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Contents
A reflecting
telescope constructed -- Trunnion turn-table , Sir David Brewster , Edward Cowper's
lecture , Cause of the sun's
light , Lord Murray , Sir T. Mitchell , The Milky Way , Countless suns , Infusoria in
Bridgewater Canal , Rotary movements of
heavenly bodies , Geological Society
meeting , Dr Vaugham , Improvement of Small Arms Factory, Enfield , Generosity of United States Government , The Enfield Rifle ,
ASTRONOMY, instead of
merely being an amusement, became my chief study. It occupied
many of my leisure hours. Desirous of having the advantage of a
Reflecting Telescope of large aperture, I constructed one of
twenty-inches diameter. In order to avoid the personal risk and
inconvenience of having to mount to the eye-piece by a ladder, I
furnished the telescope tube with trunnions, like a cannon, with
one of the trunnions hollow so as to admit of the eye-piece.
Opposite to it a plain diagonal mirror was placed, to transmit
the image to the eye. The whole was mounted on a turn-table,
having a seat opposite to the eye-piece, as will be seen in the
engraving on the other side.
"Trunnion
Vision" Reflecting telescope of 20-inch diameter mounted on
a turn-table.
The observer, when seated, could direct the
telescope to any part of the heavens without moving from his
seat. Although this arrangement occasioned some loss of light,
that objection was more than compensated by the great convenience
which it afforded for the prosecution of the special class of
observations in which I was engaged namely, that of the Sun,
Moon, and Planets.
I wrote to my old
friend Sir David Brewster, then living at St. Andrews, in 1849,
about this improvement and he duly congratulated me upon my
devotion to astronomical science. In his letter to me he brought
to mind many precious memories.
"I
recollect," he said, "with much pleasure the many happy
hours that I spent in your father's house; and ever since I first
saw you in your little workshop at Edinburgh, -- then laying the
foundation of your future fortunes, -- I have felt a deep
interest in your success, and rejoiced at your progress to wealth
and reputation.
"I have perused
with much pleasure the account you have sent me of your plan of
shortening and moving large telescopes, and I shall state to you
the opinion which I have formed of it. If you will look into the
article 'Optics' in the Edinburgh Encyclopedia (vol. xv.
p. 643), you will find an account of what has been previously
done to reduce by one-half the length of reflecting telescopes.
The advantage of substituting, as you propose, a convex for a
plane mirror arises from two causes that a spherical surface is
more easily executed than a plane one; and that the spherical
aberration of the larger speculum, if it be spherical, will be
diminished by the opposite aberration of the convex one. This
advantage, however, will disappear if the plane mirror of the old
construction is accurately plane; and in your case, if the large
speculum is parabolic and the small one elliptical in their
curvature.
"The only
objection to your construction is the loss of light; first of
one-fourth of the whole incident light by obstruction, and
then one-half of the remainder by reflection from the
convex mirror, thus reducing 100 rays of incident light to 37 1/2
before the pencil is thrown out of the tube by a prism or a third
reflector. This loss of light, it is true, may be compensated by
an additional inch or two to the margin of the large speculum;
but still it is the best part of the large speculum that is made
unproductive by the eclipse of it by the convex speculum.
"With regard to the mechanical contrivance which you propose
for working the instrument, I think it is singularly ingenious
and beautiful, and will compensate for any imperfection in the
optical arrangements which are rendered necessary for its
adoption. The application of the railway turn-table is very
happy, and not less so is the extraction of the image through the
hollow trunnions.
"I am much
obliged to you for the beautiful drawing of the apparatus for
grinding and polishing specula, invented by Mr. Lassell and
constructed by yourself. I shall be glad to hear of your further
progress in the construction of your telescope; and I trust that
I shall have the pleasure of meeting you and Mr. Lassell at the
Birmingham meeting of the British Association.
In the course of the
same year (1849) I sent a model of my Trunnion turn-table
telescope for exhibition at a lecture at the Royal Institution,
given by my old friend Edward Cowper. In the model I had placed a
neat little figure of the observer, but the head had
unfortunately been broken off during its carriage to London. Mrs.
Nasmyth had made the wearing apparel; but Edward Cowper wrote to
her, before the lecture, that he had put "Sir Fireside
Brick" all to rights in respect of his garb. His letter
after the lecture was quite characteristic.
