Abstract
WITH reference to Mr. Brett's observations on the colour of sea and sky, I have one or two remarks to offer which I think may be of interest. Smokers have all noticed that the smoke from the end of a pipe or eigar is bluer than that which they puff from the mouth, and many may have wondered, as I did for a long time, what the reason of this could be. The contrast may be well seen on a bright sunny day. This is, in fact, the simplest form of the experiment of the condensation of vapours causing them to pass through a fine blue to a white condition, which Professor Tyndall exhibited about two years ago, and which he employed to explain the blue colour of the sky, and the remarkable polarisation of its light. The finer state of division in the freshly-formed smoke gives it its bright blue colour, as does the finely divided aqueous vapour give to the blue sky; the smoke which has passed through the pipe-stem and mouth has become more condensed, and consequently gives a whiter cloud.
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Lankestek, E. Colour of the Sky. Nature 2, 235 (1870). https://doi.org/10.1038/002235a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/002235a0
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