Abstract
IN answer to Mr. Procter's first question (vol. x. p. 355), I would refer him to NATURE, vol. vii., p. 201, where he will find an account of observations of the polarisation of the zodiacal light, and of the aurora, by Mr. Ranyard, who appears to have used a double image prism and Savart, during the great aurora of Feb. 4, 1872, and to have detected no polarisation. He refers also to some observations made upon the small aurora of Nov. 11, 1871, in which he could detect no polarisation. The only other account of observations that I have met with are contained in the report of Prof. Stephen Alexander on his expedition to Labrador, given in Appendix 21 of the United States Coast Survey Report for 1860, p. 30. He found strong polarisation with a Savart's polariscope, and, what is most remarkable, thought that the dark parts of the aurora gave the strongest polarisation. This was at the beginning of July. He was in latitude about 60°, and the observations appear to have been made near midnight. But he does not state whether there was twilight or traces of air polarisation at the time, nor does he give; the plane of polarisation.
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FLEMING, J. Polarisation of the Aurora. Nature 10, 398 (1874). https://doi.org/10.1038/010398d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/010398d0
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