globe in such a Medium would lose above half its Motion in moving three |
| times the length of its Diameter, and a Globe not solid (such as are the |
| Planets,) would be retarded sooner. And therefore to make way for the |
| regular and lasting Motions of the Planets and Comets, it's necessary to |
| empty the Heavens of all Matter, except perhaps some very thin Vapours, |
| Steams, or Effluvia, arising from the Atmospheres of the Earth, Planets, |
| and Comets, and from such an exceedingly rare Æthereal Medium as we |
| described above. A dense Fluid can be of no use for explaining the |
| Phænomena of Nature, the Motions of the Planets and Comets being better |
| explain'd without it. It serves only to disturb and retard the Motions |
| of those great Bodies, and make the Frame of Nature languish: And in the |
| Pores of Bodies, it serves only to stop the vibrating Motions of their |
| Parts, wherein their Heat and Activity consists. And as it is of no use, |
| and hinders the Operations of Nature, and makes her languish, so there |
| is no evidence for its Existence, and therefore it ought to be rejected. |
| And if it be rejected, the Hypotheses that Light consists in Pression |
| or Motion, propagated through such a Medium, are rejected with it. |
| |
| And for rejecting such a Medium, we have the Authority of those the |
| oldest and most celebrated Philosophers of _Greece_ and _Phoenicia_, |
| who made a _Vacuum_, and Atoms, and the Gravity of Atoms, the first |
| Principles of their Philosophy; tacitly attributing Gravity to some |
| other Cause than dense Matter. Later Philosophers banish the |
| Consideration of such a Cause out of natural Philosophy, feigning |
| Hypotheses for explaining all things mechanically, and referring other |
| Causes to Metaphysicks: Whereas the main Business of natural Philosophy |
| is to argue from Phænomena without feigning Hypotheses, and to deduce |
| Causes from Effects, till we come to the very first Cause, which |
| certainly is not mechanical; and not only to unfold the Mechanism of the |
| World, but chiefly to resolve these and such like Questions. What is |
| there in places almost empty of Matter, and whence is it that the Sun |
| and Planets gravitate towards one another, without dense Matter between |
| them? Whence is it that Nature doth nothing in vain; and whence arises |
| all that Order and Beauty which we see in the World? To what end are |
| Comets, and whence is it that Planets move all one and the same way in |
| Orbs concentrick, while Comets move all manner of ways in Orbs very |
| excentrick; and what hinders the fix'd Stars from falling upon one |
| another? How came the Bodies of Animals to be contrived with so much |
| Art, and for what ends were their several Parts? Was the Eye contrived |
| without Skill in Opticks, and the Ear without Knowledge of Sounds? How |
| do the Motions of the Body follow from the Will, and whence is the |
| Instinct in Animals? Is not the Sensory of Animals that place to which |
| the sensitive Substance is present, and into which the sensible Species |
| of Things are carried through the Nerves and Brain, that there they may |
| be perceived by their immediate presence to that Substance? And these |
| things being rightly dispatch'd, does it not appear from Phænomena that |
| there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent, omnipresent, who in |
| infinite Space, as it were in his Sensory, sees the things themselves |
| intimately, and throughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by |
| their immediate presence to himself: Of which things the Images only |
| carried through the Organs of Sense into our little Sensoriums, are |
| there seen and beheld by that which in us perceives and thinks. And |
| though every true Step made in this Philosophy brings us not immediately |
| to the Knowledge of the first Cause, yet it brings us nearer to it, and |
| on that account is to be highly valued. |
| |
| _Qu._ 29. Are not the Rays of Light very small Bodies emitted from |
| shining Substances? For such Bodies will pass through uniform Mediums in |
| right Lines without bending into the Shadow, which is the Nature of the |
| Rays of Light. They will also be capable of several Properties, and be |
| able to conserve their Properties unchanged in passing through several |
| Mediums, which is another Condition of the Rays of Light. Pellucid |
| Substances act upon the Rays of Light at a distance in refracting, |
| reflecting, and inflecting them, and the Rays mutually agitate the Parts |
| of those Substances at a distance for heating them; and this Action and |
| Re-action at a distance very much resembles an attractive Force between |
| Bodies. If Refraction be perform'd by Attraction of the Rays, the Sines |
| of Incidence must be to the Sines of Refraction in a given Proportion, |
| as we shew'd in our Principles of Philosophy: And this Rule is true by |
| Experience. The Rays of Light in going out of Glass into a _Vacuum_, are |
| bent towards the Glass; and if they fall too obliquely on the _Vacuum_, |
| they are bent backwards into the Glass, and totally reflected; and this |
| Reflexion cannot be ascribed to the Resistance of an absolute _Vacuum_, |
| but must be caused by the Power of the Glass attracting the Rays at |
| their going out of it into the _Vacuum_, and bringing them back. For if |
| the farther Surface of the Glass be moisten'd with Water or clear Oil, |
| or liquid and clear Honey, the Rays which would otherwise be reflected |
| will go into the Water, Oil, or Honey; and therefore are not reflected |
| before they arrive at the farther Surface of the Glass, and begin to go |
| out of it. If they go out of it into the Water, Oil, or Honey, they go |
| on, because the Attraction of the Glass is almost balanced and rendered |
| ineffectual by the contrary Attraction of the Liquor. But if they go out |
| of it into a _Vacuum_ which has no Attraction to balance that of the |
| Glass, the Attraction of the Glass either bends and refracts them, or |
| brings them back and reflects them. And this is still more evident by |
| laying together two Prisms of Glass, or two Object-glasses of very long |
| Telescopes, the one plane, the other a little convex, and so compressing |
| them that they do not fully touch, nor are too far asunder. For the |
| Light which falls upon the farther Surface of the first Glass where the |
| Interval between the Glasses is not above the ten hundred thousandth |
| Part of an Inch, will go through that Surface, and through the Air or |
| _Vacuum_ between the Glasses, and enter into the second Glass, as was |
| explain'd in the first, fourth, and eighth Observations of the first |
| Part of the second Book. But, if the second Glass be taken away, the |
| Light which goes out of the second Surface of the first Glass into the |
| Air or _Vacuum_, will not go on forwards, but turns back into the first |
| Glass, and is reflected; and therefore it is drawn back by the Power of |
| the first Glass, there being nothing else to turn it back. Nothing more |
| is requisite for producing all the variety of Colours, and degrees of |
| Refrangibility, than that the Rays of Light be Bodies of different |
| Sizes, the least of which may take violet the weakest and darkest of the |
| Colours, and be more easily diverted by refracting Surfaces from the |
| right Course; and the rest as they are bigger and bigger, may make the |
| stronger and more lucid Colours, blue, green, yellow, and red, and be |
| more and more difficultly diverted. Nothing more is requisite for |
| putting the Rays of Light into Fits of easy Reflexion and easy |
| Transmission, than that they be small Bodies which by their attractive |
| Powers, or some other Force, stir up Vibrations in what they act upon, |
