sity of devising a very sensitive apparatus, which would give records magnified from ten to a hundred times.[1]
RESPONSE RECORDERS.
The magnification of movement is produced by a light lever, the short arm of which is attached to the plant organ, the long arm tracing the record on a moving smoked plate of glass. The axis of the lever is supported by jewel bearings. The principal difficulty in obtaining accurate record of response of plant lies in the friction of contact of the recording point against the glass surface. This difficulty I have been able to overcome by providing a device of intermittent instead of continuous contact. For this, either the writer is made to vibrate to and fro, or the recording plate is made to oscillate backwards and forwards.
1. The Resonant Recorder.—In this the writing lever is made of a fine steel wire. One end of this wire is supported at the centre of a circular electromagnet; this latter is periodically magnetised by a coercing vibrator, which completes an electric circuit ten hundred, or two hundred times in a second. The writing lever is exactly tuned to the vibrating interrupter and is thus thrown into sympathetic vibration. Successive dots in the record thus measure time from 0·1 to 0·05 second. The employment of the Resonant Recorder enables us to measure extremely short periods of time for the determination of the latent period or the velocity of transmission of excitation.
2. The Magnetic Tapper.—Measurement of very short intervals is not necessary in ordinary records of res-
- ↑ For detailed description cf. Bose.—"An Automatic Method for Investigation of Velocity of Transmission of Excitation in Mimosa."— Phil. Trans., B. vol. 204, (1913).