Page:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Vol 4.djvu/67

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vious combination inverted, that is, with a small copper ball in the interior of a large hollow sphere of zinc; and from these the author concludes that, in this case also, the law of radiation is maintained, although the force is reduced to one half of that obtained from the former combination.

In order to ascertain the effect of cutting off the lateral radiation from the zinc ball, it was placed in a glass tube, six inches long, within half an inch of the lower aperture, over which a piece of membrane was tied, and the tube plunged into the solution cf copper contained in a brass hemisphere, so as to rest upon the bottom. The results obtained by this arrangement, as also those when the zinc ball was raised in the tube to the surface of the solution, showed that the action of the zinc ball had been propagated from the aperture of the glass tube, as from a centre, diverging from this in the solution.

The experiments next described appear to have an important bearing on a question of vital interest in the theory of electricity, which has been discussed by Mr. Faraday, in a paper recently read to this Society: viz., whether the forces emanating from a centre of electric action act, like other central forces, in straight lines; or whether they are propagated from particle to particle in the surrounding mat- ter, and may, consequently, when obstacles interfere with their rectilinear propagation, exert their influence in curved lines. An elliptical plate of copper, one side of which was covered with lac varnish, was placed in an earthen pan, with the varnished side upwards, and covered to the depth of a few inches with the acid solution of copper. The zinc ball, placed in the tube half an inch from the diaphragm, was plunged just below the surface of the solution, and the circuit being completed, the galvanometer indicated an action nearly equal to that which had been previously observed when both sides of the copper had been exposed. The under side of the copper presented the appearance of a border of precipitated compact pink copper, varying from 14 to of an inch in width, and the remainder was covered with precipitated copper of a darker red colour, into which the border gradually passed; and similar results were obtained with a circular disc of copper, having one side varnished. It hence appears, that the under surface, which, by itself, is capable of sustaining from the ball in the centre of the solution an action nearly as great as the upper surface, when combined with the latter adds no more than about one-eighth part of its efficiency; and whereas, with the upper surface, the action varies in some inverse ratio of the distance of the generating from the conducting surface, with the under surface, there is a maximum point, on both sides of which it decreases: and this point is doubtless dependent on the angle at which the force which radiates from the ball meets the edge of the plate. The author having been led to the conclusion, that the force developed by voltaic combinations is subject to the law of radiant forces, had been utterly at a loss to understand how, upon this hypothesis, it could extend its influence to the side of a plate opposite to that to which it was directed in right lines; but having perused Mr. Faraday's "Eleventh series of experimental researches in