| which Vibrations being swifter than the Rays, overtake them |
| successively, and agitate them so as by turns to increase and decrease |
| their Velocities, and thereby put them into those Fits. And lastly, the |
| unusual Refraction of Island-Crystal looks very much as if it were |
| perform'd by some kind of attractive virtue lodged in certain Sides both |
| of the Rays, and of the Particles of the Crystal. For were it not for |
| some kind of Disposition or Virtue lodged in some Sides of the Particles |
| of the Crystal, and not in their other Sides, and which inclines and |
| bends the Rays towards the Coast of unusual Refraction, the Rays which |
| fall perpendicularly on the Crystal, would not be refracted towards that |
| Coast rather than towards any other Coast, both at their Incidence and |
| at their Emergence, so as to emerge perpendicularly by a contrary |
| Situation of the Coast of unusual Refraction at the second Surface; the |
| Crystal acting upon the Rays after they have pass'd through it, and are |
| emerging into the Air; or, if you please, into a _Vacuum_. And since the |
| Crystal by this Disposition or Virtue does not act upon the Rays, unless |
| when one of their Sides of unusual Refraction looks towards that Coast, |
| this argues a Virtue or Disposition in those Sides of the Rays, which |
| answers to, and sympathizes with that Virtue or Disposition of the |
| Crystal, as the Poles of two Magnets answer to one another. And as |
| Magnetism may be intended and remitted, and is found only in the Magnet |
| and in Iron: So this Virtue of refracting the perpendicular Rays is |
| greater in Island-Crystal, less in Crystal of the Rock, and is not yet |
| found in other Bodies. I do not say that this Virtue is magnetical: It |
| seems to be of another kind. I only say, that whatever it be, it's |
| difficult to conceive how the Rays of Light, unless they be Bodies, can |
| have a permanent Virtue in two of their Sides which is not in their |
| other Sides, and this without any regard to their Position to the Space |
| or Medium through which they pass. |
| |
| What I mean in this Question by a _Vacuum_, and by the Attractions of |
| the Rays of Light towards Glass or Crystal, may be understood by what |
| was said in the 18th, 19th, and 20th Questions. |
| |
| _Quest._ 30. Are not gross Bodies and Light convertible into one |
| another, and may not Bodies receive much of their Activity from the |
| Particles of Light which enter their Composition? For all fix'd Bodies |
| being heated emit Light so long as they continue sufficiently hot, and |
| Light mutually stops in Bodies as often as its Rays strike upon their |
| Parts, as we shew'd above. I know no Body less apt to shine than Water; |
| and yet Water by frequent Distillations changes into fix'd Earth, as Mr. |
| _Boyle_ has try'd; and then this Earth being enabled to endure a |
| sufficient Heat, shines by Heat like other Bodies. |
| |
| The changing of Bodies into Light, and Light into Bodies, is very |
| conformable to the Course of Nature, which seems delighted with |
| Transmutations. Water, which is a very fluid tasteless Salt, she changes |
| by Heat into Vapour, which is a sort of Air, and by Cold into Ice, which |
| is a hard, pellucid, brittle, fusible Stone; and this Stone returns into |
| Water by Heat, and Vapour returns into Water by Cold. Earth by Heat |
| becomes Fire, and by Cold returns into Earth. Dense Bodies by |
| Fermentation rarify into several sorts of Air, and this Air by |
| Fermentation, and sometimes without it, returns into dense Bodies. |
| Mercury appears sometimes in the form of a fluid Metal, sometimes in the |
| form of a hard brittle Metal, sometimes in the form of a corrosive |
| pellucid Salt call'd Sublimate, sometimes in the form of a tasteless, |
| pellucid, volatile white Earth, call'd _Mercurius Dulcis_; or in that of |
| a red opake volatile Earth, call'd Cinnaber; or in that of a red or |
| white Precipitate, or in that of a fluid Salt; and in Distillation it |
| turns into Vapour, and being agitated _in Vacuo_, it shines like Fire. |
| And after all these Changes it returns again into its first form of |
| Mercury. Eggs grow from insensible Magnitudes, and change into Animals; |
| Tadpoles into Frogs; and Worms into Flies. All Birds, Beasts and Fishes, |
| Insects, Trees, and other Vegetables, with their several Parts, grow out |
| of Water and watry Tinctures and Salts, and by Putrefaction return again |
| into watry Substances. And Water standing a few Days in the open Air, |
| yields a Tincture, which (like that of Malt) by standing longer yields a |
| Sediment and a Spirit, but before Putrefaction is fit Nourishment for |
| Animals and Vegetables. And among such various and strange |
| Transmutations, why may not Nature change Bodies into Light, and Light |
| into Bodies? |
| |
| _Quest._ 31. Have not the small Particles of Bodies certain Powers, |
| Virtues, or Forces, by which they act at a distance, not only upon the |
| Rays of Light for reflecting, refracting, and inflecting them, but also |
| upon one another for producing a great Part of the Phænomena of Nature? |
| For it's well known, that Bodies act one upon another by the Attractions |
| of Gravity, Magnetism, and Electricity; and these Instances shew the |
| Tenor and Course of Nature, and make it not improbable but that there |
| may be more attractive Powers than these. For Nature is very consonant |
| and conformable to her self. How these Attractions may be perform'd, I |
| do not here consider. What I call Attraction may be perform'd by |
| impulse, or by some other means unknown to me. I use that Word here to |
| signify only in general any Force by which Bodies tend towards one |
| another, whatsoever be the Cause. For we must learn from the Phænomena |
| of Nature what Bodies attract one another, and what are the Laws and |
| Properties of the Attraction, before we enquire the Cause by which the |
| Attraction is perform'd. The Attractions of Gravity, Magnetism, and |
| Electricity, reach to very sensible distances, and so have been observed |
| by vulgar Eyes, and there may be others which reach to so small |
| distances as hitherto escape Observation; and perhaps electrical |
| Attraction may reach to such small distances, even without being excited |
| by Friction. |
| |
| For when Salt of Tartar runs _per Deliquium_, is not this done by an |
| Attraction between the Particles of the Salt of Tartar, and the |
| Particles of the Water which float in the Air in the form of Vapours? |
| And why does not common Salt, or Salt-petre, or Vitriol, run _per |
| Deliquium_, but for want of such an Attraction? Or why does not Salt of |
| Tartar draw more Water out of the Air than in a certain Proportion to |
| its quantity, but for want of an attractive Force after it is satiated |
| with Water? And whence is it but from this attractive Power that Water |
| which alone distils with a gentle luke-warm Heat, will not distil from |
| Salt of Tartar without a great Heat? And is it not from the like |
| attractive Power between the Particles of Oil of Vitriol and the |
| Particles of Water, that Oil of Vitriol draws to it a good quantity of |
| Water out of the Air, and after it is satiated draws no more, and in |
| Distillation lets go the Water very difficultly? And when Water and Oil |
| of Vitriol poured successively into the same Vessel grow very hot in the |
| mixing, does not this Heat argue a great Motion in the Parts of the |
| Liquors? And does not this Motion argue, that the Parts of the two |
| Liquors in mixing coalesce with Violence, and by consequence rush |
| towards one another with an accelerated Motion? And when _Aqua fortis_, |
| or Spirit of Vitriol poured upon Filings of Iron dissolves the Filings |
| with a great Heat and Ebullition, is not this Heat and Ebullition |