"The
lecture," he said, "went off very well last night. All
the models performed their duty, and were duly applauded for
doing so. My new equatorial was approved of by astronomers and by
instrument-makers. The last gun I fired was a howitzer, but
mounted swivel-gun fashion; on a sort of revolving platform, or
something like a turn-table proper -- the gunner at the side of
the carriage. Do you know anything of the kind? Bang! Invented by
one Nasmyth. Bang! The observer is sitting at ease; the stars are
brought down to you instead of your creeping up a scaffolding
after the stars. Well, the folks came to the table after the
lecture, and 'The Nasmyth Telescope' kept banging away for a
quarter of an hour, and was admired by everybody. The loss of
light was not much insisted on, but it was said that you ran the
risk of error of form in three surfaces instead of two. I see
that Sir J. South states that Lord Rosse would increase the light
of his telescope from five to seven by adopting Herschel's plan
"De La Rue was
quite delighted. He said, 'Well, I congratulate you on a most
splendid lecture -- I cannot call it anything else.' My father,
who takes very little interest in these things, said, 'Well,
Edward has made me understand more about telescopes than I ever
did in my life.' The theatre was full, gallery and all. They were
very attentive, and I never felt more comfortable in a lecture. I
am happy to say that, having administered a dose of cement to
Mrs. Nasmyth's friend, Sir Fireside Brick of Green Lanes, he is
now in a convalescent state. The lecture is to be repeated in
another fortnight. With many thanks for your kind assistance,
yours very sincerely,
"EDWARD
COWPER."
In the course of my
astronomical inquiries I had occasion to consider the causes of
the sun's light. I observed the remarkable phenomena of the
variable and some times transitory brightness of the stars. In
connection with geology, there was the evidence of an arctic or
glacial climate in regions where such cannot now naturally exist
;thus giving evidence of the existence of a condition of climate,
for the explanation of which we look in vain for any at present
known cause. I wrote a paper on the subject, which I sent to the
Astronomical Society. It was read in May 1851. In that paper I
wrote as follows:
"A course of
observations on the solar spots, and on the remarkable features
which from time to time appear on the sun's surface, which I have
examined with considerable assiduity for several years, had in
the first place led me to entertain the following conclusion :
namely, that whatever be the nature of solar light, its main
source appears to result from an action induced on the exterior
surface of solar sphere,-- a conclusion in which I doubt not
all who have attentively pursued observations on the structure of
the sun's surface will agree.
"Impressed with
the correctness of this conclusion, I was led to consider whether
we might not reasonably consider the true source of the latent
element of light to reside, not in the solar orb, but in
space itself; and that the grand function and duty of the sun was
to act as an agent for bringing forth into vivid existence its
due portion of the illuminating or luciferous element, which
element I suppose to be diffused throughout the boundless regions
of space, and which in that case must be exhaustless.
Assuming, therefore,
that the sun's light is the result of some peculiar action by
which it brings forth into visible existence the element
of light, which I conceive to be latent in, and diffused
throughout space, we have but to imagine the existence of a very
probable condition, namely, the unequal diffusion of this
light-yielding element, to catch a glimpse of a reason why our
sun may, in common with his solar brotherhood, in some portions
of his vast stellar orbit, have passed, and may yet have to pass,
through regions of space, in which the light-yielding element may
either abound or be deficient, and so cause him to beam forth
with increased splendour, or fade in brilliancy, just in
proportion to the richness or poverty of this supposed
light-yielding element as may occur in those regions of space
through which our sun, in common with every stellar orb, has
passed, is now passing, or is destined to pass, in following up
their mighty orbits.
"Once admit that
this light-yielding element resides in space, and that it
is not equally diffused, we may then catch a glimpse of
the cause of the variable and transitory brightness of stars,and
more especially of those which have been known to beam forth with
such extraordinary splendour, and have again so mysteriously
faded away; many instances of which abound in historical record.
"Finally, in
reference to such a state of change having come over our sun, as
indicated by the existence of a glacial period, as is now placed
beyond doubt by geological research, it appears to me no very
wild stretch of analogy to suppose that in such former periods of
the earth's history our sun may have passed through portions of
his stellar orbit in which the light-yielding element was
deficient, and in which case his brilliancy would have suffered
the while, and an arctic climate in consequence spread from the
poles towards the equator, and thus leave the record of such a
condition in glacial handwriting on the everlasting walls of our
mountain ravines, of which there is such abundant and
unquestionable evidence. As before said, it is the existence of
such facts as we have in stars of transitory brightness, and the
above named evidence of an arctic climate existing in what are
now genial climates, that renders some adequate cause to be
looked for. I have accordingly hazarded the preceding remarks as
suggestive of a cause, in the hope that the subject may receive
that attention which its deep interest entitles it to obtain.
