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56 - Uniformity of Rotation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

Lord Rayleigh exhibited and explained an arrangement which he has employed with advantage in certain acoustical experiments, in order to secure absolute uniformity in the rate of rotation of an axle. After referring to the mathematical principles involved in such a problem, he explained that the only hope of its solution lay in the employment of a vibratory movement, which by some suitable device must be converted into a motion of rotation. The axle whose motion it is required to maintain uniform is usually driven at an approximately uniform rate by means of a small horizontal water-wheel, or, in some cases, the electro-magnetic regulating apparatus presently described is sufficient by itself to supply the necessary power. At equal distances round the axle are arranged four soft iron armatures which successively come in front of the poles of a horse-shoe electro-magnet placed in the circuit of a four-cell Grove battery. The current is rendered intermittent by the following arrangement. Passing into the body of a tuning fork vibrating about 40 times per second, it leaves by a small platinum stud which is touched at each vibration of the fork; the current then traverses a second small electro-magnet between the prongs, and by this means the vibrations are maintained; passing to the magnet above referred to the current then returns to the battery. The velocity of the axle is such that it performs about one complete revolution for every four vibrations of the fork, and the exact adjustment is effected as follows.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 355 - 356
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1899

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