| effected by a violent Motion of the Parts, and does not that Motion |
| argue that the acid Parts of the Liquor rush towards the Parts of the |
| Metal with violence, and run forcibly into its Pores till they get |
| between its outmost Particles, and the main Mass of the Metal, and |
| surrounding those Particles loosen them from the main Mass, and set them |
| at liberty to float off into the Water? And when the acid Particles, |
| which alone would distil with an easy Heat, will not separate from the |
| Particles of the Metal without a very violent Heat, does not this |
| confirm the Attraction between them? |
| |
| When Spirit of Vitriol poured upon common Salt or Salt-petre makes an |
| Ebullition with the Salt, and unites with it, and in Distillation the |
| Spirit of the common Salt or Salt-petre comes over much easier than it |
| would do before, and the acid part of the Spirit of Vitriol stays |
| behind; does not this argue that the fix'd Alcaly of the Salt attracts |
| the acid Spirit of the Vitriol more strongly than its own Spirit, and |
| not being able to hold them both, lets go its own? And when Oil of |
| Vitriol is drawn off from its weight of Nitre, and from both the |
| Ingredients a compound Spirit of Nitre is distilled, and two parts of |
| this Spirit are poured on one part of Oil of Cloves or Carraway Seeds, |
| or of any ponderous Oil of vegetable or animal Substances, or Oil of |
| Turpentine thicken'd with a little Balsam of Sulphur, and the Liquors |
| grow so very hot in mixing, as presently to send up a burning Flame; |
| does not this very great and sudden Heat argue that the two Liquors mix |
| with violence, and that their Parts in mixing run towards one another |
| with an accelerated Motion, and clash with the greatest Force? And is it |
| not for the same reason that well rectified Spirit of Wine poured on the |
| same compound Spirit flashes; and that the _Pulvis fulminans_, composed |
| of Sulphur, Nitre, and Salt of Tartar, goes off with a more sudden and |
| violent Explosion than Gun-powder, the acid Spirits of the Sulphur and |
| Nitre rushing towards one another, and towards the Salt of Tartar, with |
| so great a violence, as by the shock to turn the whole at once into |
| Vapour and Flame? Where the Dissolution is slow, it makes a slow |
| Ebullition and a gentle Heat; and where it is quicker, it makes a |
| greater Ebullition with more heat; and where it is done at once, the |
| Ebullition is contracted into a sudden Blast or violent Explosion, with |
| a heat equal to that of Fire and Flame. So when a Drachm of the |
| above-mention'd compound Spirit of Nitre was poured upon half a Drachm |
| of Oil of Carraway Seeds _in vacuo_, the Mixture immediately made a |
| flash like Gun-powder, and burst the exhausted Receiver, which was a |
| Glass six Inches wide, and eight Inches deep. And even the gross Body of |
| Sulphur powder'd, and with an equal weight of Iron Filings and a little |
| Water made into Paste, acts upon the Iron, and in five or six hours |
| grows too hot to be touch'd, and emits a Flame. And by these Experiments |
| compared with the great quantity of Sulphur with which the Earth |
| abounds, and the warmth of the interior Parts of the Earth, and hot |
| Springs, and burning Mountains, and with Damps, mineral Coruscations, |
| Earthquakes, hot suffocating Exhalations, Hurricanes, and Spouts; we may |
| learn that sulphureous Steams abound in the Bowels of the Earth and |
| ferment with Minerals, and sometimes take fire with a sudden Coruscation |
| and Explosion; and if pent up in subterraneous Caverns, burst the |
| Caverns with a great shaking of the Earth, as in springing of a Mine. |
| And then the Vapour generated by the Explosion, expiring through the |
| Pores of the Earth, feels hot and suffocates, and makes Tempests and |
| Hurricanes, and sometimes causes the Land to slide, or the Sea to boil, |
| and carries up the Water thereof in Drops, which by their weight fall |
| down again in Spouts. Also some sulphureous Steams, at all times when |
| the Earth is dry, ascending into the Air, ferment there with nitrous |
| Acids, and sometimes taking fire cause Lightning and Thunder, and fiery |
| Meteors. For the Air abounds with acid Vapours fit to promote |
| Fermentations, as appears by the rusting of Iron and Copper in it, the |
| kindling of Fire by blowing, and the beating of the Heart by means of |
| Respiration. Now the above-mention'd Motions are so great and violent as |
| to shew that in Fermentations the Particles of Bodies which almost rest, |
| are put into new Motions by a very potent Principle, which acts upon |
| them only when they approach one another, and causes them to meet and |
| clash with great violence, and grow hot with the motion, and dash one |
| another into pieces, and vanish into Air, and Vapour, and Flame. |
| |
| When Salt of Tartar _per deliquium_, being poured into the Solution of |
| any Metal, precipitates the Metal and makes it fall down to the bottom |
| of the Liquor in the form of Mud: Does not this argue that the acid |
| Particles are attracted more strongly by the Salt of Tartar than by the |
| Metal, and by the stronger Attraction go from the Metal to the Salt of |
| Tartar? And so when a Solution of Iron in _Aqua fortis_ dissolves the |
| _Lapis Calaminaris_, and lets go the Iron, or a Solution of Copper |
| dissolves Iron immersed in it and lets go the Copper, or a Solution of |
| Silver dissolves Copper and lets go the Silver, or a Solution of Mercury |
| in _Aqua fortis_ being poured upon Iron, Copper, Tin, or Lead, dissolves |
| the Metal and lets go the Mercury; does not this argue that the acid |
| Particles of the _Aqua fortis_ are attracted more strongly by the _Lapis |
| Calaminaris_ than by Iron, and more strongly by Iron than by Copper, and |
| more strongly by Copper than by Silver, and more strongly by Iron, |
| Copper, Tin, and Lead, than by Mercury? And is it not for the same |
| reason that Iron requires more _Aqua fortis_ to dissolve it than Copper, |
| and Copper more than the other Metals; and that of all Metals, Iron is |
| dissolved most easily, and is most apt to rust; and next after Iron, |
| Copper? |
| |
| When Oil of Vitriol is mix'd with a little Water, or is run _per |
| deliquium_, and in Distillation the Water ascends difficultly, and |
| brings over with it some part of the Oil of Vitriol in the form of |
| Spirit of Vitriol, and this Spirit being poured upon Iron, Copper, or |
| Salt of Tartar, unites with the Body and lets go the Water; doth not |
| this shew that the acid Spirit is attracted by the Water, and more |
| attracted by the fix'd Body than by the Water, and therefore lets go the |
| Water to close with the fix'd Body? And is it not for the same reason |
| that the Water and acid Spirits which are mix'd together in Vinegar, |
| _Aqua fortis_, and Spirit of Salt, cohere and rise together in |
| Distillation; but if the _Menstruum_ be poured on Salt of Tartar, or on |
| Lead, or Iron, or any fix'd Body which it can dissolve, the Acid by a |
| stronger Attraction adheres to the Body, and lets go the Water? And is |
| it not also from a mutual Attraction that the Spirits of Soot and |
| Sea-Salt unite and compose the Particles of Sal-armoniac, which are less |
| volatile than before, because grosser and freer from Water; and that the |
| Particles of Sal-armoniac in Sublimation carry up the Particles of |
| Antimony, which will not sublime alone; and that the Particles of |
| Mercury uniting with the acid Particles of Spirit of Salt compose |
| Mercury sublimate, and with the Particles of Sulphur, compose Cinnaber; |
| and that the Particles of Spirit of Wine and Spirit of Urine well |
| rectified unite, and letting go the Water which dissolved them, compose |
