. Impact with a Liquid Surface Studied by the Aid of Instantaneous Photography. Paper II. * The photographs (unfortunately not the reproductions here given) both of this and of our previouspaper ilkistrate incidentally the great rapidity with which fine jets undergo division into drops, which,however, as Lord Eayleigh has explained (* Roy. Soc. Proc, vol. 29, 1879, p. 85, on the CapillaryPhenomena of Jets), need cause no surprise, since the time of complete segmentation will vary inverselyas the 3/2 power of the diameter if viscosity does not hinder. 184 MESSRS. A. M. WORTHINGTON AND R, S. COL


. Impact with a Liquid Surface Studied by the Aid of Instantaneous Photography. Paper II. * The photographs (unfortunately not the reproductions here given) both of this and of our previouspaper ilkistrate incidentally the great rapidity with which fine jets undergo division into drops, which,however, as Lord Eayleigh has explained (* Roy. Soc. Proc, vol. 29, 1879, p. 85, on the CapillaryPhenomena of Jets), need cause no surprise, since the time of complete segmentation will vary inverselyas the 3/2 power of the diameter if viscosity does not hinder. 184 MESSRS. A. M. WORTHINGTON AND R, S. COLE Series XVir Fig. Yw 4- MHMI HHMHHBmi ?HHhHI HH^^H^HH^H w^^^w ^^^^^^H^^^^^HHUhH^^^h ^mMiHMt «ffliMiifffciiiitMi^^Bllii ^^mmmm ^^^^^^^^^^Hi ?^s*^**^^^WmWHB| «? ? ;v/./^-—^--£-. 19 milliiiiB. ill diameter falling 30 centims. into AlexKaiiclra oil^ a height at whicliordinary observation in continuous light had shown that a little air was alreadytaken down. In Series XVIII. the height was 40 centims., and in Series XIX. it was50 centims. oeries a. v iii Fig. 1 Fig. 2,


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