Abstract
MR. BIDWELL's notice of spectral images (NATURE, vol. xxxii. p. 30) calls to mind certain phenomena I witnessed while riding in a railway train in Kentucky last October. The fence of the railway consisted of posts of about 6 inches in diameter, and twenty paces apart, connected by wires. The posts had newly been painted green. I was seated on the right side of the carriage, face forwards; the speed fully twenty miles an hour, with the sun behind my right shoulder, when looking at the posts on the left side, brightly illuminated by the sun, I observed that each post had the appearance of a twin post immediately in advance of it—touching it—of a red colour. To make myself sure that I was not deceived by some abnormal affection, I called the attention of a niece of mine to the phenomenon, and she saw it quite as well as I did. Another niece, however, failed to make it out. I am under the belief that the red post was the complementary colour of the green one, appearing the instant after the latter had been seen, and though apparently in advance in space of the green post, really was seen later in time. The fact of both being apparently seen simultaneously, is accounted for by the well-known law of retinal images lingering on vision.
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MUIRHEAD, H. Spectral Images. Nature 32, 55 (1885). https://doi.org/10.1038/032055a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/032055a0
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