| a consistent Body; and that in subliming Cinnaber from Salt of Tartar, |
| or from quick Lime, the Sulphur by a stronger Attraction of the Salt or |
| Lime lets go the Mercury, and stays with the fix'd Body; and that when |
| Mercury sublimate is sublimed from Antimony, or from Regulus of |
| Antimony, the Spirit of Salt lets go the Mercury, and unites with the |
| antimonial metal which attracts it more strongly, and stays with it till |
| the Heat be great enough to make them both ascend together, and then |
| carries up the Metal with it in the form of a very fusible Salt, called |
| Butter of Antimony, although the Spirit of Salt alone be almost as |
| volatile as Water, and the Antimony alone as fix'd as Lead? |
| |
| When _Aqua fortis_ dissolves Silver and not Gold, and _Aqua regia_ |
| dissolves Gold and not Silver, may it not be said that _Aqua fortis_ is |
| subtil enough to penetrate Gold as well as Silver, but wants the |
| attractive Force to give it Entrance; and that _Aqua regia_ is subtil |
| enough to penetrate Silver as well as Gold, but wants the attractive |
| Force to give it Entrance? For _Aqua regia_ is nothing else than _Aqua |
| fortis_ mix'd with some Spirit of Salt, or with Sal-armoniac; and even |
| common Salt dissolved in _Aqua fortis_, enables the _Menstruum_ to |
| dissolve Gold, though the Salt be a gross Body. When therefore Spirit of |
| Salt precipitates Silver out of _Aqua fortis_, is it not done by |
| attracting and mixing with the _Aqua fortis_, and not attracting, or |
| perhaps repelling Silver? And when Water precipitates Antimony out of |
| the Sublimate of Antimony and Sal-armoniac, or out of Butter of |
| Antimony, is it not done by its dissolving, mixing with, and weakening |
| the Sal-armoniac or Spirit of Salt, and its not attracting, or perhaps |
| repelling the Antimony? And is it not for want of an attractive virtue |
| between the Parts of Water and Oil, of Quick-silver and Antimony, of |
| Lead and Iron, that these Substances do not mix; and by a weak |
| Attraction, that Quick-silver and Copper mix difficultly; and from a |
| strong one, that Quick-silver and Tin, Antimony and Iron, Water and |
| Salts, mix readily? And in general, is it not from the same Principle |
| that Heat congregates homogeneal Bodies, and separates heterogeneal |
| ones? |
| |
| When Arsenick with Soap gives a Regulus, and with Mercury sublimate a |
| volatile fusible Salt, like Butter of Antimony, doth not this shew that |
| Arsenick, which is a Substance totally volatile, is compounded of fix'd |
| and volatile Parts, strongly cohering by a mutual Attraction, so that |
| the volatile will not ascend without carrying up the fixed? And so, when |
| an equal weight of Spirit of Wine and Oil of Vitriol are digested |
| together, and in Distillation yield two fragrant and volatile Spirits |
| which will not mix with one another, and a fix'd black Earth remains |
| behind; doth not this shew that Oil of Vitriol is composed of volatile |
| and fix'd Parts strongly united by Attraction, so as to ascend together |
| in form of a volatile, acid, fluid Salt, until the Spirit of Wine |
| attracts and separates the volatile Parts from the fixed? And therefore, |
| since Oil of Sulphur _per Campanam_ is of the same Nature with Oil of |
| Vitriol, may it not be inferred, that Sulphur is also a mixture of |
| volatile and fix'd Parts so strongly cohering by Attraction, as to |
| ascend together in Sublimation. By dissolving Flowers of Sulphur in Oil |
| of Turpentine, and distilling the Solution, it is found that Sulphur is |
| composed of an inflamable thick Oil or fat Bitumen, an acid Salt, a very |
| fix'd Earth, and a little Metal. The three first were found not much |
| unequal to one another, the fourth in so small a quantity as scarce to |
| be worth considering. The acid Salt dissolved in Water, is the same with |
| Oil of Sulphur _per Campanam_, and abounding much in the Bowels of the |
| Earth, and particularly in Markasites, unites it self to the other |
| Ingredients of the Markasite, which are, Bitumen, Iron, Copper, and |
| Earth, and with them compounds Allum, Vitriol, and Sulphur. With the |
| Earth alone it compounds Allum; with the Metal alone, or Metal and |
| Earth together, it compounds Vitriol; and with the Bitumen and Earth it |
| compounds Sulphur. Whence it comes to pass that Markasites abound with |
| those three Minerals. And is it not from the mutual Attraction of the |
| Ingredients that they stick together for compounding these Minerals, and |
| that the Bitumen carries up the other Ingredients of the Sulphur, which |
| without it would not sublime? And the same Question may be put |
| concerning all, or almost all the gross Bodies in Nature. For all the |
| Parts of Animals and Vegetables are composed of Substances volatile and |
| fix'd, fluid and solid, as appears by their Analysis; and so are Salts |
| and Minerals, so far as Chymists have been hitherto able to examine |
| their Composition. |
| |
| When Mercury sublimate is re-sublimed with fresh Mercury, and becomes |
| _Mercurius Dulcis_, which is a white tasteless Earth scarce dissolvable |
| in Water, and _Mercurius Dulcis_ re-sublimed with Spirit of Salt returns |
| into Mercury sublimate; and when Metals corroded with a little acid turn |
| into rust, which is an Earth tasteless and indissolvable in Water, and |
| this Earth imbibed with more acid becomes a metallick Salt; and when |
| some Stones, as Spar of Lead, dissolved in proper _Menstruums_ become |
| Salts; do not these things shew that Salts are dry Earth and watry Acid |
| united by Attraction, and that the Earth will not become a Salt without |
| so much acid as makes it dissolvable in Water? Do not the sharp and |
| pungent Tastes of Acids arise from the strong Attraction whereby the |
| acid Particles rush upon and agitate the Particles of the Tongue? And |
| when Metals are dissolved in acid _Menstruums_, and the Acids in |
| conjunction with the Metal act after a different manner, so that the |
| Compound has a different Taste much milder than before, and sometimes a |
| sweet one; is it not because the Acids adhere to the metallick |
| Particles, and thereby lose much of their Activity? And if the Acid be |
| in too small a Proportion to make the Compound dissolvable in Water, |
| will it not by adhering strongly to the Metal become unactive and lose |
| its Taste, and the Compound be a tasteless Earth? For such things as are |
| not dissolvable by the Moisture of the Tongue, act not upon the Taste. |
| |
| As Gravity makes the Sea flow round the denser and weightier Parts of |
| the Globe of the Earth, so the Attraction may make the watry Acid flow |
| round the denser and compacter Particles of Earth for composing the |
| Particles of Salt. For otherwise the Acid would not do the Office of a |
| Medium between the Earth and common Water, for making Salts dissolvable |
| in the Water; nor would Salt of Tartar readily draw off the Acid from |
| dissolved Metals, nor Metals the Acid from Mercury. Now, as in the great |
| Globe of the Earth and Sea, the densest Bodies by their Gravity sink |
| down in Water, and always endeavour to go towards the Center of the |
| Globe; so in Particles of Salt, the densest Matter may always endeavour |
| to approach the Center of the Particle: So that a Particle of Salt may |
| be compared to a Chaos; being dense, hard, dry, and earthy in the |
| Center; and rare, soft, moist, and watry in the Circumference. And |
| hence it seems to be that Salts are of a lasting Nature, being scarce |
| destroy'd, unless by drawing away their watry Parts by violence, or by |
| letting them soak into the Pores of the central Earth by a gentle Heat |
| in Putrefaction, until the Earth be dissolved by the Water, and |
