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Braces
Spectrophotometer Prism #10565
Unsigned
In D.B. Braces research work he made use of spectrophotometers
of various kinds. Not satisfied with them, he invented a simple,
but effective new type that utilized two 30°-60°-90°
prisms cemented together with a silvered strip between them. His
device was subsequently manufactured by Schmidt & Haensch
in Berlin, Germany and Gaertner in Chicago and was used, e.g.,
at the Yerkes Observatory. Several of his prisms remain in the
department.
References: D.B. Brace, "Description of a new spectrophotometer
and an optical method of calibration," Philosophical Magazine
48, 420-30 (1899); D.B. Brace, "On a new system for spectral
photometric work," Astrophys. J 11 (1900): 6-23. Schmidt & Haensch Katalog II: Spektralapparate,
1900 and Katalog II Spektralphotometer, Pyrometer, etc., 1914.
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Large
Prism Spectrometer #10060
Franz Schmidt & Haensch, Berlin, S.
The Schmidt & Haensch Company of Berlin offered this spectrometer
for use with D.B. Braces spectrophotometer prisms. The main
scale is calibrated in units of 10 minutes of arc and with the
vernier it can be read to 10 seconds of arc. In addition to the
usual telescope for viewing and the collimator for the light source,
this instrument has a second collimator tube to utilize his new
spectrophotometric system which Brace described in the literature.
He attached the departments 4-inch Brashear telescope, directed
at the star Capella, to one collimator and a standard light source
to the other. This enabled him to make quantitative measurements
of the spectrum of the star.
References: Schmidt & Haensch Catalogue No. 55 (1896); D.B.
Brace, Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, 48, 420
(1899); D.B. Brace, Astrophysical Journal, 11, 6-23 (1900).
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Direct
Vision Spectroscope #10076
Unsigned, probably German, late 19th century
A train of prisms of alternating types of glass is able to disperse
a collimated beam of light into its spectrum without deviating
its direction appreciably.
Reference: Max Kohl Catalogue No. 100 (c.1927) p.417.
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Ultraviolet
Spectrometer #10339
R. & J. Beck, London
Many of the important lines in atomic spectra lie outside the
visible range, especially in the ultraviolet. Since ordinary glass
does not transmit UV very well, special glass, quartz, or other
crystalline minerals such as rock salt are used. A fluorescent
screen allows one to view the otherwise invisible spectrum. This
simple spectrometer has a scale reading from 2000 to 4500 Ångstrom
units in steps of 100 Å.
Reference: Ralph Sawyer, Experimental Spectroscopy, New York,
1944.
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Color
Blindness Tester #10325
F.A. Hardy
This is the Holmgren Color Test consisting of skeins of different
colored yarn. The subject selects samples that match each of three
standards. From the numbers selected the type of color blindness
or lack of color blindness can be determined. The Physics Department
acquired the kit in January 1922.
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Rowland
Gratings #10648, 10649, 10659, 10660, and 10661
Henry A. Rowland and John A. Brashear
In 1882 Henry Rowland (1848-1901) at Johns Hopkins University
devised an extraordinarily uniform screw which he used as the
heart of his new ruling engine. With this system he produced diffraction
gratings that were by far the best made at the time. For many
years John Brashear made the speculum metal concave mirrors on
which Rowland and his helpers ruled gratings with tens of thousands
of lines per inch. Because of the uniformity of the grating spacings
they avoided the "ghost" lines seen with less uniform
gratings. Rowlands gratings, which were sold at cost to
investigators all over the world, created a revolution in spectroscopy.
The 6-inch grating, which was the largest size produced by Rowland,
was probably purchased about the same time as a smaller one dated
1889. D.B. Brace also had a special grating made for his abortive
attempt to measure the velocity of light in 1889.
References: Gerard LE Turner, Nineteenth-Century Scientific
Instruments, Berkeley, 1983, pp. 161-63; D.B. Brace, Science n.s.16,
81-94 (1902); John A. Brashear Company Catalogue Optical, Physical,
Astrophysical, and Astronomical Instruments, 1906.
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Echelon
Grating #10333
Petitdidier, Chicago
Albert Michelson invented the echelon, which acts like a diffraction
grating by virtue of a division of the wave front into parts that
travel through different thicknesses of glass and are reunited
at an angle depending on the wavelength. Echelons provide a very
high resolution but since the orders overlap, they are generally
used with a prism that allows only a narrow region of the spectrum
to reach the echelon. Glass of very uniform thickness has to be
used in the construction of echelons. Petitdidier advertised that
his echelon plates differered from each other in optical thickness
and parallelism by no more than one-twentieth of the wavelength
of light. He made most of the echelons used in the United States.
References: George Monk, Light Principles and Experiments, New
York, 1937, p.199-202; Deborah Jean Warner, "Octave Leon
Petitdidier: Precision Optician," Rittenhouse 9, 54-58 (1995).
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