Soap Bubbles
and the Forces which Mould Them
Forfatter: F. R. S., A. R. S. M., C. V. Boys
År: 1890
Serie: Romance of Science Series
Sted: London
Sider: 178
UDK: 532
Søgning i bogen
Den bedste måde at søge i bogen er ved at downloade PDF'en og søge i den.
Derved får du fremhævet ordene visuelt direkte på billedet af siden.
Digitaliseret bog
Bogens tekst er maskinlæst, så der kan være en del fejl og mangler.
156
SOAP-BUBBLES, AND
Pholographs of Water-jets,
These are easily taken by the method
described by Mr. Chichester Bell. The flash
of light is produced by a short spark from
a few Leyden-jars. The fountain^ or jet, should
be five or six feet away from the spark, and
the photographic plate should be held as close
to the stream of water as is possible without
touching. The shadow is then so definite that
the photograph, when taken, may be examined
with a powerful lens, and will still appear sharp.
Any rapid dry plate will do. The room, of
course, must be quite dark when the plate is
placed in position, and the spark then made.
The regular breaking up of the jet may be
effected by sound produced in almost any way.
The straight jet, of which Fig. 41 is a repre-
sentation, magnified about three and a quarter
times, was regularly broken up by simply
whistling to it with a key. The fountains were
broken up regularly by fastening the nozzle to
one end of a long piece of wood clamped at
the end to the stand of a tuning-fork, which
was kept sounding by electrical means. An
ordinary tuning-fork, made to rest when sound-