"This view of the
source of light, as respects the existence of the luciferous
element throughout space, accords with the Mosaic account of
creation, in so far as that light is described as having been
created in the first instance before the sun was called
forth." Dr Siemens read a paper before the Royal Society in
March 1882, on "A New Theory of the Sun". His views in
many respects coincided with mine.[note: Interstellar
space, according to Dr. Siemens, is filled with attenuated
matter, consisting of highly rarefied gaseous bodies -- including
hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and aqueous vapour; that
these gaseous compounds are capable of being dissociated by
radiant solar energy while in a state of extreme attenuation; and
that the vapours so dissociated are drawn towards the sun in
consequence of solar rotation, are flashed into flame in the
photosphere, and rendered back into space in the condition of
products of combustion. With respect to the influence of the
sun's light on geology, Dr. Siemens says: "The effect of
this continuous outpour of solar materials could not be without
very important influences as regards the geological conditions of
our earth. Geologists have long acknowledged the difficulty of
accounting for the amount of carbonic acid that must have been in
our atmosphere at one time or another in order to form with lime
those enormous beds of dolomite and limestone of which the crust
of our earth is in great measure composed. It has been calculated
that if this carbonic acid had been at one and the same time in
our atmosphere it would have caused an elastic pressure fifty
times that of our present atmosphere; and if we add the carbonic
acid that must have been absorbed in vegetation in order to form
our coal-beds we should probably have to double that pressure.
Animal life, of which we had abundant traces in these 'measures,'
could not have existed under such conditions, we are almost
forced to the conclusion that the carbonic acid must have been
derived from an external source." ]
Soon after my paper
was read, Lord Murray of Henderland, an old friend, then a Judge
on the Scottish Bench, wrote to me as follows:-" I shall be
much obliged to you for a copy, if you have a spare one, of your
printed note on Light. It is expressed with great clearness and
brevity. If you wish to have a quotation for it, you may have
recourse to the blind Milton, who has expressed your views in his
address to Light :-
"'Hail, holy
Light! offspring of heaven first-born Or of the Eternal
co-eternal beam May I express thee unblamed? since God is light,
And never but in unapproached light Dwelt from eternity -- dwelt
then in thee, Bright effluence of bright essence increate
!"'
About the same time
Sir Thomas Mitchell, Surveyor General of Australia, communicated
his notions on the subject. "My dear Sir," he wrote,
"Your kind and valuable communications are as welcome to me
as the sun's light, and I now thank you most gratefully for the
last, with its two enclosures. These, and especially your views
as to the source of light, afford me new scope for satisfactory
thinking -- a sort of treasure one can always carry about, and,
unlike other treasures, is most valuable in the solitude of a
desert. The beauty of your theory as to the nature of the source
of light is, that it rather supports all preconceived notions
respecting the soul, heaven,and an immortal state."
I still continued the
study of astronomy. The sun, moon, and planets yielded to me an
inexhaustible source of delight. I gazed at them with increasing
wonder and awe. Among the glorious objects which the telescope
reveals, the most impressive is that of the starry heavens in a
clear dark night. When I directed my 20-inch reflecting telescope
almost at random to any part of the firmament, especially to any
portion of the Milky Way, the sight of myriads of stars brought
into view within the field of the eye-piece was overpoweringly
sublime.
When it is considered
that every one of these stars which so bewilderingly crowd the
field of vision is, according to rational probability, and, I
might even say, absolute certainty, are Suns as vast in magnitude
as that which gives light to our globe, and yet situated so
inconceivably deep in the abyss of space as to appear minute
points of light even to the most powerful telescope, it will be
felt what a sublime subject appears before us. Turn the telescope
to any part of the heavens, it is the same.
Let us suppose
ourselves perched upon the farthest star which we are enabled to
see by the aid of the most powerful telescope. There, too, we
should see countless myriads of Suns, rolling along in their
appointed orbits, and thus on and on throughout eternity. What an
idea of the limitless extent of Creative Power -- filling up
infinite space with the evidences of His Almighty Presence! The
human mind feels its utter impotency in endeavouring to grasp
such a subject.
