ADDITIONAL
NOTES. XII.
CHEMICAL
THEORY OF ELECTRICITY
AND MAGNETISM.
Then
mark how two electric
streams conspire
To
form the resinous
and vitreous fire. CANTO
III.
1.
21. |
I. Of
Attraction
and
Repulsion.
THE motions,
which accomplish the combinations
and decompositions of bodies,
depend on the peculiar attractions
and repulsions of the particles
of those bodies, or of the
sides and angles of them;
while the motions, of the
sun and planets, of the air
and ocean, and of all bodies
approaching to a general centre
or retreating from it, depend
on the general attraction
or repulsion of those masses
of matter. The peculiar attractions
above mentioned are termed
chemical affinities, and the
general attraction is termed
gravitation; but the peculiar
repulsions of the particles
of bodies, or the general
repulsion of the masses of
matter, have obtained no specific
names, nor have been sufficiently
considered; though they appear
to be as powerful agents
as the attractions.
The
motions of ethereal fluids,
as of magnetism and electricity,
are yet imperfectly understood,
and seem to depend both on
chemical affinity, and on
gravitation; and also on the
peculiar repulsions of the
particles of bodies, and on
the general repulsion of the
masses of matter.
In
what manner attraction and
repulsion are produced has
not yet been attempted to
be explained by modern philosophers;
but as nothing can act, where
it does not exist, all distant
attraction of the particles
of bodies, as well as general
gravitation, must be ascribed
to some still finer ethereal
fluid; which fills up all
space between the suns and
their planets, as well as
the interstices of coherent
matter. Repulsion in the same
manner must consist of some
finer ethereal fluid; which
at first projected the planets
from the sun, and I suppose
prevents their return to it;
and which occasionally volatilizes
or decomposes solid bodies
into fluid or aerial ones,
and perhaps into ethereal
ones.
May
not the ethereal matter which
constitutes repulsion, be
the same as the matter of
heat in its diffused state;
which in its quiescent state
is combined with various bodies,
as appears from many chemical
explosions, in which so much
heat is set at liberty? The
ethereal matter, which constitutes
attraction, we are less acquainted
with; but it may also exist
combined with bodies, as well
as in its diffused state;
since the specific gravities
of some metallic mixtures
are said not to accord with
what ought to result from
the combination of their specific
gravities, which existed before
their mixture; but their absolute
gravities have not been attended
to sufficiently; as these
have always been supposed
to depend on their quantity
of matter, and situation in
respect to the centre of the
earth.
The
ethereal fluids, which constitute
peculiar repulsions and attractions,
appear to gravitate round
the particles of bodies mixed
together; as those, which
constitute the general repulsion
or attraction, appear to gravitate
round the greater masses of
matter mixed together; but
that which constitutes attraction
seems to exist in a denser
state next to the particles
or masses of matter; and that
which constitutes repulsion
to exist more powerfully in
a sphere further from them;
whence many bodies attract
at one distance, and repel
at another. This may be observed
by approaching to each other
two electric atmospheres round
insulated cork-balls; or by
pressing globules of mercury,
which roll on the surface,
till they unite with it; or
by pressing the drops of water,
which stand on a cabbage leaf,
till they unite with it, and
hence light is reflected from
the surface of a mirror without
touching it.
Thus
the peculiar attractions and
repulsions of the particles
of bodies, and the general
ones of the masses of matter,
perpetually oppose and counteract
each other; whence if the
power of attraction should
cease to act, all matter would
be dissipated by the power
of repulsion into boundless
space; and if heat, or the
power of repulsion, should
cease to act, the whole world
would become one solid mass,
condensed into a point.
II. Preliminary Propositions.
The
following propositions concerning
Electricity and Galvanism
will either be proved by
direct experiments, or will
be rendered probable by their
tending to explain or connect
the variety of electric facts,
to which they will be applied.
1.
There
are
two
kinds
of
electric
ether,
which
exist
either
separately
or
in
combination.
That
which
is
accumulated
on
the
surface
of
smooth
glass,
when
it
is
rubbed
with
a
cushion,
is
here
termed
vitreous
ether;
and
that
which
is
accumulated
on
the
surface
of
resin
or
sealing-wax,
when
it
is
rubbed
with
a
cushion,
is
here
termed
resinous
ether;
and
a
combination
of
them,
as
in
their
usual
state,
may
be
termed
neutral
electric
ethers.
2.
Atmospheres
of
vitreous,
or
of
resinous
or
of
neutral
electricity
surround
all
separate
bodies,
are
attracted
by
them,
and
permeate
those,
which
are
called,
conductors,
as
metallic
and
aqueous
and
carbonic
ones;
but
will
not
permeate
those,
which
are
termed
nonconductors,
as
air,
glass,
silk,
resin,
sulphur.
3.
The
particles
of
vitreous
electric
ether
strongly
repel
each
other
as
they
surround
other
bodies;
but
strongly
attract
the
particles
of
resinous
electric
ether:
in
similar
manner
the
particles
of
the
resinous
ether
powerfully
repel
each
other,
and
as
powerfully
attract
those
of
the
vitreous
ether.
Hence
in
their
separate
state
they
appear
to
occupy
much
greater
space,
as
they
gravitate
round
insulated
bodies,
and
are
then
only
cognizable
by
our
senses
or
experiments.
They
rush
violently
together
through
conducting
substances,
and
then
probably
possess
much
less
space
in
this
their
combined
state.
They
thus
resemble
oxygen
gas
and
nitrous
gas;
which
rush
violently
together
when
in
contact;
and
occupy
less
space
when
united,
than
either
of
them
possessed
separately
before
their
union.
When
the
two
electric
ethers
thus
unite,
a
chemical
explosion
occurs,
like
an
ignited
train
of
gunpowder;
as
they
give
out
light
and
heat;
and
rend
or
fuse
the
bodies
they
occupy;
they
cannot
be
accounted
for
on
the
mechanical
theory
of
Dr.
Franklin.
4.
Glass holds within it
in combination much resinous
electric ether, which
constitutes a part of
it, and which more forcibly
attracts vitreous electric
ether from surrounding
bodies, which stands
on it mixed with a less
proportion of resinous
ether like an atmosphere,
but cannot unite with
the resinous ether, which
is combined with the glass;
and resin, on the contrary,
holds within it in combination
much vitreous
electric ether, which
constitutes
a part of it, and which
more forcibly attracts
resinous
electric ether from surrrounding
bodies, which stands
on it mixed with a less
proportion
of vitreous ether like
an atmosphere, but cannot
unite with the vitreous
ether, which is combined
with the resin.
