Page:Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Vol 60.djvu/72

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Magnetised Iron, &c., cooled to Temperature of liquid Air.
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of gas is a mixture of these two, its refractivity will determine the proportions in which the components are present.

The observations were made by an apparatus similar in character to that already described, but designed to work with smaller quantities of gas. The space to be filled is only about 12 c.c., and if the gas be at atmospheric pressure its refractivity may be fixed to about 1/1000 part. By working at pressures below atmosphere very fair results could be arrived at with quantities of gas ordinarily reckoned at only 3 or 4 c.c.

The refractivity found for the Bath residue after desiccation was O'896 referred to air, so that the proportional amount of helium is 8 per cent. “Referred to the original volume, the proportion of helium is T2 parts per thousand.

“ On the Changes produced in Magnetised Iron and Steels

by'cooling to the Temperature of Liquid Air.” By JAMES Dewar, LL.D., F.R.S., Fullerian Professor of Chemistry in the Royal Institution of Great Britain, and J. A. F leming, M.A., D.Sc., F.R.S., Professor of Electrical Engineering in University College, London. Received April 25,—Read

May 21, 1896.

The action of the low temperature produced by liquid air upon the magnetic moment of steel magnets was studied by one of us in a few cases in a preliminary research made some time ago.* We have recently returned to the subject and made further investigations on the influence of the low temperatures thus obtained on magnetised iron and steels of very various compositions, with the object of determining the nature of the changes which take place in the magnetic moment of small magnets constructed of these metals, when cooled gradually or suddenly down to the lowest temperature obtainable by the use of boiling liquid air. The arrangements adopted in this investigation were as follows :—

A reflecting magnetometer consisting of three small magnetised needles of watch-spring steel, cemented to a concave glass mirror, suspended by a single cocoon fibre, was placed in a tube so as to be free from disturbance by draughts of air. The small magnets were 8 to 10 mm. in length. The image of a portion of the filament of an incandescent lamp was reflected by the mirror on to a divided scale placed at a distance of 70 cm. from the mirror. The edge of the very sharp image of the filament, focussed upon the scale,

  • Friday evening discourse at the Royal Institution, “ On the Scientific Uses .of

Liquid Air,” by Janies Denar, LL.D., F.R.S., January 19, 1894.