I also turned my
attention to the microscope. In 1851 I examined, by the aid of
this instrument, the infusoria in the Bridgewater Canal. I found
twenty-seven of them, of the most varied form, colour, and
movements. This was almost as remarkable a revelation as the
mighty phenomena of the heavens. I found these living things
moving about in the minutest drop of water. The sight of the
wonderful range of creative power -- from the myriads of suns
revealed by the telescope, to the myriads of moving organisms
revealed by the microscope -- filled me with unutterably devout
wonder and awe.
Moreover, it seemed
to me to confer a glory even upon the instruments of human skill,
which elevated man to the Unseen and the Divine. When we examine
the most minute organisms, we find clear evidence in their
voluntary powers of motion that these creatures possess a
will, and that such Will must be conveyed by a nervous system
of an infinitesimally minute description. When we follow out such
a train of thought, and contrast the myriads of suns and planets
at one extreme, with the myriads of minute organised atoms at the
other, we cannot but feel inexpressible wonder at the
transcendent range of Creative Power.
Shortly after, I sent
to the Royal Astronomical Society a paper on another equally
wonderful subject, "The Rotatory Movements of the Celestial
Bodies. As the paper is not very long, and as I endeavoured to
illustrate my ideas in a familiar manner, I may here give it
entire:
"What first set
me thinking on this subject was the endeavour to get at the
reason of why water in a basin acquires a rotatory motion when a
portion of it is allowed to escape through a hole in the bottom.
Every well-trained philosophical judgment is accustomed to
observe illustrations of the most sublime phenomena of creation
in the most minute and familiar operations of the Creator's laws,
one of the most characteristic features of which consists in the
absolute and wonderful integrity maintained in their action
whatsoever be the range as to magnitude or distance of the
objects on which they operate.
"For instance,
the minute particles of dew which whiten the grass-blade in early
morn are moulded into spheres by the identical law which gives to
the mighty sun its globular form!
"Let us pass
from the rotation of water in a basin to the consideration of the
particles of a nebulous mass just summoned into existence by the
fiat of the Creator -- the law of gravitation coexisting.
"The first moment of the existence of such a nebulous mass
would be inaugurated by the election of a centre of gravity, and,
instantly after, every particle throughout the entire mass of
such nebulae would tend to and converge towards that centre of
gravity.
"Now let us
consider what would be the result of this. It appears to me that
the inevitable consequence of the convergence of the particles
towards the centre of gravity of such a nebulous mass would not
only result in the formation of nucleus, but by reason of the
physical impossibility that all the converging particles should
arrive at the focus of convergence in directions perfectly radial
and diametrically opposite to each other, however slight the
degree of deviation from the absolute diametrically opposite
direction in which the converging particles coalesce at the focus
of attraction, a twisting action would result, and Rotation
ensue, which, once engendered, be its intensity ever so slight,
from that instant forward the nucleus would continue to revolve ,
and all the particles which its attraction would subsequently
cause to coalesce with it, would do so in directions tangential
to its surface, and not diametrically towards its centre.
"In due course
of time the entire of the remaining nebulous mass would become
affected with rotation from the more rapidly moving centre, and
would assume what appears to me to be their inherent normal
condition, namely, spirality, as the prevailing character of
their structure; and as that is actually the aspect which
may be said to characterise the majority of those marvellous
nebulae, as revealed to us by Lord Rosse's magnificent telescope,
I am strongly impressed with the conviction that such reasons as
I have assigned have been the cause of their spiral aspect and
arrangement.
"And by
following up the same train of reasoning, it appears to me that
we may catch a glimpse of the primeval cause of the rotation of
every body throughout the regions of space, whether they be
nebulae, stars, double stars, or planetary systems.
"The primary
cause of rotation which I have endeavoured to describe in the
preceding remarks is essentially cosmical, and is the direct and
immediate offspring of the action of gravitation on matter in a
diffused, nebulous, and, as such, highly mobile condition.
"It will be
obvious that in the case of a nebulous mass, whose matter is
unequally distributed, that in such a case several sub-centres of
gravity would be elected, that is to say, each patch of nebulous
matter would have its own centre of gravity; but these in their
turn subordinate to that of the common centre of gravity of the
whole system, about which all such outlaying parts would revolve.