As
in the production of
vitrification,
those materials are
necessary
which contain much oxygen,
as minium, and manganese;
there is probably much
oxygen combined with
glass, which may thence
be esteemed a solid
acid, as water may be
esteemed a fluid one.
It is hence not improbable,
that one kind of electric
ether may also be combined
with it, as it seems
to affect the oxygen
of water in the Galvanic
experiments.
The combination of the
other kind of electric
ether with wax or sulphur,
is countenanced from
those
bodies, when heated
or melted, being said
to part with much electricity
as they
cool, and as it appears
to affect the hydrogen
in the decomposition
of water by Galvanism.
5.
Hence the nonconductors
of electricity are of
two kinds; such as are
combined with vitreous
ether, as resin, and
sulphur; and such as are
combined with resinous
ether, as glass, air,
silk. But both these kinds
of nonconductors are impervious
to either of the electric
ethers; as those ethers
being already combined
with other bodies, will
not unite with each other,
or be removed from their
situations by each other.
Whereas the perfect conducting
bodies, as metals, water,
charcoal, though surrounded
with electric
atmospheres, as they
have
neither of the electric
ethers combined with
them, suffer them to
permeate
and pass through them,
whether separately or
in their neutral state
of reciprocal combination.
But
it is probable, that
imperfect
conductors may possess
more or less of either
the vitreous or resinous
ether combined with them,
since their natural atmospheres
are dissimilar as mentioned
below; and that this
makes them more or less
imperfect conductors.
6.
Those bodies which are
perfect conductors, have
probably neutral electric
atmospheres gravitating
round them consisting
of an equal or saturated
mixture
of the two electric ethers,
whereas the atmospheres
round the nonconducting
bodies probably consist
of an unequal mixture
of the electric ethers,
as more of the vitreous
one round glass, and
more of the resinous one
round resin; and, it is
probable, that these mixed
atmospheres,
which surround imperfect
conducting bodies, consist
also of different proportions
of the vitreous and resinous
ethers, according to
their being more or less
perfect conductors. These
minute degrees of the
difference
of these electric atmospheres
are evinced by Mr. Bennet's
Doubler of Electricity,
as shown in his work,
and are termed by him
Adhesive Electric Atmospheres,
to distinguish them from
those accumulated by
art; thus the natural
adhesive electricity of
silver is more of the
vitreous kind compared
with that of zinc, which
consists
of a greater proportion
of the resinous; that
is, in his language,
silver
is positive and zinc
negative. This experiment
I have successfully repeated
with Mr. Bennet's Doubler
along with Mr. Swanwick.
7.
Great accumulation or
condensation
of the separate electric
ethers attract each other
so strongly, that they
will break a passage
through
nonconducting bodies,
as through a plate of
glass,
or of air, and will rend
bodies which are less
perfect conductors, and
give out light and heat
like the explosion of
a train of gunpowder;
whence, when a strong
electric shock is passed
through a quire of paper,
a bur, or elevation
of the sheets, is seen
on both sides of it occasioned
by the explosion. Whence
trees and stone walls
are burst by lightning,
and wires are fused,
and inflammable bodies
burnt, by the heat given
out along with the flash
of light, which cannot
be explained by the mechanic
theory.
8.
When artificial or natural
accumulations of these
separate ethers are
very
minute in quantity or
intensity, they pass
slowly and with difficulty
from one body to another,
and require the best
conductors for this purpose;
whence many
of the phænomena of
the torpedo or gymnotus,
and of Galvanism. Thus
after having discharged
a coated jar, if the
communicating
wire has been quickly
withdrawn,
a second small shock
may be taken after the
principal
discharge, and this
repeatedly
two or three times.
Hence
the charge of the Galvanic
pile being very minute
in quantity, or intensity,
will not readily pass
through the dry cuticle
of the hands,
though it so easily
passes
through animal flesh
or nerves, as this combination
of charcoal with water
seems to constitute
the most perfect conductor
yet known.
9.
As light is reflected
from
the surface of a mirror
before it actually touches
it, and as drops of water
are repelled from cabbage
leaves without touching
them, and as oil lies
on water without touching
it, and also as a fine
needle
may be made to lie on
water
without touching it,
as shown by Mr. Melville
in the Literary Essays
of Edinburgh; there is
reason to believe, that
the vitreous and resinous
electric ethers are repelled
by, or will not pass
through,
the surfaces of glass
or resin, to which they
are applied. But though
neither of these electric
ethers passes through
the surfaces of glass
or resin, yet their attractive
or repulsive powers pass
through them;
as the attractive or
repulsive
power of the magnet to
iron passes through the
atmosphere, and all other
bodies which exist between
them. So an insulated
cork-ball, when electrised
either with vitreous
or resinous ether, repels
another insulated cork
ball electrised with
the same kind of ether;
through half an inch of
common air, though these
electric atmospheres do
not unite.
Whence
it may be concluded;
that
the general attractive
and repulsive ethers
accompany
the electric ethers as
well as they accompany
all other bodies; and
that the electric ethers
do not themselves attract
or repel through glass
or resin, as they cannot
pass through them, but
strongly attract each
other when they come
into
contact, rush together,
and produce an explosion
of the sudden liberation
of heat and light.
III. Effect of Metallic Points.
1.
When a pointed wire is presented
by a person standing on the
ground to an insulated conductor,
on which either vitreous or
resinous electricity is accumulated,
the accumulated electricity
will pass off at a much greater
distance than if a metallic
knob be fixed on the wire
and presented in its stead.
2.
The same occurs if the metallic
point be fixed on the electrised
conductor, and the finger
of a person standing on the
ground be presented to it,
the accumulated electricity
will pass off at a much greater
distance, and indeed will
soon discharge itself by communicating
the accumulated electricity
to the atmosphere.
3.
If a metallic point be fixed
on the prime conductor, and
the flame of a candle be presented
to it, on electrising the
conductor either with vitreous
or resinous ether, the flame
of the candle is blown from
the point, which must be owing
to the electric fluid in its
passage from the point carrying
along with it a stream of
atmospheric air.
The
manner in which the accumulated
electricity so readily passes
off by a metallic point may
be thus understood; when a
metallic point stands erect
from an electrised metallic
plane, the accumulated electricity
which exists on the extremity
of the point, is attracted
less than that on the other
parts of the electrised surface.
For the particle of electric
matter immediately over the
point is attracted by that
point only, whereas the particles
of electric matter over every
other part of the electrised
plane, is not only attracted
by the parts of the plane
immediately under them, but
also laterally by the circumjacent
parts of it; whence the accumulated
electric fluid is pushed off
at this point by that over
the other parts being more
strongly attracted to the
plane.
