Abstract
WE have received the following communications on this phenomenon. At the same time we may refer to a passage in one of Mr. Norman Lockyer's papers on “Physical Science for Artists,” in which he speaks of the marked effects of aqueous vapour in the atmosphere on the character of the sun's light. He states that he asked Dr. Schuster to test his theory while in India. “Theory,” he states, “had led me to expect that with the enormous thickness of air available there, absorption at the red end of the spectrum by aqueous vapour would be seen as well as the absorption at the blue, which is so common with us. Seeing the sun a vivid green through the steam of the little paddle-boat on Windermere first led me to inquire into the possibility of aqueous vapour following the same law as that which I think we may now accept in the cases of the vapours of metals. As in these experiments with vapours absorption of the red end alone was seen, as well as absorption at the blue end alone, the assumption that these two absorptions existed in aqueous vapour at once accounted for the green sun.” In the sequel it will be found that Dr. Schuster's observations quite confirmed Mr. Lockyer's theory.
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SMYTH, C., MANLEY, W. A Green Sun in India . Nature 28, 575–577 (1883). https://doi.org/10.1038/028575a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/028575a0