Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
In examining the dispersive powers of a great variety of glasses prepared by the late Rev. W. Vernon Harcourt, I had occasion to examine several prisms which were too much striated to show clearly even the boldest dark lines of the solar spectrum. I found that I was able to get a fair measure of the dispersive powers even of these by a method depending on the achromatizing of one prism by another. If the method succeeded even with such prisms, it stands to reason that it would be still more successful with prisms of good glass.
For the construction of an objective we require but one datum as regards the dispersions, namely, the ratio of the dispersions, or rather, the ratio which on being treated as if it were the ratio of the dispersions gives the best results in practice.
If it were not for irrationality, the matter would be comparatively simple. The ratio of the dispersions would then be the same for whatever interval of the spectrum it were taken; and we should merely have to take two well-defined lines, bright or dark, situated as nearly as may be at the extremities of the spectrum, so that any errors of observation should be divided by as large a quantity as practicable, to measure the refractive indices of the two glasses for each of those two lines, and to take the ratio of the increments in passing from one line to the other.
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