Thus
if a light insulated horizontal
fly be constructed of wire
with points fixed as tangents
to the circle, it will revolve
the way contrary to the direction
of the points as long as it
continues to be electrised.
For the same reason as when
a circle of cork, with a point
of the cork standing from
it like a tangent, is smeared
with oil, and thrown upon
a lake, it will continue to
revolve backwards in respect
to the direction of the point
till all the oil is dispersed
upon the lake, as first observed
by Dr. Franklin; for the oil
being attracted to all the
other parts of the cork circle
more than towards the pointed
tangent, that part over the
point is pushed off and diffuses
itself on the water, over
which it passes without touching,
and consequently without friction;
and thus the cork revolves
in the contrary direction.
As
the flame of a candle is blown
from a point fixed on an electrised
conductor, whether vitreous
or resinous electricity is
accumulated on it, it shows
that in both cases electricity
passes from the point, which
is a forcible argument against
the mechanical theory of positive
and negative electricity;
because then the flame should
be blown towards the point
in one case, and from it in
the other.
So
the electric fly, as it turns
horizontally, recedes from
the direction of the points
of the tangents, whether it
be electrised with vitreous
or resinous electricity; whereas
if it was supposed to receive
electricity, when electrised
by resin, and to part with
it when electrised by glass,
it ought to revolve different
ways; which also forciably
opposes the theory of positive
and negative electricity.
As
an electrised point with either
kind of electricity causes
a stream of air to pass from
it in the direction of the
point, it seems to affect
the air much in the same manner
as the fluid matter of heat
affects it; that is, it will
not readily pass through it,
but will adhere to the particles
of air, and is thus carried
away with them.
From
this it will also appear,
that points do not attract
electricity, properly speaking,
but suffer it to depart from
them; as it is there less
attracted to the body which
it surrounds, than by any
other part of the surface.
And
as a point presented to an
electrised conductor facilitates
the discharge of it, and blows
the flame of a candle towards
the conductor, whether vitreous
or resinous electricity be
accumulated upon it; it follows,
that in both cases some electric
matter passes from the point
to the conductor, and that
hence there are two electric
ethers; and that they combine
or explode when they meet
together, and give out light
and heat, and occupy less
space in this their combined
state, like the union of nitrous
gas with oxygen gas.
IV. Accumulation of Electric Ethers
by Contact.
The
electric ethers may be separately
accumulated by contact of
conductors with nonconductors,
by vicinity of the two ethers,
by heat, and by decomposition.
Glass
is
believed
to
consist
in
part
of
consolidated
resinous
ether,
and
thence
to
attract
an
electric
atmosphere
round
it,
which
consists
of
a
greater
proportion
of
vitreous
ether
compared
to
the
quantity
of
the
resinous,
as
mentioned
in
Proposition
No.
4.
This
atmosphere
may
stand
off
a
line
from
the
surface
of
the
glass,
though
its
attractive
or
repulsive
power
may
extend
to
a
much
greater
distance;
and
a
more
equally
mixed
electric
atmosphere
may
stand
off
about
the
same
distance
from
the
surface
of
a
cushion.
Now
when
a
cushion
is
forcibly
pressed
upon
the
surface
of
a
glass
cylinder
or
plane,
the
atmosphere
of
the
cushion
is
forced
within
that
of
the
glass,
and
consequently
the
vitreous
part
of
it
is
brought
within
the
sphere
of
the
attraction
of
the
resinous
ether
combined
with
the
glass,
and
therefore
becomes
attracted
by
it
in
addition
to
the
vitreous
part
of
the
spontaneous
atmosphere
of
the
glass;
and
the
resinous
part
of
the
atmosphere
of
the
cushion
is
at
the
same
time
repelled
by
its
vicinity
to
the
combined
resinous
ether
of
the
glass. From
both which circumstances
a vitreous ether alone surrounds
the part of the glass on
which the cushion is forcibly
pressed;
which does not, nevertheless,
resemble an electrised coated
jar; as this accumulation
of vitreous ether on one
side of the glass is not so
violently condensed, or so
forcibly attracted to the
glass by the loose resinous
ether on the other side of
it, as occurs in the charged
coated jar.
Hence as weak
differences of the kinds
or quantities of electricity
do
not very rapidly change place,
if the cushion be suddenly
withdrawn, with or without
friction, I suppose an accumulation
of vitreous electric ether
will be left on the surface
of the glass, which will
diffuse itself on an insulated
conductor by the assistance
of points, or will gradually
be dissipated in the air,
probably like odours by the
repulsion of its own particles,
or may be conducted away
by the surrounding air as
it is repelled from it, or
by the moisture or other
impurities of the atmosphere.
And hence I do not suppose
the friction of the glass
globe to be necessary, except
for the purpose of more
easily removing the parts
of the surface from the
pressure of the cushion to the
points of the prime conductor,
and to bring them more easily
into reciprocal contact.
When
sealing wax or sulphur is
rubbed by a cushion, exactly
the same circumstance occurs,
but with the different ethers;
as the resinous ether of
the spontaneous atmosphere
of the cushion, when it is
pressed within the spontaneous
atmosphere of the sealing
wax, is attracted by the solid
vitreous ether, which is combined
with it; and at the same time
the vitreous ether of the
cushion is repelled by it;
and hence an atmosphere of
resinous ether alone exists
between the sealing wax and
the cushion thus pressed
together. It is nevertheless
possible, that friction on
both sealing wax and glass
may add some facility to the
accumulations of their opposite
ethers by the warmth which
it occasions. As most electric
machines succeed best after
being warmed, I think even
in dry frosty seasons.
Though
when a cushion is applied
to a smooth surfaced glass,
so as to intermix their electric
atmospheres, the vitreous
ether of the cushion is attracted
by the resinous ether combined
with the glass; but does not
intermix with it, but only
adheres to it: and as the
glass turns round, the vitreous
electric atmosphere stands
on the solid resinous electric
ether combined with the glass;
and is taken away by the metallic
points of the prime conductor.
Yet
if the surface of the glass
be roughened by scratching
it: with a diamond or with
hard sand, a new event occurs;
which is, that the vitreous
ether attracted from the cushion
by the resinous ether combined
with the glass becomes adhesive
to it; and stands upon the
roughened glass, and will
not quit the glass to go to
the prime conductor; whence
the surface of the glass having
a vitreous electric atmosphere
united, as it were, to its
inequalities, becomes similar
to resin; and will now attract
resinous electric ether, like
a stick of sealing wax, without
combining with it. Whence
this curious and otherwise
unintelligible phenomenon,
that smooth surfaced glass
will give vitreous electric
ether to an insulated conductor,
and glass with a roughened
surface will give resinous
ether to it.
