Abstract
SUNLIGHT is so intimately woven up with our physical enjoyment of life that it is perhaps not the most uninteresting subject that can be chosen for what is—perhaps somewhat pedantically—termed a Friday evening “discourse.” Now, no discourse ought to be possible without a text on which to hang one's words, and I think I found a suitable one when walking with an artist friend from South Kensington Museum the other day. The sun appeared like a red disk through one of those fogs which the east wind had brought, and I happened to point it out to him. He looked, and said, “Why is it that the sun appears so red?” Being near the railway station, whither he was bound, I had no time to enter into the subject, but said if he would come to the Royal Institution this evening I would endeavour to explain the matter. I am going to redeem that promise, and to devote at all events a portion of the time allotted to me in answering the question why the sun appears red in a fog. I must first of all appeal to what everyone who frequents this theatre is so accustomed, viz. the spectrum; I am going not to put it in the large and splendid stripe of the most gorgeous colours before you with which you are so well acquainted, but my spectrum will take a more modest form of purer colours some twelve inches in length.
Article PDF
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Sunlight Colours 1 . Nature 35, 498–501 (1887). https://doi.org/10.1038/035498a0
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/035498a0