Abstract
MR. J. RAND CAPRON'S experiment with the Swan lamp is very interesting; but his inference that the aurora may not be an electric discharge in the upper atmosphere because it does not show nitrogen lines in the spectrum is hardly justified by the experiment. On the contrary, the true significance of that experiment appears to be that there is a certain degree of rarefaction of the air (or vacuum) at which the nitrogen lines disappear. Such a vacuum is given by the Swan, and probably other electric incandescence lamps. According to Mr. Capron's result, when more air got into the bulb and vitiated this fine vacuum, the nitrogen lines appeared. We may say, then, that if the aurora is an electric discharge in the upper air, the rarefaction must be aproximately that of a Sean lamp, if there are no nitrogen lines visible in the spectrum of the light. To study this further some one ought to examine the discharge in vacuum tubes containing air at different degrees of density.
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MUNRO, J. Swan Lamp Spectrum and the Aurora. Nature 27, 173 (1882). https://doi.org/10.1038/027173e0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/027173e0
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