V. Accumulation of electric ethers
by vicinity.
Though
the contact of a cushion on
the whirling glass is the
easiest method yet in use
for the accumulation of the
vitreous electric ether on
an insulated conductor; yet
there are other methods of
effecting this, as by the
vicinity of the two electric
ethers with a nonconductor
between them.
Thus
I believe a great quantity
of both vitreous and resinous
electric ether may be accumulated
in the following manner. Let
a glass jar be coated within
in the usual manner; but let
it have a loose external coating,
which can easily be withdrawn
by an insulating handle. Then
charge the jar, as highly
as it may be, by throwing
into it vitreous electric
ether; and in this state hermetically
seal it, if practicable, otherwise
close it with a glass stopple
and wax. When the external
coating is drawn off by an
insulating handle, having
previously had a communication
with the earth, it will possess
an accumulation of resinous
electric ether; and then touching
it with your finger, a spark
will be seen; and there will
cease to be any accumulated
ether.
Thus
by alternately replacing this
loose coating, and withdrawing
it from the sealed charged
jar, by means of an insulating
handle; and by applying it
to one insulated conductor,
when it is in the vicinity
of the jar; and to another
insulated conductor, when
it is withdrawn; vitreous
electric ether may be accumulated
on one of them, and resinous
on the other; and thus I suspect
an immense quantity of both
ethers may be produced without
friction or much labour, if
a large electric battery was
so contrived; and that it
might be applied to many mechanical
purposes, where other explosions
are now used, as in the place
of steam engines, or to rend
rocks, or timber, or destroy
invading armies!
The
principle of this mode of
accumulating the two electric
ethers in some measare resembles
that of Volta's Electrophorus
and Bennet's Doubler.
VI. Accumulation of electric ethers
by heat and by decomposition.
When
glass or amber is heated by
the fire in a dry season,
I suspect that it becomes
in some degree electric; as
either of the electric ethers
which is combined with them
may have its combination with
those materials loosened by
the application of heat; and
that on this account they
may more forcibly attract
the opposite one from the
air in their vicinity.
It
has long been known, that
a siliceous stone called the
tourmalin, when its surfaces
are polished, if it be laid
down before the fire, will
become electrified with vitreous,
or what is called positive
electricity on its upper surface;
and resinous, or what is called
negative electricity on its
under surface; which I suppose
lay in contact with somewhat
which supported it near the
fire.
In
this experiment I suppose
the tourmalin to be naturally
combined with resinous electric
ether like glass; which on
one side next towards the
fire by the increase of its
attractive power, owing to
the heat having loosened its
combination with the earth
of the stone, more strongly
attracts vitreous electric
ether from the atmosphere;
which now stands on its surface:
and then as the lower surface
of the stone lies in contact
with the hearth, the less
quantity of vitreous ether
is there repelled by the greater
quantity of it on the upper
surface; while the resinous
ether is attracted by it:
and the stone is thus charged
like a coated jar with vitreous
electric ether condensed on
one side of it, and resinous
on the other.
So
cats, as they lie by the fire
in a frosty day, become so
electric as frequently to
give a perceptible spark to
one's finger from their ears
without friction.
A
fourth method of separating
the two ethers would seem
to be by the decomposition
of metallic bodies, as in
the experiment with Volta's
Galvanic pile; which is said
by Mr. Davy to act so much
more powerfully, when an acid
is added to the water used
in the experiment; as will
be spoken of below.
From
experiments made by M. Saussure
on the electricity of evaporated
water from hot metallic vessels,
and from those of china and
glass, he found when the vessel
was calcined or made rusty
by the evaporating water,
that the electricity of it
was positive (or vitreous),
and that from china or glass
was negative (or resinous),
Encyclop. Britan. Art. Elect.
No. 206, which seems also
to show, that vitreous electric
ether was given out or produced
by the corrosion of metals,
and resinous ether from the
evaporation of water.
VII.
The spark from the conductor,
and of electric light.
When
either the vitreous or resinous
electric ether is accumulated
on an insulated conductor,
and an uninsulated conductor,
as the finger of an attendant,
is applied nearly in contact
with it, what happens? The
attractive and repulsive powers
of the accumulated electric
ether pass through the nonconducting
plate of air, and if it be
of the vitreous kind, it attracts
the resinous electric ether
of the finger towards it,
and repels the vitreous electric
ether of the finger from it.
Hence
there exists for an instant
a charged plate of air between
the finger and the prime conductor,
with an accumulation of vitreous
ether on one side of it, and
of resinous ether on the other
side of it; and lastly these
two kinds of electric ethers
suddenly unite by their powerful
attraction of each other,
explode, and give out heat
and light, and rupture the
plate of nonconducting air,
which separated them.
The
rupture or disjunction of
the plate of air is known
by the sound of the spark,
as of thunder; which shows
that a vacuum of air was previously
produced by the explosion
of the electric fluids, and
a vibration of the air in
consequence of the sudden
joining again of the sides
of the vacuum.
The
light which attends electric
sparks and shocks, is not
accounted for by the Theory
of Dr. Franklin. I suspect
that it is owing to the combination
of the two electric ethers,
from which as from all chemical
explosions both light and
heat are set at liberty, and
because a smell is said to
be perceptible from electric
sparks, and even a taste which
must be deduced from new combinations,
or decompositions, as in other
explosions: add to this that
the same thing occurs, when
electric shocks are passed
through eggs in the dark,
or through water, a luminous
line is seen like the explosion
of a train of gunpowder; lastly,
whether light is really produced
in the passage of the Galvanic
electricity through the eyes,
or that the sensation alone
of light is perceived by its
stimulating the optic nerve,
has not yet been investigated;
but I suspect the former,
as it emits light from its
explosion even in passing
through eggs and through water,
as mentioned above.
VIII. The shock from the coated
jar, and of electric condensation.
1.
When a glass jar is coated
on both sides, and either
vitreous or resinous electricity
is thrown upon the coating
on one side, and there is
a communication to the earth
from the other side, the same
thing happens as in the plate
of air between the finger
and prime conductor above
described; that is, the accumulated
electricity, if it be of the
vitreous kind, on one coating
of the glass jar will attract
the resinous part of the electricity,
which surrounds or penetrates
the coating on the other side
of the jar, and also repel
the vitreous part of it; but
this occurs on a much more
extensive surface than in
the instance of the plate
of air between the finger
and prime conductor.
The
difference between electric
sparks and shocks consists
in this circumstance, that
in the former the insulating
medium, whether of air, or
of thin glass, is ruptured
in one part, and thus a communication
is made between the vitreous
and resinous ethers, and they
unite immediately, like globules
of quicksilver, when pressed
forcibly together: but in
the electric shock a communication
is made by some conducting
body applied to the other
extremities of the vitreous,
and of the resinous atmospheres,
through which they pass and
unite, whether both sides
of the coated jar are insulated,
or only one side of it.