| separated into smaller Particles, which by reason of their Smallness |
| make the rotten Compound appear of a black Colour. Hence also it may be, |
| that the Parts of Animals and Vegetables preserve their several Forms, |
| and assimilate their Nourishment; the soft and moist Nourishment easily |
| changing its Texture by a gentle Heat and Motion, till it becomes like |
| the dense, hard, dry, and durable Earth in the Center of each Particle. |
| But when the Nourishment grows unfit to be assimilated, or the central |
| Earth grows too feeble to assimilate it, the Motion ends in Confusion, |
| Putrefaction, and Death. |
| |
| If a very small quantity of any Salt or Vitriol be dissolved in a great |
| quantity of Water, the Particles of the Salt or Vitriol will not sink to |
| the bottom, though they be heavier in Specie than the Water, but will |
| evenly diffuse themselves into all the Water, so as to make it as saline |
| at the top as at the bottom. And does not this imply that the Parts of |
| the Salt or Vitriol recede from one another, and endeavour to expand |
| themselves, and get as far asunder as the quantity of Water in which |
| they float, will allow? And does not this Endeavour imply that they have |
| a repulsive Force by which they fly from one another, or at least, that |
| they attract the Water more strongly than they do one another? For as |
| all things ascend in Water which are less attracted than Water, by the |
| gravitating Power of the Earth; so all the Particles of Salt which float |
| in Water, and are less attracted than Water by any one Particle of Salt, |
| must recede from that Particle, and give way to the more attracted |
| Water. |
| |
| When any saline Liquor is evaporated to a Cuticle and let cool, the Salt |
| concretes in regular Figures; which argues, that the Particles of the |
| Salt before they concreted, floated in the Liquor at equal distances in |
| rank and file, and by consequence that they acted upon one another by |
| some Power which at equal distances is equal, at unequal distances |
| unequal. For by such a Power they will range themselves uniformly, and |
| without it they will float irregularly, and come together as |
| irregularly. And since the Particles of Island-Crystal act all the same |
| way upon the Rays of Light for causing the unusual Refraction, may it |
| not be supposed that in the Formation of this Crystal, the Particles not |
| only ranged themselves in rank and file for concreting in regular |
| Figures, but also by some kind of polar Virtue turned their homogeneal |
| Sides the same way. |
| |
| The Parts of all homogeneal hard Bodies which fully touch one another, |
| stick together very strongly. And for explaining how this may be, some |
| have invented hooked Atoms, which is begging the Question; and others |
| tell us that Bodies are glued together by rest, that is, by an occult |
| Quality, or rather by nothing; and others, that they stick together by |
| conspiring Motions, that is, by relative rest amongst themselves. I had |
| rather infer from their Cohesion, that their Particles attract one |
| another by some Force, which in immediate Contact is exceeding strong, |
| at small distances performs the chymical Operations above-mention'd, and |
| reaches not far from the Particles with any sensible Effect. |
| |
| All Bodies seem to be composed of hard Particles: For otherwise Fluids |
| would not congeal; as Water, Oils, Vinegar, and Spirit or Oil of Vitriol |
| do by freezing; Mercury by Fumes of Lead; Spirit of Nitre and Mercury, |
| by dissolving the Mercury and evaporating the Flegm; Spirit of Wine and |
| Spirit of Urine, by deflegming and mixing them; and Spirit of Urine and |
| Spirit of Salt, by subliming them together to make Sal-armoniac. Even |
| the Rays of Light seem to be hard Bodies; for otherwise they would not |
| retain different Properties in their different Sides. And therefore |
| Hardness may be reckon'd the Property of all uncompounded Matter. At |
| least, this seems to be as evident as the universal Impenetrability of |
| Matter. For all Bodies, so far as Experience reaches, are either hard, |
| or may be harden'd; and we have no other Evidence of universal |
| Impenetrability, besides a large Experience without an experimental |
| Exception. Now if compound Bodies are so very hard as we find some of |
| them to be, and yet are very porous, and consist of Parts which are only |
| laid together; the simple Particles which are void of Pores, and were |
| never yet divided, must be much harder. For such hard Particles being |
| heaped up together, can scarce touch one another in more than a few |
| Points, and therefore must be separable by much less Force than is |
| requisite to break a solid Particle, whose Parts touch in all the Space |
| between them, without any Pores or Interstices to weaken their Cohesion. |
| And how such very hard Particles which are only laid together and touch |
| only in a few Points, can stick together, and that so firmly as they do, |
| without the assistance of something which causes them to be attracted or |
| press'd towards one another, is very difficult to conceive. |
| |
| The same thing I infer also from the cohering of two polish'd Marbles |
| _in vacuo_, and from the standing of Quick-silver in the Barometer at |
| the height of 50, 60 or 70 Inches, or above, when ever it is well-purged |
| of Air and carefully poured in, so that its Parts be every where |
| contiguous both to one another and to the Glass. The Atmosphere by its |
| weight presses the Quick-silver into the Glass, to the height of 29 or |
| 30 Inches. And some other Agent raises it higher, not by pressing it |
| into the Glass, but by making its Parts stick to the Glass, and to one |
| another. For upon any discontinuation of Parts, made either by Bubbles |
| or by shaking the Glass, the whole Mercury falls down to the height of |
| 29 or 30 Inches. |
| |
| And of the same kind with these Experiments are those that follow. If |
| two plane polish'd Plates of Glass (suppose two pieces of a polish'd |
| Looking-glass) be laid together, so that their sides be parallel and at |
| a very small distance from one another, and then their lower edges be |
| dipped into Water, the Water will rise up between them. And the less |
| the distance of the Glasses is, the greater will be the height to which |
| the Water will rise. If the distance be about the hundredth part of an |
| Inch, the Water will rise to the height of about an Inch; and if the |
| distance be greater or less in any Proportion, the height will be |
| reciprocally proportional to the distance very nearly. For the |
| attractive Force of the Glasses is the same, whether the distance |
| between them be greater or less; and the weight of the Water drawn up is |
| the same, if the height of it be reciprocally proportional to the |
| distance of the Glasses. And in like manner, Water ascends between two |
| Marbles polish'd plane, when their polish'd sides are parallel, and at a |
| very little distance from one another, And if slender Pipes of Glass be |
| dipped at one end into stagnating Water, the Water will rise up within |
| the Pipe, and the height to which it rises will be reciprocally |
| proportional to the Diameter of the Cavity of the Pipe, and will equal |
| the height to which it rises between two Planes of Glass, if the |
| Semi-diameter of the Cavity of the Pipe be equal to the distance between |
| the Planes, or thereabouts. And these Experiments succeed after the same |
| manner _in vacuo_ as in the open Air, (as hath been tried before the |
| Royal Society,) and therefore are not influenced by the Weight or |
| Pressure of the Atmosphere. |
| |
| And if a large Pipe of Glass be filled with sifted Ashes well pressed |
| together in the Glass, and one end of the Pipe be dipped into stagnating |
