Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- On the Effect of the Internal Friction of Fluids on the Motion of Pendulums
- PART I Analytical Investigation
- PART II Comparison of Theory and Experiment
- An Examination of the possible effect of the Radiation of Heat on the Propagation of Sound
- On the Colours of Thick Plates
- On a new Elliptic Analyser
- On the Conduction of Heat in Crystals
- On the Total Intensity of Interfering Light
- On the Composition and Resolution of Streams of Polarized Light from different Sources
- Abstract of a paper “On the Change of Refrangibility of Light”
- On the Change of Refrangibility of Light
- Index
- Plate
On the Conduction of Heat in Crystals
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- On the Effect of the Internal Friction of Fluids on the Motion of Pendulums
- PART I Analytical Investigation
- PART II Comparison of Theory and Experiment
- An Examination of the possible effect of the Radiation of Heat on the Propagation of Sound
- On the Colours of Thick Plates
- On a new Elliptic Analyser
- On the Conduction of Heat in Crystals
- On the Total Intensity of Interfering Light
- On the Composition and Resolution of Streams of Polarized Light from different Sources
- Abstract of a paper “On the Change of Refrangibility of Light”
- On the Change of Refrangibility of Light
- Index
- Plate
Summary
The 21st, 22nd, and 23rd volumes of the Annales de Chimie et de Physique contain three very interesting papers by M. de Senarmont, describing a series of experimental researches on the conduction of heat in crystals, as well as in bodies subject to mechanical pressure in one direction. The mode of experimental examination employed consisted in cutting a plate from the crystal to be examined, drilling a small hole through it near the middle, covering the faces with a thin coating of wax, and then heating the crystal by a wire or fine tube inserted into the hole. The heat caused the wax to melt in the neighbourhood of the hole, and thus a certain isothermal line was rendered visible to the eye, namely, the line corresponding to the temperature of melting wax. The variation of conductivity in different directions was indicated by the elliptical, or at least oval form of the line bounding the melted wax. This line remained sufficiently visible after the plate had cooled, and thus the eccentricity of the ellipse and the azimuth of its major axis could be examined at leisure. On allowing for errors of observation, it was found that, for a plate cut in a given direction from a given crystal, the axes of the ellipse had a determinate ratio, and the major axis a determinate azimuth.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mathematical and Physical Papers , pp. 203 - 227Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1901