Abstract
IX. NOW let me state to you how the discovery mentioned on p. 12 was finally established by Kirchhoff. In my notice of the spectroscope in the earlier articles, I had so much to say that there were several details it was absolutely essential I should curtail. One of these details was the scale by which the positions of the different bright or dark lines which are seen in the different spectra are registered, so that we may say that such a line occupies such and such a position, and such another line occupies such another position, with regard to something else. When Kirchhoff and Bunsen, two German chemists, were engaged in mapping the spectra of the elements—a research which at its commencement had nothing whatever to do with the sun—they came across this difficulty of a scale. How could they get a good scale? I have already referred to some very obvious arrangements that might determine the actual position; for instance, the observing telescope may be made to move along a graduated are, so that by moving the telescope for the different rays and fixing it when in a proper position to see a particular ray, you might read off the index placed on the arc to a great nicety by means of a graduated vernier working on the curve of the arc; or you may, by a modification of the instrument, use a reduced photographic picture of a scale, so that the thing to be measured and the actual scale would appear in the field of view at the same time. Kirchhoff and Bunsen tried these methods, but they did not like them. Then it suddenly struck them that, as they made their experiments in the day-time, they might use as a scale the black lines in the solar spectrum, which had not been known to change since the time of Wollaston, who discovered them. When working in the day-time, they had thus the solar spectrum visible in one half of the field of view of the telescope, which was easily managed by placing a reflecting prism over one half of the slit, as is shown in the enlarged slit in Fig. 46, so as to light one half of the slit by the sun, and the other half by whatever substance was under examination. With this arrangement they set to work with infinite care, and made a map of the solar spectrum. Such was their proposal: first to map the unchangeable solar spectrum, and then, having this unchangeable scale, about which there could be no mistake, always visible, they would be able to refer to the dark lines in it all the unknown phenomena they were about to investigate in the bright lines of different vapours and gases. Having got this idea of the scale well into their minds, they were exceedingly anxious to test this question, which, as I have told you, was raised by Fraunhofer and many other men before them, of the asserted coincidence of the bright sodium line with the dark solar sodium lines; with a very delicate instrument, Prof. Kirchhoff made the following remarkable experiment:—“In order,” says Kirchhoff, for these are his own words, “to test in the most direct manner possible the frequently asserted fact of the coincidence of the sodium lines with the lines D”—(that is to say, of the bright double lines of sodium in the yellow part of the spectrum, with the double line D of the solar spectrum)—“I obtained a tolerably bright solar spectrum, and brought a flame coloured by sodium vapour in front of the slit. I then saw the dark lines D change into bright ones.” That is to say, in the spectrum of the sodium which was burning in the flame were lines so exactly coincident with the two dark lines in the solar spectrum, that the bright lines of the sodium spectrum put these dark lines out altogether, so that they seemed to vanish, as it were, from the solar spectrum. He goes on:—“In order to find out the extent to which the intensity of the solar spectrum could be reduced without impairing the distinctness of the sodium lines, I allowed the full sunlight to shine through the sodium flame.” Here he varies the experiment. In the first instance he used a very feeble beam of sunlight, but he now allows the whole glare of the sun to enter the slit. What was the result? “To my astonishment, I saw that the dark lines D appeared with an extraordinary degree of clearness.” That is to say, the lines which came from the sodium in the first instance, were sufficiently bright to entirely eradicate the dark lines from the solar spectrum, but the two lines D were now so utterly powerless compared with the light of the sun, that they actually appeared as black lines, and coincident with the two lines D in the solar spectrum.
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LOCKYER, J. On the Spectroscope and its Applications . Nature 8, 89–91 (1873). https://doi.org/10.1038/008089a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/008089a0