Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 129 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882.
media.  As well known, Faraday attributed such effects to the action of the air; and he thought that magnetic motions always resulted from a difference between the attraction exerted by the magnet upon the body under experiment, and the attraction exerted by the air.  If the body is more sensitive than the air, there is direct magnetism, but if it is less so, there is diamagnetism.  Water between the bodies, in the Bjerknes experiments, plays the same role; it is this which, by its vibration, transmits the motions and determines the phases in the suspended body.  If the body is heavier than water its motion is less than that of the liquid, and, consequently, relatively to the vibrating body, it is of like phase; and if it is lighter, the contrary takes place, and the phases are in discordance.  These effects may be very well verified by the aid of the little apparatus shown in Fig. 5, and which carries two bars, one of them lighter and the other heavier than water.  On presenting to them the vibrating body, one presents its extremity and takes an axial direction, while the other arranges itself crosswise and takes the equatorial direction.  These experiments may be varied in different ways that it is scarcely necessary to dwell upon in this place, as they may be seen at the Electrical Exhibition.

[Illustration:  FIG. 5.]

Very curious effects are also obtained with the arrangement shown in Fig. 6.  Between the two drums there is introduced a body sustained by a float such as represented at a, Fig. 4.  Various results may, then, be obtained according to the combinations adopted.  Let us suppose that the phases are alike, and that the interposed body is heavier than water; in this case it is repelled as far as the circumference of the drums, at which point it stops.  If the phases are different, the influenced body behaves in the opposite manner and stops at the center.  If the body is lighter than water the effects are naturally changed.  Placed between two like phases, it is attracted within a certain radius and repelled when it is placed further off; if the phases are unlike, it is always repelled.  We may easily assure ourselves that these effects are analogous to those which are produced on bodies placed between the poles of wide and powerful magnets.  It is useless to repeat that the analogies are always inverse.

[Illustration:  FIG. 6.]

Mr. Bjerknes has carried the examination of these phenomena still further in studying experimentally the actions that occur in the depths of the liquid; and for this purpose he has made use of the arrangement shown in Fig. 7.  By the side of the vibrating body there is placed a light body mounted on a very flexible spring.  This assumes the motion of that portion of the fluid in which it is immersed, and, by the aid of a small pencil, its direction is inscribed upon a plate located above it.  By placing this registering apparatus in different directions the entire liquid may be explored.  We find by this means figures that are perfectly identical with magnetic phantoms.  All the circumstances connected with these can be reproduced, the vibrating sphere giving the phantom of a magnet with its two poles.  We may even exhibit the mutual action of two magnets.  The figures show with remarkable distinctness—­much more distinct, perhaps, than those that are obtained by true magnets.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 315, January 14, 1882 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.