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3. On the Property of Transmitting Light, possessed by Charcoal and Plumbago, in fine plates and particles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 March 2015
Extract
The charcoal of the pith of the elder consists of plates of extraordinary thinness. It was in examining this charcoal, that the author first observed the property which is the subject of his paper. He detected it by means of the microscope, using a high magnifying power. By analogy, he was led to infer that the power of transmitting light must belong to charcoal in general, in all its varieties, when reduced to the state of fine powder or filaments,—an influence which he found confirmed by experiment in a number of different instances, as the charcoal of the pith of the sycamore, of the pith of the rush, the fibre of cotton, flax, &c. He also found it to belong to lampblack, to cork in very fine powder, to anthracite, and plumbago.
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- Proceedings 1842–43
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1844