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Автор Dingle, Herbert
Дата выпуска 1963
dc.description A hundred years ago the science of spectroscopy, though not yet christened, may be said to have attained its majority and to be just entering on its period of full adult development. It was born, of course, with Newton's explanation of the formation of the spectrum, and for many years thereafter little of importance was added to what he had discovered. It was not, in fact, until the nineteenth century that anything of outstanding importance occurred, and then, in 1802, Wollaston substituted a slit for the round hole through which Newton's sunlight passed into his prism, and thereby not only saw for the first time the dark lines in the solar spectrum but also took the first step towards the perfection of the spectroscope on which all later progress depended. The next step was taken by Fraunhofer who, in 1814, examined the spectrum through a telescope instead of letting it fall on a screen. The last essential improvement—the introduction of the collimator to make the light from the slit parallel before it entered the prism—was introduced in 1839 independently by Simms and Swan, so that before our period begins, the complete spectroscope existed, though it was not to be converted into a spectrograph, for photographing spectra, until much later.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1963
Название A Hundred Years of Spectroscopy*
Тип research-article
DOI 10.1017/S0007087400001461
Electronic ISSN 1474-001X
Print ISSN 0007-0874
Журнал The British Journal for the History of Science
Том 1
Первая страница 199
Последняя страница 216
Выпуск 3

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