Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Section III SPECIAL SCIENTIFIC CORRESPONDENCE
- JAMES CLERK MAXWELL
- JAMES PRESCOTT JOULE
- WILHELM v. HAIDINGER
- JULIUS ROBERT PLÜCKER
- THOMAS GRAHAM
- Lord AVEBURY
- Sir HENRY E. ROSCOE
- Rev. W. V. VERNON HARCOURT
- Lord RAYLEIGH
- THOMAS ANDREWS
- PETER GUTHRIE TAIT
- Observations of Waves and Swells at Sea
- Sir GEORGE BIDDELL AIRY
- Sir WILLIAM H. M. CHRISTIE
- Extracts from Minutes and Reports of the Meteorological Council
- Pendulums and Gravity Surveys
- CHARLES VERNON BOYS
- Sir WILLIAM CROOKES
- SILVANUS P. THOMPSON
- Index to Vol. II
Lord AVEBURY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Section III SPECIAL SCIENTIFIC CORRESPONDENCE
- JAMES CLERK MAXWELL
- JAMES PRESCOTT JOULE
- WILHELM v. HAIDINGER
- JULIUS ROBERT PLÜCKER
- THOMAS GRAHAM
- Lord AVEBURY
- Sir HENRY E. ROSCOE
- Rev. W. V. VERNON HARCOURT
- Lord RAYLEIGH
- THOMAS ANDREWS
- PETER GUTHRIE TAIT
- Observations of Waves and Swells at Sea
- Sir GEORGE BIDDELL AIRY
- Sir WILLIAM H. M. CHRISTIE
- Extracts from Minutes and Reports of the Meteorological Council
- Pendulums and Gravity Surveys
- CHARLES VERNON BOYS
- Sir WILLIAM CROOKES
- SILVANUS P. THOMPSON
- Index to Vol. II
Summary
4, Windsor Terrace, Malahide, Co. Dublin. 4 August, 1881.
Dear Sir John Lubbock,
I got your proof here, which was forwarded from Armagh. I expect to be going there tomorrow. I saw Miss Stokes the day before yesterday, and gave her your message.
I have read your proof, and have made some reference marks, in the margin, numbers enclosed in circles. I also corrected a few misprints which I happened to see. It is no trouble to correct them, and they might be overlooked, especially by the author, who is apt to read a proof as it was meant to be.
In what follows, the numbers refer to the reference marks.
1. A few of the more conspicuous of the fixed lines were discovered by Wollaston near the beginning of the century, by viewing a slit through a prism applied to the naked eye. This observation however remained but little noticed.
2. Long ago, but I have not got the date, and have not reference books here, Fox Talbot showed that the red given to a flame by strontium and the red due to a salt of lithium might be at once distinguished by the prism. I think too, but I am not sure, that he dwelt on the delicacy of this test for the detection of lithium. I do not recollect whether this was before or after 1835 [Wheatstone's experiments]. It is to Kirchhoff and Bunsen that we owe the great impetus that has been given to spectrum analysis, and perhaps it would be proper to mention their names in this connexion; it rather looks as if they had merely applied what had been done by their predecessors.
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- Information
- Memoir and Scientific Correspondence of the Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes, Bart.Selected and Arranged by Joseph Larmor, pp. 74 - 80Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907