And
in this line, as they reciprocally
meet, they appear to explode
and give out light and heat,
and a new combination of the
two ethers is produced, as
a residuum after the explosion,
which probably occupies much
less space than either the
vitreous or resinous ethers
did separately before. At
the same time there may be
another unrestrainable ethereal
fluid yet unobserved, given
out from this explosion, which
rends oak trees, bursts stone-walls, lights inflammable
substances, and fuses metals,
or dissipates them in a calciform
smoak, along with which great
light and much heat are emitted,
or these effects are produced
by the heat and light only
thus set at liberty by their
synchronous and sudden evolution.
2.
The curious circumstance of
electric condensation appears
from the violence of the shock
of the coated jar compared
with the strongest spark from
an insulated conductor; though
the latter possesses a much
greater surface; when vitreous
electric ether is thrown on
one side of a coated jar,
it attracts the resinous electric
ether of the other side of
the coated jar; and the same
occurs, when resinous ether
is thrown on one side of it,
it attracts the vitreous ether
of the other side of it, and
thus the vitreous electric
ether on one side of the jar,
and the resinous ether on
the other side of it become
condensed, that is accumulated
in less space, by their reciprocal
attraction of each other.
This
condensation of the two electric
ethers owing to their reciprocal
attraction appears from another
curious event, that the thinner
the glass jar is, the stronger
will the charge be on the
same quantity of surface,
as then the two ethers approaching
nearer without their intermixing
attract each other stronger,
and consequently condense
each other more. And when
the glass jar is very thin
the reciprocal attractive
powers of the vitreous and
resinous ether attract each
other so violently as at length
to pass through the glass
by rupturing it, in the same
manner as a less forcible
attraction of them ruptures
and passes through the plate
of air in the production of
sparks from the prime conductor.
As
these two ethers on each side
of a charged coated jar so
powerfully attract each other,
when a communication is made
between them by some conducting
substance as in the common
mode of discharging an electrised
coated jar, they reciprocally
pass to each other for the
purpose of combining, as some
chemical fluids are known
to do; as when nitrous gas
and oxygen gas are mixed together;
whence as these fluids pass
both ways to intermix with
each other, and then explode;
a bur appears on each side
of a quire of paper well pressed
together, when a strong electric
shock is passed through it;
which is occasioned by their
explosion, like a train of
gunpowder, and consequent
emission of some other ethereal
fluid, either those of heat
and light or of some new one
not yet observed. Whence it
becomes difficult to explain,
according to the theory of
Dr. Franklin, which way the
electric fluid passed, and
which side of the coated jar
contained positive and which
the negative charge according
to that doctrine.
But
the theory of the ingenious
Dr. Franklin failed also in
explaining other phenomena
of the coated jar; since if
the positive electricity accumulated
on one side of the jar repelled
the electricity from the coating
on the other side of it, so
as to produce an electric
vacuum; why should it be so
eager, when a communication
is made by some conducting
body, to run into that vacuum
by its attraction or gravitation,
which has been made by its
repulsion; as thus it seems
to be violently attracted
by the vacuum, from which
it had previously repelled
a fluid similar to itself,
which is not easily to be
comprehended.
3.
There is another mode by which
either vitreous or resinous
electric ether is capable
of condensation; which consists
in contracting the volume,
so as to diminish the surface
of the electrised body; as
was ingeniously shown by Dr.
Franklin's experiment of electrising
a silver tankard with a length
of chain rolled up within
it; and then drawing up the
chain by a silk string, which
weakened the electric attraction
of the tankard; which was
strengthened again by returning
the chain into it; thus the
condensation of an electrised
cloud is believed to condense
the electric ether, which
it contains, and thus to occasion
the lightning passing from
one cloud to another, or from
a cloud into the earth.
This
experiment of the chain and
tankard is said to succeed
as well with what is termed
negative electricity in the
theory of Dr. Franklin, as
with what is termed positive
electricity; but in that theory
the negative electricity means
a less quantity or total deprivation
or vacuity of that fluid;
now to condense negative electricity
by lowering the suspended
chain into the tankard ought
to make it less negative;
whereas in this experiment
I am told it becomes more
so, as appears by its stronger
repulsion of cork balls suspended
on silk strings, and previously
electrised by rubbed sealing
wax: and if the negative electricity
be believed to be a perfect
vacuum of it, the condensation
of a vacuum of electricity
is totally incomprehensible;
and this experiment alone
seems to demonstrate the existence
of two electric ethers.
IX. Of Galvanic Electricity.
1.
The conductors of electricity,
as well as the nonconductors
of it, have probably a portion
of the vitreous and resinous
ethers combined with them,
and have also another portion
of these ethers diffused round
them, which forms their natural
or spontaneous adhesive atmospheres;
and which exists in different
proportions round them correspondent
in quantity to those which
are combined with them, but
opposite in kind.
These
adhesive spontaneous atmospheres
of electricity are shown to
consist of different proportions
or quantities of the electric
ethers by Mr. Bennet's Doubler
of Electricity, as mentioned
in his work called New Experiments
on Electricity, sold by Johnson.
In this work, p. 91, the blade
of a steel knife was evidently,
in his language, positive,
compared to a soft iron wire
which was comparatively negative;
so the adhesive electricity
of gold, silver, copper, brass,
bismuth, mercury, and various
kinds of wood and stone, were
what he terms positive or
vitreous; and that of tin
and zinc, what he terms negative
or resinous.
Where
these spontaneous atmospheres
of diffused electricity surrounding
two conducting bodies, as
two pieces of silver, are
perfectly similar, they probably
do not intermix when brought
into the vicinity of each
other; but if these spontaneous
atmospheres of diffused electricity
are different in respect to
the proportion of the two
ethers, or perhaps in respect
to their quantity, in however
small degree either of these
circumstances exists, they
may be made to unite but with
some difficulty; as the two
metallic plates, suppose one
of silver, and another of
zinc, which they surround,
must be brought into absolute
or adhesive contact; or otherwise
these atmospheres may be forced
together so as to be much
flattened, and compress each
other where they meet, like
small globules of quicksilver
when pressed together, but
without uniting.
