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experiments, all of which confirmed his discovery. One of these may be
mentioned. He made a hole in the screen at that part on which the violet rays
fell. Thus a violet ray was allowed to pass through, all the rest of the light
being intercepted, and on this beam so isolated he was able to try further
experiments. For instance, when he interposed another prism in its path, he
found, as he expected, that it was again deflected, and he measured the
amount of the deflection. Again he tried the same experiment with one of the
red rays from the opposite end of the coloured band. He allowed it to pass
through the same aperture in the screen, and he tested the amount by which
the second prism was capable of producing deflection. He thus found, as he
had expected to find, that the second prism was more efficacious in bending
the violet rays than in bending the red rays. Thus he confirmed the fact that
the various hues of the rainbow were each bent by a prism to a different
extent, violet being acted upon the most, and red the least.
Not only did Newton decompose a white beam into its constituent colours,
but conversely by interposing a second prism with its angle turned upwards,
he reunited the different colours, and thus reproduced the original beam of
white light. In several other ways also he illustrated his famous proposition,
which then seemed so startling, that white light was the result of a mixture of
all hues of the rainbow. By combining painters’ colours in the proper
proportion he did not indeed succeed in producing a mixture which would
ordinarily be called white, but he obtained a grey pigment. Some of this he
put on the floor of his room for comparison with a piece of white paper. He
allowed a beam of bright sunlight to fall upon the paper and the mixed
colours side by side, and a friend whom he called in for his opinion
pronounced that under these circumstances the mixed colours looked the
whiter of the two.
By repeated demonstrations Newton thus established his great discovery of
the composite character of light. He at once perceived that his researches had
an important bearing upon the principles involved in the construction of a
telescope. Those who employed the telescope for looking at the stars, had
been long aware of the imperfections which prevented all the various rays
from being conducted to the same focus. But this imperfection had hitherto
been erroneously accounted for. It had been supposed that the reason why
success had not been attained in the construction of a refracting telescope was
due to the fact that the object glass, made as it then was of a single piece, had
not been properly shaped. Mathematicians had abundantly demonstrated that
a single lens, if properly figured, must conduct all rays of light to the same
focus, provided all rays experienced equal refraction in passing through the
glass. Until Newton’s discovery of the composition of white light, it had been
taken for granted that the several rays in a white beam were equally
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Buch Great Astronoms - Isaac Newton"
Great Astronoms
Isaac Newton
- Titel
- Great Astronoms
- Untertitel
- Isaac Newton
- Autor
- Robert S. Ball
- Datum
- 1907
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 22
- Schlagwörter
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik