Abstract
ONE of the subjects to which I propose to invite your attention this evening is the application of instantaneous photography to the illustration of certain mechanical phenomena which pass so quickly as to elude ordinary means of observation. The expression “instantaneous photography” is perhaps not quite a defensible one, because no photography can be really instantaneous—some time must always be occupied. One of the simplest and most commonly used methods of obtaining very short exposures is by the use of movable shutters, for which purpose many ingenious mechanical devices have been invented. About two years ago we had a lecture from Prof. Muybridge, in which he showed us the application of this method—and a remarkably interesting application it was—to the examination of the various positions assumed by a horse in his several gaits. Other means, however, may he employed to the same end, and one of them depends upon the production of an instantaneous light. It will obviously come to the same thing whether the light to which we expose the plates be instantaneous, or whether by a mechanical device we allow the plate to be submitted to a continuous light for only a very short time. A good deal of use has been made in this way of what is known as the magnesium flash light. A cloud of magnesium powder is ignited, and blazes up quickly with a bright light of very short duration. Now I want to compare that mode of illumination with another, in order to be able to judge of the relative degree of instantaneity, if 1 may use such an expression. We will illumine for a short time a revolving disk, composed of black and white sectors; and the result will depend upon how quick the motion is as compared with the duration of the light. If the light could be truly instantaneous, it would of necessity show the disk apparently stationary. I believe that the duration of this light is variously estimated at from one-tenth to one- fiftieth of a second; and as the arrangement that I have here is one of the slowest, we may assume that the time occupied will be about a tenth of a second. I will say the words one, two, three, and at the word three Mr. Gordon will project the powder into the flame of a spirit lamp, and the flash will be produced. Please give your attention to the disk, for the question is whether the present uniform grey will be displaced by a perception of the individual black and white sectors. [Experiment.] You see the flash was not instantaneous enough to resolve the grey into its components.
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References
The appearance of the breaking bubble, as seen under instantaneous illumination, was first described by Marangoni, and Stephanelli, Nuovo Cimento, 1873.
On this principle we may readily calculate the focal lengths of lenses without use of the law of sines (see Phil. Mag., December 1879).
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RAYLEIGH, L. Some Applications of Photography1. Nature 44, 249–254 (1891). https://doi.org/10.1038/044249e0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/044249e0