This
curious phenomenon may be
seen in more dense electric
atmospheres accumulated by
art, as in the following experiment
ascribed to Mr. Canton. Lay
a wooden skewer the size of
a goose quill across a dry
wine-glass, and another across
another wine-glass; let the
ends of them touch each other,
as they lie in a horizontal
line; call them X and Y; approach
a rubbed glass-tube near the
external end of the skewer
X, but not so as to touch
it; then separate the two
skewers by removing the wine-glasses further from each
other; and lastly, withdraw
the rubbed glass-tube, and
the skewer X will now be found
to possess resinous electricity,
which has been generally called
negative or minus electricity;
and the skewer Y will be found
to possess vitreous, or what
is generally termed positive
or plus electricity.
The
same phenomenon will occur
if rubbed sealing wax be applied
near to, but not in contact
with, the skewer X, as the
skewer X will then be left
with an atmosphere of vitreous
ether, and the skewer Y with
one of resinous ether. These
experiments also evince the
existence of two electric
fluids, as they cannot be
understood from an idea of
one being a greater or less
quantity of the same material;
as a vacuum of electric ether,
brought near to one end of
the skewer, cannot be conceived
so to attract the ether as
to produce a vacuum at the
other end.
In
this experiment the electric
atmospheres, which are nearly
of similar kinds, do not seem
to touch, as there may remain
a thin plate of air between
them, in the same manner as
small globules of mercury
may be pressed together so
as to compress each other,
long before they intermix;
or as plates of lead or brass
require strongly to be pressed
together before they acquire
the attraction of cohesion;
that is, before they come
into real contact.
2.
It is probable, that all bodies
are more or less perfect conductors,
as they have less or more
of either of the electric
ethers combined with them;
as mentioned in Preliminary
Proposition, No. VI. as they
may then less resist the passage
of either of the ethers through
them. Whence some conducting
bodies admit the junction
of these spontaneous electric
atmospheres, in which the
proportions or quantities
of the two ethers are not
very different, with greater
facility than others.
Thus
in the common experiments,
where the vitreous or resinous
ether is accumulated by art,
metallic bodies have been
esteemed the best conductors,
and next to these water, and
all other moist bodies; but
it was lately discovered,
that dry charcoal, recently
burnt, was a more perfect
conductor than metals; and
it appears from the experiments
discovered by Galvani, which
have thence the name of Galvanism,
that animal flesh, and particularly
perhaps the nerves of animals,
both which are composed of
much carbon and water, are
the most perfect conductors
yet discovered; that is, that
they give the least resistance
to the junction of the spontaneous
electric atmospheres, which
exist round metallic bodies,
and which differ very little
in respect to the proportions
of their vitreous and resinous
ingredients.
Thus
also, though where the accumulated
eletricities are dense, as
in charging a coated glass-jar, the glass, which intervenes,
may be of considerable thickness,
and may still become charged
by the stronger attraction
of the secondary electric
ethers; but where the spontaneous
adhesive electric atmospheres
are employed to charge plates
of air, as in the Galvanic
pile, or probably to charge
thin animal membranes or cuticles,
as perhaps in the shock given
by the torpedo or gymnotus,
it seems necessary that the
intervening nonconducting
plate must be extremely thin,
that it may become charged
by the weaker attraction of
these small quantities or
difference of the spontaneous
electric atmospheres; and
in this circumstance only,
I suppose, the shocks from
the Galvanic pile, and from
the torpedo and gymnotus,
differ from those of the coated
jar.
3.
When atmospheres of electricity,
which do not differ much in
the quantity or proportion
of their vitreous and resinous
ethers, approach each other,
they are not easily or rapidly
united; but the predominant
vitreous or resinous ether
of one of them repels the
similar ether of the opposed
atmosphere, and attracts the
contrary kind of ether.
The
slowness or difficulty with
which atmospheres, which differ
but little in kind or in density,
unite with each other, appears
not only from the experiment
of Mr. Canton above related,
but also from the repeated
smaller shocks, which may
be taken from a charged coated
jar after the first or principal
discharge, if the conducting
medium has not been quickly
removed, as is also mentioned
above.
Hence
those atmospheres of either
kind of electric matter, which
differ but very little from
each other in kind or quantity,
require the most perfect conductors
to cause them to unite. Thus
it appears by Mr. Bennet's
doubler, as mentioned in the
Preliminary Proposition, No.
VI. that the natural adhesive
atmosphere round silver contains
more vitreous electricity
than that naturally round
zinc; but when thin plates
of these metals, each about
an ounce in weight, are laid
on each other, or moderately
pressed together, their atmospheres
do not unite. For metallic
plates, which when laid on
each other, do not adhere,
cannot be said to be in real
contact, of which their not
adhering is a proof; and in
consequence a thin plate of
air, or of their own repulsive
ethers exists between them.
Hence
when two plates of zinc and
silver are thus brought in
to the vicinity of each other,
the plate of air between them,
as they are not in adhesive
contact, becomes like a charged
coated jar; and if these two
metallic plates are touched
by your dry hands, they do
not unite their electricities,
as the dry cuticle is not
a sufficiently good conductor;
but if one of the metals be
put above, and another under
the tongue, the saliva and
moist mucous membrane, muscular
fibres, and nerves, supply
so good a conductor, that
this very minute electric
shock is produced, and a kind
of pungent taste is perceived.
When
a plate or pencil of silver
is put between the upper lip
and the gum, and a plate or
pencil of zinc under the tongue,
a sensation of light is perceived
in the eyes, as often as the
exterior extremities of these
metals are brought into contact;
which is owing in like manner
to the discharge of a very
minute electric shock, which
would not have been produced
but by the intervention of
such good conductors as moist
membranes, muscular fibres,
and nerves.
In
this situation, a sensation
of light is produced in the
eyes; which seems to show,
that these ethers pass through
nerves more easily, than through
muscular flesh simply; since
the passage of them through
the retina of the eyes from
the upper gum to the parts
beneath the tongue is a more
distant one, than would otherwise
appear necessary. It is not
so easy to give the sensation
of light in the eyes by passing
a small shock of artificially
accumulated electricity though
the eyes (though this may,
I believe, be done) because
this artificial accumulated
electricity, as it passes
with greater velocity than
the spontaneous accumulations
of it, will readily permeate
the muscles or other moist
parts of animal bodies; whereas
the spontaneous accumulations
of electricity seem to require
the best of all conductors,
as animal nerves, to facilitate
their passage.
4.
