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ART. 205 - Grinding and Polishing of Glass Surfaces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

Lord Rayleigh stated that he had been investigating the nature of these processes, and gave a most interesting description of the results. He first pointed out that the process of grinding with emery is not, as is commonly supposed, a scratching process. The normal effect is the production of isolated detached pits—not scratches. The glass gives way under the emery; at the same time the emery gives way under the glass and suffers abrasion. An image seen through glass which has been finely ground (but not yet polished) has perfect definition. And so when the sun is viewed through a cloud the image is sharp as long as there is an image; even when the cloud thickens, the edge appears to be sharp until we lose the image altogether. A glass lens finely ground gives very good definition, but there is great loss of light by irregular reflection. To obviate this, the lens is polished, and examination under the microscope shows that in the process of polishing with pitch and rouge the polishing goes on entirely on the surface or plateau, the bottom of each pit being left untouched until the adjoining surface is entirely worked down to it. It appeared interesting to investigate the amount of glass removed during the process of polishing. This was done both by weighing and interference methods, and the amount removed was found to be surprisingly small.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1903

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