| Water, the Water will rise up slowly in the Ashes, so as in the space |
| of a Week or Fortnight to reach up within the Glass, to the height of 30 |
| or 40 Inches above the stagnating Water. And the Water rises up to this |
| height by the Action only of those Particles of the Ashes which are upon |
| the Surface of the elevated Water; the Particles which are within the |
| Water, attracting or repelling it as much downwards as upwards. And |
| therefore the Action of the Particles is very strong. But the Particles |
| of the Ashes being not so dense and close together as those of Glass, |
| their Action is not so strong as that of Glass, which keeps Quick-silver |
| suspended to the height of 60 or 70 Inches, and therefore acts with a |
| Force which would keep Water suspended to the height of above 60 Feet. |
| |
| By the same Principle, a Sponge sucks in Water, and the Glands in the |
| Bodies of Animals, according to their several Natures and Dispositions, |
| suck in various Juices from the Blood. |
| |
| If two plane polish'd Plates of Glass three or four Inches broad, and |
| twenty or twenty five long, be laid one of them parallel to the Horizon, |
| the other upon the first, so as at one of their ends to touch one |
| another, and contain an Angle of about 10 or 15 Minutes, and the same be |
| first moisten'd on their inward sides with a clean Cloth dipp'd into Oil |
| of Oranges or Spirit of Turpentine, and a Drop or two of the Oil or |
| Spirit be let fall upon the lower Glass at the other; so soon as the |
| upper Glass is laid down upon the lower, so as to touch it at one end as |
| above, and to touch the Drop at the other end, making with the lower |
| Glass an Angle of about 10 or 15 Minutes; the Drop will begin to move |
| towards the Concourse of the Glasses, and will continue to move with an |
| accelerated Motion, till it arrives at that Concourse of the Glasses. |
| For the two Glasses attract the Drop, and make it run that way towards |
| which the Attractions incline. And if when the Drop is in motion you |
| lift up that end of the Glasses where they meet, and towards which the |
| Drop moves, the Drop will ascend between the Glasses, and therefore is |
| attracted. And as you lift up the Glasses more and more, the Drop will |
| ascend slower and slower, and at length rest, being then carried |
| downward by its Weight, as much as upwards by the Attraction. And by |
| this means you may know the Force by which the Drop is attracted at all |
| distances from the Concourse of the Glasses. |
| |
| Now by some Experiments of this kind, (made by Mr. _Hauksbee_) it has |
| been found that the Attraction is almost reciprocally in a duplicate |
| Proportion of the distance of the middle of the Drop from the Concourse |
| of the Glasses, _viz._ reciprocally in a simple Proportion, by reason of |
| the spreading of the Drop, and its touching each Glass in a larger |
| Surface; and again reciprocally in a simple Proportion, by reason of the |
| Attractions growing stronger within the same quantity of attracting |
| Surface. The Attraction therefore within the same quantity of attracting |
| Surface, is reciprocally as the distance between the Glasses. And |
| therefore where the distance is exceeding small, the Attraction must be |
| exceeding great. By the Table in the second Part of the second Book, |
| wherein the thicknesses of colour'd Plates of Water between two Glasses |
| are set down, the thickness of the Plate where it appears very black, is |
| three eighths of the ten hundred thousandth part of an Inch. And where |
| the Oil of Oranges between the Glasses is of this thickness, the |
| Attraction collected by the foregoing Rule, seems to be so strong, as |
| within a Circle of an Inch in diameter, to suffice to hold up a Weight |
| equal to that of a Cylinder of Water of an Inch in diameter, and two or |
| three Furlongs in length. And where it is of a less thickness the |
| Attraction may be proportionally greater, and continue to increase, |
| until the thickness do not exceed that of a single Particle of the Oil. |
| There are therefore Agents in Nature able to make the Particles of |
| Bodies stick together by very strong Attractions. And it is the Business |
| of experimental Philosophy to find them out. |
| |
| Now the smallest Particles of Matter may cohere by the strongest |
| Attractions, and compose bigger Particles of weaker Virtue; and many of |
| these may cohere and compose bigger Particles whose Virtue is still |
| weaker, and so on for divers Successions, until the Progression end in |
| the biggest Particles on which the Operations in Chymistry, and the |
| Colours of natural Bodies depend, and which by cohering compose Bodies |
| of a sensible Magnitude. If the Body is compact, and bends or yields |
| inward to Pression without any sliding of its Parts, it is hard and |
| elastick, returning to its Figure with a Force rising from the mutual |
| Attraction of its Parts. If the Parts slide upon one another, the Body |
| is malleable or soft. If they slip easily, and are of a fit Size to be |
| agitated by Heat, and the Heat is big enough to keep them in Agitation, |
| the Body is fluid; and if it be apt to stick to things, it is humid; and |
| the Drops of every fluid affect a round Figure by the mutual Attraction |
| of their Parts, as the Globe of the Earth and Sea affects a round Figure |
| by the mutual Attraction of its Parts by Gravity. |
| |
| Since Metals dissolved in Acids attract but a small quantity of the |
| Acid, their attractive Force can reach but to a small distance from |
| them. And as in Algebra, where affirmative Quantities vanish and cease, |
| there negative ones begin; so in Mechanicks, where Attraction ceases, |
| there a repulsive Virtue ought to succeed. And that there is such a |
| Virtue, seems to follow from the Reflexions and Inflexions of the Rays |
| of Light. For the Rays are repelled by Bodies in both these Cases, |
| without the immediate Contact of the reflecting or inflecting Body. It |
| seems also to follow from the Emission of Light; the Ray so soon as it |
| is shaken off from a shining Body by the vibrating Motion of the Parts |
| of the Body, and gets beyond the reach of Attraction, being driven away |
| with exceeding great Velocity. For that Force which is sufficient to |
| turn it back in Reflexion, may be sufficient to emit it. It seems also |
| to follow from the Production of Air and Vapour. The Particles when they |
| are shaken off from Bodies by Heat or Fermentation, so soon as they are |
| beyond the reach of the Attraction of the Body, receding from it, and |
| also from one another with great Strength, and keeping at a distance, |
| so as sometimes to take up above a Million of Times more space than they |
| did before in the form of a dense Body. Which vast Contraction and |
| Expansion seems unintelligible, by feigning the Particles of Air to be |
| springy and ramous, or rolled up like Hoops, or by any other means than |
| a repulsive Power. The Particles of Fluids which do not cohere too |
| strongly, and are of such a Smallness as renders them most susceptible |
| of those Agitations which keep Liquors in a Fluor, are most easily |
| separated and rarified into Vapour, and in the Language of the Chymists, |
| they are volatile, rarifying with an easy Heat, and condensing with |
| Cold. But those which are grosser, and so less susceptible of Agitation, |
| or cohere by a stronger Attraction, are not separated without a stronger |
| Heat, or perhaps not without Fermentation. And these last are the Bodies |
| which Chymists call fix'd, and being rarified by Fermentation, become |
| true permanent Air; those Particles receding from one another with the |
| greatest Force, and being most difficultly brought together, which upon |
