Article contents
3. On Diamagnetic Rotation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
Faraday's discovery of the magnetic rotatory polarisation of light may be expressed in the following manner:—Let two electromagnets, in the form of iron tubes, surrounded by helices of wire, be placed end to end, so that in the space between them the lines of force are very intense. Let a rod of dense glass be placed in this space, so that a ray of light may pass through the two tubes and the rod of glass. Let such a ray on entrance be plane-polarised, so that the direction of vibration is in a vertical direction. If the electro-magnet be now magnetised, the emergent ray will be polarised, so that its vibrations are inclined to the vertical at a small angle. The direction in which the line of vibration has been rotated is the same as the direction of the positive current in the helices.
- Type
- Proceedings 1875-76
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1878
- 1
- Cited by