Page:Popular Astronomy - Airy - 1881.djvu/29

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
LECTURE I.
15

prism of water, it is turned in the direction CD. If you examine the prism, (as it is usually called in Optics, meaning the same form as that of a trough), you find that when the point of it is downwards, the effect of it is that the beam of light which comes in this direction AB, is turned in the direction CD, or more upwards. There is a rule on this matter, which is thus expressed—that the course of the light is always turned to the thicker part of the prism. Or if you observe what is the bending of the light at the two surfaces of the prism, this is the way in which it may be expressed when the light comes from the air into the water, its direction is bent more nearly towards the direction of the line which is perpendicular to the surface—when it goes from the water to the air, it is bent further from the perpendicular.[1] In the particular use of the prism, with its point downwards, these two things are combined in such a manner, that at each of these surfaces the direction of the beam of light is bent upwards. Of course you will infer that if the prism were turned in the opposite

Fig. 5.

way as at Figure 5, so that its point was upwards,

  1. The reader is particularly desired to remark that the word perpendicular does not mean perpendicular to the horizon, or vertical, unless it is so expressed. When the expression perpendicular to the surface of the glass is used, it means what a workman would probably call square to the surface of the glass. The vertical direction at any place is that of a plumbline hanging there, or perpendicular to the surface of still water.