| Contact cohere most strongly. And because the Particles of permanent Air |
| are grosser, and arise from denser Substances than those of Vapours, |
| thence it is that true Air is more ponderous than Vapour, and that a |
| moist Atmosphere is lighter than a dry one, quantity for quantity. From |
| the same repelling Power it seems to be that Flies walk upon the Water |
| without wetting their Feet; and that the Object-glasses of long |
| Telescopes lie upon one another without touching; and that dry Powders |
| are difficultly made to touch one another so as to stick together, |
| unless by melting them, or wetting them with Water, which by exhaling |
| may bring them together; and that two polish'd Marbles, which by |
| immediate Contact stick together, are difficultly brought so close |
| together as to stick. |
| |
| And thus Nature will be very conformable to her self and very simple, |
| performing all the great Motions of the heavenly Bodies by the |
| Attraction of Gravity which intercedes those Bodies, and almost all the |
| small ones of their Particles by some other attractive and repelling |
| Powers which intercede the Particles. The _Vis inertiæ_ is a passive |
| Principle by which Bodies persist in their Motion or Rest, receive |
| Motion in proportion to the Force impressing it, and resist as much as |
| they are resisted. By this Principle alone there never could have been |
| any Motion in the World. Some other Principle was necessary for putting |
| Bodies into Motion; and now they are in Motion, some other Principle is |
| necessary for conserving the Motion. For from the various Composition of |
| two Motions, 'tis very certain that there is not always the same |
| quantity of Motion in the World. For if two Globes joined by a slender |
| Rod, revolve about their common Center of Gravity with an uniform |
| Motion, while that Center moves on uniformly in a right Line drawn in |
| the Plane of their circular Motion; the Sum of the Motions of the two |
| Globes, as often as the Globes are in the right Line described by their |
| common Center of Gravity, will be bigger than the Sum of their Motions, |
| when they are in a Line perpendicular to that right Line. By this |
| Instance it appears that Motion may be got or lost. But by reason of the |
| Tenacity of Fluids, and Attrition of their Parts, and the Weakness of |
| Elasticity in Solids, Motion is much more apt to be lost than got, and |
| is always upon the Decay. For Bodies which are either absolutely hard, |
| or so soft as to be void of Elasticity, will not rebound from one |
| another. Impenetrability makes them only stop. If two equal Bodies meet |
| directly _in vacuo_, they will by the Laws of Motion stop where they |
| meet, and lose all their Motion, and remain in rest, unless they be |
| elastick, and receive new Motion from their Spring. If they have so much |
| Elasticity as suffices to make them re-bound with a quarter, or half, or |
| three quarters of the Force with which they come together, they will |
| lose three quarters, or half, or a quarter of their Motion. And this may |
| be try'd, by letting two equal Pendulums fall against one another from |
| equal heights. If the Pendulums be of Lead or soft Clay, they will lose |
| all or almost all their Motions: If of elastick Bodies they will lose |
| all but what they recover from their Elasticity. If it be said, that |
| they can lose no Motion but what they communicate to other Bodies, the |
| consequence is, that _in vacuo_ they can lose no Motion, but when they |
| meet they must go on and penetrate one another's Dimensions. If three |
| equal round Vessels be filled, the one with Water, the other with Oil, |
| the third with molten Pitch, and the Liquors be stirred about alike to |
| give them a vortical Motion; the Pitch by its Tenacity will lose its |
| Motion quickly, the Oil being less tenacious will keep it longer, and |
| the Water being less tenacious will keep it longest, but yet will lose |
| it in a short time. Whence it is easy to understand, that if many |
| contiguous Vortices of molten Pitch were each of them as large as those |
| which some suppose to revolve about the Sun and fix'd Stars, yet these |
| and all their Parts would, by their Tenacity and Stiffness, communicate |
| their Motion to one another till they all rested among themselves. |
| Vortices of Oil or Water, or some fluider Matter, might continue longer |
| in Motion; but unless the Matter were void of all Tenacity and Attrition |
| of Parts, and Communication of Motion, (which is not to be supposed,) |
| the Motion would constantly decay. Seeing therefore the variety of |
| Motion which we find in the World is always decreasing, there is a |
| necessity of conserving and recruiting it by active Principles, such as |
| are the cause of Gravity, by which Planets and Comets keep their Motions |
| in their Orbs, and Bodies acquire great Motion in falling; and the cause |
| of Fermentation, by which the Heart and Blood of Animals are kept in |
| perpetual Motion and Heat; the inward Parts of the Earth are constantly |
| warm'd, and in some places grow very hot; Bodies burn and shine, |
| Mountains take fire, the Caverns of the Earth are blown up, and the Sun |
| continues violently hot and lucid, and warms all things by his Light. |
| For we meet with very little Motion in the World, besides what is owing |
| to these active Principles. And if it were not for these Principles, the |
| Bodies of the Earth, Planets, Comets, Sun, and all things in them, |
| would grow cold and freeze, and become inactive Masses; and all |
| Putrefaction, Generation, Vegetation and Life would cease, and the |
| Planets and Comets would not remain in their Orbs. |
| |
| All these things being consider'd, it seems probable to me, that God in |
| the Beginning form'd Matter in solid, massy, hard, impenetrable, |
| moveable Particles, of such Sizes and Figures, and with such other |
| Properties, and in such Proportion to Space, as most conduced to the End |
| for which he form'd them; and that these primitive Particles being |
| Solids, are incomparably harder than any porous Bodies compounded of |
| them; even so very hard, as never to wear or break in pieces; no |
| ordinary Power being able to divide what God himself made one in the |
| first Creation. While the Particles continue entire, they may compose |
| Bodies of one and the same Nature and Texture in all Ages: But should |
| they wear away, or break in pieces, the Nature of Things depending on |
| them, would be changed. Water and Earth, composed of old worn Particles |
| and Fragments of Particles, would not be of the same Nature and Texture |
| now, with Water and Earth composed of entire Particles in the Beginning. |
| And therefore, that Nature may be lasting, the Changes of corporeal |
| Things are to be placed only in the various Separations and new |
| Associations and Motions of these permanent Particles; compound Bodies |
| being apt to break, not in the midst of solid Particles, but where those |
| Particles are laid together, and only touch in a few Points. |
| |
| It seems to me farther, that these Particles have not only a _Vis |
| inertiæ_, accompanied with such passive Laws of Motion as naturally |
| result from that Force, but also that they are moved by certain active |
| Principles, such as is that of Gravity, and that which causes |
| Fermentation, and the Cohesion of Bodies. These Principles I consider, |
| not as occult Qualities, supposed to result from the specifick Forms of |
| Things, but as general Laws of Nature, by which the Things themselves |
| are form'd; their Truth appearing to us by Phænomena, though their |
| Causes be not yet discover'd. For these are manifest Qualities, and |
