Abstract
I HAVE frequently noticed the peculiar movement of telegraph wires noticed by your correspondent. For some time I took it to be an ordinary case of vibration, but it presented so many peculiar features that I was induced to examine it more closely. It frequently happens that when the temperature and dew-point of the air are at or about the freezing-point, and the sky is clear, the wires are chilled by radiation, and hoar-frost is deposited upon them. With an almost imperceptible wind the hoar-frost collects almost wholly upon one side of the wire in the form of a wing, producing a torsional strain. The weight of the hoarfrost, as compared with the weight of line, is so small that their common centre of gravity is almost coincident with the centre of the wire. When in this condition, if a light wind acts upon the frozen wing, it imparts a reciprocating rotary motion to the wire. Each time the vibration brings the plane of the protuberance in a line with the eye, the wire almost disappears from sight, while when it is at right angles to that line it flashes suddenly into view. If looked at from such a point that the wing of hoar-frost moves backwards and forwards behind the black wire, the effect is very much more marked.
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DEELEY, R. Movement of Telegraph-Wires. Nature 33, 343 (1886). https://doi.org/10.1038/033343c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/033343c0
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