In the Galvanic pile of Volta
this electric shock becomes
so much increased, as to pass
by less perfect conductors,
and to give shocks to the
arms of the conducting person,
if the cuticle of his hands
be moistened, and even to
show sparks like the coated
jar; which appears to be effected
in this manner. When a plate
of silver is laid horizontally
on a plate of zinc, the plate
of air between them becomes
charged like a coated jar;
as the silver, naturally possessing
more vitreous electric ether,
repels the vitreous ether,
which the zinc possesses in
less quantity, and attracts
the resinous ether of the
zinc. Whence the inferior
surface of the plate of zinc
abounds now with vitreous
ether, and its upper surface
with resinous ether. Beneath
this pair of plates lay a
cloth moistened with water,
or with some better conductor,
as salt and water, or a slight
acid mixed with water, or
volatile alcali of ammoniac
mixed with water, and this
vitreous electric ether on
the lower surface of the zinc
plate will be given to the
second silver plate which
lies beneath it; and thus
this second silver plate will
possess not only its own natural
vitreous atmosphere, which
was denser or in greater quantity
than that of the zinc plate
next beneath it, but now acquires
an addition of vitreous ether
from the zinc plate above
it, conducted to it through
the moist cloth.
This
then will repel more vitreous
ether from the second zinc
plate into the third silver
one; and so on till the plates
of air between the zincs and
silvers are all charged, and
each stronger and stronger,
as they descend in the pile.
If
the reader still prefers the
Franklinian theory of positive
and negative electricity,
he will please to put the
word positive for vitreous,
and negative for resinous,
and he will find the theory
of the Galvanic pile equally
thus accounted for.
5.
When a Galvanic pile is thus
placed, and a communication
between the two ends of it
is made by wires, so that
the electric shocks pass through
water, the water becomes decomposed
in some measure, and oxygen
is liberated from it at the
point of one wire, and hydrogen
at the point of the other;
and this though a syphon of
water be interposed between
them. This curious circumstance
seems to evince the existence
of two electric ethers, which
enter the water at different
ends of the syphon, and have
chemical affinities to the
component parts of it; the
resinous ether sets at liberty
the hydrogen at one end, and
the vitreous ether the oxygen
at the other end of the conducting
medium.
Hence
it must appear, that the longer
the Galvanic pile, or the
greater the number of the
alternate pieces of silver
and zinc that it consists
of, the stronger will be the
Galvanic shock; but there
is another circumstance difficult
to explain, which is the perpetual
decomposition of water by
the Galvanic pile; when water
is made the conducting medium
between the two extremities
of the pile.
As
no conductors of electricity
are absolutely perfect, there
must be produced a certain
accumulation of vitreous ether
on one side of each charged
plate of the Galvanic pile,
and of resinous ether on the
other side of it, before the
discharge takes place, even
though the conducting medium
be in apparent contact. When
the discharge does take place,
the whole of the accumulated
electricity explodes and vanishes;
and then an instant of time
is required for the silver
and zinc again to attract
from the air, or other bodies
in their vicinity, their spontaneous
natural atmospheres, and then
another discharge ensues;
and so repeatedly and perpetually
till the surface of one of
the metallic plates becomes
so much oxydated or calcined,
that it ceases to act.
Hence
a perpetual motion may be
said to be produced, with
an incessant decomposition
of water into the two gasses
of oxygen and hydrogen; which
must probably be constantly
proceeding on all moist surfaces,
where a chain of electric
conductors exists, surrounded
with different proportions
of the two electric ethers.
Whence the ceaseless liberation
of oxygen from the water has
oxydated or calcined the ores
of metals near the surface
of the earth, as of manganese,
of zinc into lapis calaminaris,
of iron into various ochres,
and other calciform ores.
From this source also the
corrosion of some metals may
be traced, when they are immersed
in water in the vicinity of
each other, as when the copper
sheathing of ships was held
on by iron nails. And hence
another great operation of
nature is probably produced,
I mean the restoration of
oxygen to the atmosphere from
the surface of the earth in
dewy mornings, as well as
from the perspiration of vegetable
leaves; which atmospheric
oxygen is hourly destructible
by the respiration of animals
and plants, by combustion,
and by other oxydations.
6.
The combination of the electric
ethers with metallic bodies
before mentioned appears from
the Galvanic pile; since,
according to the experiments
of Mr. Davy, when an acid
is mixed with the water placed
between the alternate pairs
of silver and zinc plates,
a much greater electric shock
is produced by the same pile;
and an anonymous writer in
the Phil. Magaz. No. 86, for
May 1801, asserts, that when
the intervening cloths or
papers are moistened with
pure alcali, as a solution
of pure ammonia, the effect
is greater than by any other
material. It must here be
observed, that both the acid
and the alcaline solution,
or common salt and water,
and even water alone, in these
experiments much erodes the
plates of zinc, and somewhat
tarnishes those of silver.
Whence it would appear, that
as by the repeated explosions
of the two electric ethers
in the conducting water, both
oxygen and hydrogen are liberated;
the oxygen erodes the zinc
plates, and thus increases
the Galvanic shock by liberating
their combined electric ethers:
and that this erosion is much
increased by a mixture either
of acid or of volatile alcali
with the water. Further experiments
are wanting on this subject
to show whether metallic bodies
emit either or both of the
electric ethers at the time
of their solution or erosion
in acids or in alcalies.
X.
Of the two Magnetic Ethers.
1.
Magnetism coincides with electricity
in so many important points,
that the existence of two
magnetic ethers, as well as
of two electric ones, becomes
highly probable. We shall
suppose, that in a common
bar of iron or steel the two
magnetic ethers exist intermixed
or in their neutral state;
which for the greater ease
of speaking of them may be
called arctic ether and antarctic
ether; and in this state like
the two electric fluids they
are not cognizable by our
senses or experiments.
When
these two magnetic ethers
are separated from each other,
and the arctic ether is accumulated
on one end of an iron or steel
bar, which is then called
the north pole of the magnet,
and the antarctic ether is
accumulated on the other end
of the bar, and is then termed
the south pole of the magnet;
they become capable of attracting
other pieces of iron or steel,
and are thus cognizable by
experiments.
It
seems probable, that it is
not the magnetic ether itself
which attracts or repels particles
of iron, but that an attractive
and repulsive ether attends
the magnetic ethers, as was
shown to attend the electric
ones in No. II. 9. of this
Note; because magnetism does
not pass through other bodies,
as it does not escape from
magnetised steel when in contact
with other bodies; just as
the electric fluids do not
pass through glass, but the
attractive and repellent ethers,
which attend both the magnetic
and electric ethers, pass
through all bodies.
2.
