Page:Scientific Memoirs, Vol. 1 (1837).djvu/35

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
OF RADIANT HEAT THROUGH DIFFERENT BODIES.
23

oil of colza[1], and after having waited until the needle recovered its original position we reestablished the calorific communication.

The deviations obtained through the different thicknesses of the liquid are exhibited in the following table.

Degrees of thickness of
the liquid layer.
Deviations of the galvanometer.
mm °
6 ·767 15 ·642
13 ·535 12 ·831
27 ·069 10 ·389
54 ·139 9 ·540
81 ·209 8 ·988
108 ·279 8 ·512

The free radiation being always represented by 1000, the respective quantities of the rays transmitted and those stopped are found to be:

Table B.
Degrees of thickness of
the liquid layer,
Rays transmitted. Rays stopped.
mm
6 ·767 443 557
13 ·535 363 637
27 ·069 294 706
54 ·139 270 730
71 ·209 255 745
108 ·279 244 756

If we suppose the last layer (of 108mm·274) subdivided into six parallel slices of the following degrees of thickness: 6mm·767, 6·767, 13·535, 27·069, 27·069, and 27·069, we shall be able to determine, by means of the numbers contained in the two last columns, the quantity of heat incident to the first surface of each of these slices and the quantity lost in the passage. Dividing the second by the first we shall ascertain the loss. It is unnecessary to exhibit the operations in detail, as they are in all respects similar to those which have been performed in reference to the screens of glass. Here are the final results:

Degrees of thickness of the six
successive slices into which
we suppose the layer of
108mm·274 to be divided.
Losses in the respective transmissions
referred to the quantities of
rays which arrive at the
surface of each slice.
mm
6 ·767 0 .557
6 ·767 0 ·180
13 ·535 0 ·190
27 ·069 0 ·082
27 ·069 0 ·056
27 ·069 0 ·040
  1. [It may be proper to inform the English reader that "oil of colza" is an oil expressed from the seeds of the Chou Colza of the French, Brassica arvensis, Linn. It must not be confounded with the rape oil of England, obtained from the Rape, Brassica Napus.Edit.]