Each of the portions above alluded to would either be attracted
by the superior mass, and pass in towards it as a wisp of
nebulous matter, or else establish perfect individual and
distinct rotation within itself, and finally revolve about the
great common centre of gravity of the whole.
"Bearing this in
mind, and referring to some of the figures of the marvellous
spiral nebulae which Lord Rosse's telescope has revealed to us, I
shall now bring these suggestions to a conclusion. I have avoided
expanding them to the extent I feel the subject to be worthy and
capable of; but I trust such as I have offered will be sufficient
to convey a pretty clear idea of my views on this sublime
subject, which I trust may receive the careful consideration its
nature entitles it to. Let any one carefully reflect on the
reason why water assumes a rotatory motion when a portion of it
is permitted to escape from an aperture in the bottom of the
circular vessel containing it; if they will do so in the right
spirit, I am fain to think they will arrive at the same
conclusion as the contemplation of this familiar phenomenon has
brought me to.
" BRIDGEWATER
FOUNDARY, June 7, 1855."
I was present at a
meeting of the Geological Society at Manchester in 1853, in the
discussions of which I took part.
I was much impressed
by an address of the Rev. Dr. Vaughan (then Principal of the
Independent College at Manchester), which is as interesting now
as it was then. After referring to the influence which geological
changes had produced upon the condition of nations, and the moral
results which oceans, mountains, islands, and continents have had
upon the social history of man, he went on to say: "Is not
this island of ours indebted to these great causes? Oh, that
blessed geological accident that broke up a strait between Calais
and Dover! It looks but a little thing; it was a matter to take
place; but how mighty the moral results upon the condition and
history of this country, and, through this country's influence,
upon humanity! Bridge over the space between,# and you have
directly the huge continental barrack-yard system all over
England. And once get into the condition of a great continental
military power, and you get the arbitrary power; you cramp down
the people, and you unfit them from being what they ought to be
-- FREE And all the good influences together at work in this
country could not have secured us against this, but for that
blessed separation between this Isle and the Continent."
In 1853 I was
appointed a member of the Small Arms Committee for the purpose of
re-modelling and, in fact, re-establishing the Small Arms Factory
at Enfield. The wonderful success of the needle gun in the war
between Prussia and Denmark in 1848 occasioned some alarm amongst
our military authorities as to the state of affairs at home. The
Duke of Wellington to the last proclaimed the sufficiency of
"Brown Bess" as a weapon of offence and defence; but
matters could no longer be deferred. The United States
Government, though possessing only a very small standing army,
had established at Springfield a small arms factory, where, by
the use of machine tools specially designed to execute with the
most unerring precision all the details of muskets and rifles,
they were enabled to dispense with mere manual dexterity, and to
produce arms to any amount. It was finally determined to improve
the musketry and rifle systems of the English army. The
Government resolved to introduce the American system, by which
Arms might be produced much more perfectly, and at a great
diminution of cost. It was under such circumstances that the
Small Arms Committee was appointed.
Colonel Colt had
brought to England some striking examples of the admirable
machine tools used at Springfield, and he established a
manufactory at Pimlico for the production of his well-known
revolvers. The committee resolved to make a personal visit to the
United States Factory at Springfield. My own business engagements
at home prevented me accompanying the members who were selected;
but as my friend John Anderson (now Sir John), acted as their
guide, the committee had in him a most able and effective helper.
He directed their attention to the most important and available
details of that admirable establishment. The United States
Government acted most liberally in allowing the committee to
obtain every information on the subject; and the heads of the
various departments, who were intelligent and zealous, rendered
them every attention and civility.
The members of the
mission returned home enthusiastically delighted with the results
of their inquiry.The committee immediately proceeded with the
entire re-modelling of the Small Arms Factory at Enfield. The
workshops were equipped with a complete series of special machine
tools, chiefly obtained from the Springfield factory. The United
States Government also permitted several of their best and
workman and superintendents to take service under the English
Government. Such was the origin of the Enfield rifle. The weapon
came as near to absolute perfection as possible, It was perfect
in action, durable and excellent in every respect even in it's
conversion to the breechloader it is still one of the best
weapons. It is impossible to give too much praise to Sir John
Anderson and Colonel Dixon for the untiring and intelligent zeal
with which they carried out the plans, as well as for the
numerous improvements which they introduced. These have rendered
the Enfield Small Arms Factory one of the most perfect and best
regulated establishments in the kingdom.
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