XXXVIII.—The Absorption of Light by Inorganic Salts. No. III.: Aqueous Solutions of Nickel Salts in the Visible Spectrum and the Infra-Red
- 1 January 1912
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 31, 538-546
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0370164600025359
Abstract
The methods and the apparatus were the same as in the two previous articles of the series and hence need not be described, the only change being in connection with the galvanometer. Previously it had rested on the table, but when half the results in the infra-red recorded in this paper were obtained, the arrangement was changed; it was suspended by three iron wires each about one and a half metres long from a bracket in the wall and hung with its three levelling screws clearing the table by about one centimetre. Between the table and levelling screws were placed loose wads of cotton wool for the purpose of damping any vibrations that might arise. With this arrangement the zero is very much less sensitive to vibration. With the lamp and scale at one and a half metres—the distance at which they are ordinarily used now–vibrations of the laboratory rarely cause the zero to move mm. either way.Keywords
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