Page:Popular Astronomy - Airy - 1881.djvu/275

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LECTURE VI.
261

first by Mr. Henry Cavendish, a rich man, much attached to science, and who made many important contributions to chemistry, and other branches of natural philosophy (from whom the experiment of which I am speaking received the name of the Cavendish Experiment); afterwards by a Dr. Reich; and finally, in a very much more complete way, by Mr. Francis Baily, as the active member of a committee of the Astronomical Society of London, to whom funds were supplied by the British Government. It is an experiment of a different kind—a sort of domestic experiment—one of those experiments which can be made in your own observing rooms at home, and which are, in many respects, preferable to those made on the hill sides of Scotland.

Fig. 64.

The shape in which the apparatus is represented in Figure 64, is that in which it was used by Mr. Baily. There are two small balls A,B, (generally about two inches in diameter,) carried on a rod ACB, suspended by a single wire DE, or by two wires at