The London, Edinburgh and Dublin philosophical magazine and journal of science . s ,t^ ^ x^l ,K* / ^•w. g- - ^Z-kr r*—*^ ::::: APOStBRUSHCARR LE CAFCARB( B0N3*3NS + II3NS*II« I1MM-9HM-9 ~~- ^ — — -. _„.-. ^.- -*D BC * COREk CORE> SOLI CORD- COP ED. 10 AD . I0AED. I0A ?l-^~;*. ~* -, -?.•,i::;:::.::•??.?/ ?K «D --*D D EF ? SOLIL .- SOL D . I0A D. IOA . 1 IB MM St HOLLO 3LID -SW SO HHSOLIID. I0/1 OHMS Fig. 2 ^ _,-OA O „-- er~ _^;r:_7 rV-^Cl 1 «i *S > * :„-^ ** ,-::>A HO < -/ -c,-^ V -- 3 X -^^ ,-?•.•• ^B -e^u / _, X ....,.-• -- ^•V< .& ,, B- *\ \ ^^ i> C


The London, Edinburgh and Dublin philosophical magazine and journal of science . s ,t^ ^ x^l ,K* / ^•w. g- - ^Z-kr r*—*^ ::::: APOStBRUSHCARR LE CAFCARB( B0N3*3NS + II3NS*II« I1MM-9HM-9 ~~- ^ — — -. _„.-. ^.- -*D BC * COREk CORE> SOLI CORD- COP ED. 10 AD . I0AED. I0A ?l-^~;*. ~* -, -?.•,i::;:::.::•??.?/ ?K «D --*D D EF ? SOLIL .- SOL D . I0A D. IOA . 1 IB MM St HOLLO 3LID -SW SO HHSOLIID. I0/1 OHMS Fig. 2 ^ _,-OA O „-- er~ _^;r:_7 rV-^Cl 1 «i *S > * :„-^ ** ,-::>A HO < -/ -c,-^ V -- 3 X -^^ ,-?•.•• ^B -e^u / _, X ....,.-• -- ^•V< .& ,, B- *\ \ ^^ i> C H0 \ v>..?•-. ~~~-J > - --y :->?- 1-—-* •*>] , 1 ^ c^ *_-.:$— -?#- - ^ BC CORED!-SOLI D. SOLI DrCORED.; SOLI of SOLI dT L INr ===tffci ai _^ ...... !D D E solid). I6»mSO|liD- S«| _ r-< iihm hc- THELONDON, EDINBURGH, and DUBLIN PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE AND JOURNAL OF SCIE^. [FIFTH SERIES.] DECEMBER 1896. XLYII. On some Experiments ivith Rontgeiis Radiation,By Richard Threlfall, , Professor of Physics, andJames Arthur Pollock, Demonstrator of Physics in theUniversity of Sydney, W.* THE experiments to be described were performed duringApril and May of this year, and were made with theobject of elucidating the nature of the radiation. It wasthought that the following possible explanations should betested:— The radiation consists of a swarm of material particlesprojected through the glass of the generating changes taking place at the glass surface areinvoked to explain the differences between Rontgensand Lenards rays. 2. The radiation consists of an sether wind. iEther is sucked through the glass towards the source of radia-tion and then blown outwards. The question as towhether the radiation observed by Rontgen is theexpression of the motion of asther to or from the sourceremaining open. 3. The radiation consists of asther vor


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookidlondon, booksubjectscience