| their Causes only are occult. And the _Aristotelians_ gave the Name of |
| occult Qualities, not to manifest Qualities, but to such Qualities only |
| as they supposed to lie hid in Bodies, and to be the unknown Causes of |
| manifest Effects: Such as would be the Causes of Gravity, and of |
| magnetick and electrick Attractions, and of Fermentations, if we should |
| suppose that these Forces or Actions arose from Qualities unknown to us, |
| and uncapable of being discovered and made manifest. Such occult |
| Qualities put a stop to the Improvement of natural Philosophy, and |
| therefore of late Years have been rejected. To tell us that every |
| Species of Things is endow'd with an occult specifick Quality by which |
| it acts and produces manifest Effects, is to tell us nothing: But to |
| derive two or three general Principles of Motion from Phænomena, and |
| afterwards to tell us how the Properties and Actions of all corporeal |
| Things follow from those manifest Principles, would be a very great step |
| in Philosophy, though the Causes of those Principles were not yet |
| discover'd: And therefore I scruple not to propose the Principles of |
| Motion above-mention'd, they being of very general Extent, and leave |
| their Causes to be found out. |
| |
| Now by the help of these Principles, all material Things seem to have |
| been composed of the hard and solid Particles above-mention'd, variously |
| associated in the first Creation by the Counsel of an intelligent Agent. |
| For it became him who created them to set them in order. And if he did |
| so, it's unphilosophical to seek for any other Origin of the World, or |
| to pretend that it might arise out of a Chaos by the mere Laws of |
| Nature; though being once form'd, it may continue by those Laws for many |
| Ages. For while Comets move in very excentrick Orbs in all manner of |
| Positions, blind Fate could never make all the Planets move one and the |
| same way in Orbs concentrick, some inconsiderable Irregularities |
| excepted, which may have risen from the mutual Actions of Comets and |
| Planets upon one another, and which will be apt to increase, till this |
| System wants a Reformation. Such a wonderful Uniformity in the Planetary |
| System must be allowed the Effect of Choice. And so must the Uniformity |
| in the Bodies of Animals, they having generally a right and a left side |
| shaped alike, and on either side of their Bodies two Legs behind, and |
| either two Arms, or two Legs, or two Wings before upon their Shoulders, |
| and between their Shoulders a Neck running down into a Back-bone, and a |
| Head upon it; and in the Head two Ears, two Eyes, a Nose, a Mouth, and |
| a Tongue, alike situated. Also the first Contrivance of those very |
| artificial Parts of Animals, the Eyes, Ears, Brain, Muscles, Heart, |
| Lungs, Midriff, Glands, Larynx, Hands, Wings, swimming Bladders, natural |
| Spectacles, and other Organs of Sense and Motion; and the Instinct of |
| Brutes and Insects, can be the effect of nothing else than the Wisdom |
| and Skill of a powerful ever-living Agent, who being in all Places, is |
| more able by his Will to move the Bodies within his boundless uniform |
| Sensorium, and thereby to form and reform the Parts of the Universe, |
| than we are by our Will to move the Parts of our own Bodies. And yet we |
| are not to consider the World as the Body of God, or the several Parts |
| thereof, as the Parts of God. He is an uniform Being, void of Organs, |
| Members or Parts, and they are his Creatures subordinate to him, and |
| subservient to his Will; and he is no more the Soul of them, than the |
| Soul of Man is the Soul of the Species of Things carried through the |
| Organs of Sense into the place of its Sensation, where it perceives them |
| by means of its immediate Presence, without the Intervention of any |
| third thing. The Organs of Sense are not for enabling the Soul to |
| perceive the Species of Things in its Sensorium, but only for conveying |
| them thither; and God has no need of such Organs, he being every where |
| present to the Things themselves. And since Space is divisible _in |
| infinitum_, and Matter is not necessarily in all places, it may be also |
| allow'd that God is able to create Particles of Matter of several Sizes |
| and Figures, and in several Proportions to Space, and perhaps of |
| different Densities and Forces, and thereby to vary the Laws of Nature, |
| and make Worlds of several sorts in several Parts of the Universe. At |
| least, I see nothing of Contradiction in all this. |
| |
| As in Mathematicks, so in Natural Philosophy, the Investigation of |
| difficult Things by the Method of Analysis, ought ever to precede the |
| Method of Composition. This Analysis consists in making Experiments and |
| Observations, and in drawing general Conclusions from them by Induction, |
| and admitting of no Objections against the Conclusions, but such as are |
| taken from Experiments, or other certain Truths. For Hypotheses are not |
| to be regarded in experimental Philosophy. And although the arguing from |
| Experiments and Observations by Induction be no Demonstration of general |
| Conclusions; yet it is the best way of arguing which the Nature of |
| Things admits of, and may be looked upon as so much the stronger, by how |
| much the Induction is more general. And if no Exception occur from |
| Phænomena, the Conclusion may be pronounced generally. But if at any |
| time afterwards any Exception shall occur from Experiments, it may then |
| begin to be pronounced with such Exceptions as occur. By this way of |
| Analysis we may proceed from Compounds to Ingredients, and from Motions |
| to the Forces producing them; and in general, from Effects to their |
| Causes, and from particular Causes to more general ones, till the |
| Argument end in the most general. This is the Method of Analysis: And |
| the Synthesis consists in assuming the Causes discover'd, and |
| establish'd as Principles, and by them explaining the Phænomena |
| proceeding from them, and proving the Explanations. |
| |
| In the two first Books of these Opticks, I proceeded by this Analysis to |
| discover and prove the original Differences of the Rays of Light in |
| respect of Refrangibility, Reflexibility, and Colour, and their |
| alternate Fits of easy Reflexion and easy Transmission, and the |
| Properties of Bodies, both opake and pellucid, on which their Reflexions |
| and Colours depend. And these Discoveries being proved, may be assumed |
| in the Method of Composition for explaining the Phænomena arising from |
| them: An Instance of which Method I gave in the End of the first Book. |
| In this third Book I have only begun the Analysis of what remains to be |
| discover'd about Light and its Effects upon the Frame of Nature, hinting |
| several things about it, and leaving the Hints to be examin'd and |
| improv'd by the farther Experiments and Observations of such as are |
| inquisitive. And if natural Philosophy in all its Parts, by pursuing |
| this Method, shall at length be perfected, the Bounds of Moral |
| Philosophy will be also enlarged. For so far as we can know by natural |
| Philosophy what is the first Cause, what Power he has over us, and what |
| Benefits we receive from him, so far our Duty towards him, as well as |
| that towards one another, will appear to us by the Light of Nature. And |
| no doubt, if the Worship of false Gods had not blinded the Heathen, |
| their moral Philosophy would have gone farther than to the four |
| Cardinal Virtues; and instead of teaching the Transmigration of Souls, |
| and to worship the Sun and Moon, and dead Heroes, they would have taught |
| us to worship our true Author and Benefactor, as their Ancestors did |
| under the Government of _Noah_ and his Sons before they corrupted |
| themselves. |