The prominent articles of
analogical coincidence between
magnetism and electricity
are first, that when one end
of an iron bar possesses an
accumulation of arctic magnetic
ether, or northern polarity;
the other end possesses an
accumulation of antarctic
magnetic ether, or southern
polarity; in the same manner
as when vitreous electric
ether is accumulated on one
side of a coated glass jar,
resinous electric ether becomes
accumulated on the other side
of it; as the vitreous and
resinous ethers strongly attract
each other, and strongly repel
the ethers of the same denomination,
but are prevented from intermixing
by the glass plane between
them; so the arctic and antarctic
ethers attract each other,
and repel those of similar
denomination, but are prevented
from intermixing by the iron
or steel being a bad conductor
of them; they will, nevertheless,
sooner combine, when the bar
is of soft iron, than when
it is of hardened steel; and
then they slowly combine without
explosion, that is, without
emitting heat and light like
the electric ethers, and therefore
resemble a mixture of oxygen
and pure ammonia; which unite
silently producing a neutral
fluid without emitting any
other fluids previously combined
with them.
Secondly,
If the north pole of a magnetic
bar be approached near to
the eye of a sewing needle,
the arctic ether of the magnet
attracts the antarctic ether,
which resides in the needle
towards the eye of it, and
repels the arctic ether, which
resides in the needle towards
the point, precisely in the
same manner as occurs in presenting
an electrised glass tube,
or a rubbed stick of sealing
wax to one extremity of two
skewers insulated horizontally
on wine glasses in the experiment
ascribed to Mr. Canton, and
described in No. IX. 1, of
this Additional Note, and
also so exactly resembles
the method of producing a
separation and consequent
accumulation of the two electric
ethers by pressing a cushion
on glass or on sealing wax,
described in No. 4 of this
Note, that their analogy is
evidently apparent.
Thirdly,
When much accumulated electricity
is approached to one end of
a long glass tube by a charged
prime conductor, there will
exist many divisions of the
vitreous and resinous electricity
alternately; as the vitreous
ether attracts the resinous
ether from a certain distance
on the surface of the glass
tube, and, repels the vitreous
ether; but, as this surface
is a bad conductor, these
reciprocal attractions and
repulsions do not extend very
far along it, but cease and
recur in various parts of
it. Exactly similar to this,
when a magnetic bar is approximated
to the end of a common bar
of iron or steel, as described
in Mr. Cavallo's' valuable
Treatise on Magnetism; the
arctic ether of the north
pole of the magnetic bar attracts
the antarctic ether of the
bar of common iron towards
the end in contact, and repels
the arctic ether; but, as
iron and steel are as bad
conductors of magnetism, as
glass is of electricity, this
accumulation of arctic ether
extends but a little way,
and then there exists an accumulation
of antarctic ether; and thus
reciprocally in three or four
divisions of the bar, which
now becomes magnetised, as
the glass tube became electrised.
Another
striking feature, which shows
the sisterhood of electricity
and magnetism, consists in
the origin of both of them
from the earth, or common
mass of matter. The eduction
of electricity from the earth
is shown by an insulated cushion
soon ceasing to supply either
the vitreous or resinous ether
to the whirling globe of glass
or of sulphur; the eduction
of magnetism from the earth
appears from the following
experiment: if a bar of iron
be set upright on the earth
in this part of the world,
it becomes in a short time
magnetical; the lower end
possessing northern polarity,
or arctic ether, and the higher
end in consequence possessing
southern polarity or antarctic
ether; which may be well explained,
if we suppose with Mr. Cavallo,
that the earth itself is one
great magnet, with its southern
polarity or antarctic ether
at the northern end of its
axis; and, in consequence,
that it attracts the arctic
ether of the iron bar into
that end of it which touches
the earth, and repels the
antarctic ether of the iron
bar to the other end of it,
exactly the same as when the
southern pole of an artificial
magnet is brought into contact
with one end of a sewing needle.
3.
The magnetic and electric
ethers agree in the characters
above mentioned, and perhaps
in many others, but differ
in the following ones. The
electric ethers pass readily
through metallic, aqueous,
and carbonic bodies, but do
not permeate vitreous or resinous
ones; though on the surfaces
of these they are capable
of adhering, and of being
accumulated by the approach
or contact of other bodies;
while the magnetic ethers
will not permeate any bodies,
and are capable of being accumulated
only on iron and steel by
the approach or contact of
natural or artificial magnets,
or of the earth; at the same
time the attractive and repulsive
powers both of the magnetic
and electric ethers will act
through all bodies, like those
of gravitation and heat.
Secondly,
The two electric ethers rush
into combination, when they
can approach each other, after
having been separated and
condensed, and produce a violent
explosion emitting the heat
and light, which were previously
combined with them; whereas
the two magnetic ethers slowly
combine, after having been
separated and accumulated
on the opposite ends of a
soft iron bar, and without
emitting heat and light produce
a neutral mixture, which,
like the electric combination,
ceases to be cognizable by
our senses or experiments.
Thirdly,
The wonderful property of
the magnetic ethers, when
separately accumulated on
the ends of a needle, endeavouring
to approach the two opposite
poles of the earth; nothing
similar to which has been
observed in the electric ethers.
From
these strict analogies between
electricity and magnetism,
we may conclude that the latter
consists of two ethers as
well as the former; and that
they both, when separated
by art or nature, combine
by chemical affinity when
they approach, the one exploding,
and then consisting of a residuum
after having emitted heat
and light; and the other,
producing simply a neutralised
fluid by their union.
XI. Conclusion.
1.
When two fluids are diffused
together without undergoing
any change of their chemical
properties, they are said
simply to be mixed, and not
combined; as milk and water
when poured together, or as
oxygen and azote in the common
atmosphere. So when salt or
sugar is diffused in water,
it is termed solution, and
not combination; as no change
of their chemical properties
succeeds.
But
when an acid is mixed with
a pure alcali a combination
is produced, and the mixture
is said to become neutral,
as it does not possess the
chemical properties which
either of the two ingredients
possessed in their separate
state, and is therefore similar
to neither of them. But when
a carbonated alcali, as mild
salt of tartar, is mixed with
a mineral acid, they presently
combine as above, but now
the carbonic acid flies forcibly
away in the form of gas; this,
therefore, may be termed a
kind of explosion, but cannot
properly be so called, as
the ethereal fluids of heat
and light are not principally
emitted, but an aerial one
or gas; which may probably
acquire a small quantity of
heat from the combining matters.
But
when strong acid of nitre
is poured upon charcoal in
fine powder, or upon oil of
cloves; a violent explosion
ensues, and the ethereal matters
of heat and light are emitted
in great abundance, and are
dissipated; while in the former
instance the oxygen of the
nitrous acid unites with the
carbone forming carbonic acid
gas, and the azote escapes
in its gasseous form; which
may be termed a residuum after
the explosion, and may be
confined in a proper apparatus,
which the heat and light cannot;
for the former, if its production
be great and sudden, bursts
the vessels, or otherwise
it passes slowly through them;
and the latter passes through
transparent bodies, and combines
with opake ones.
But
where ethers only are concerned
in an explosion, as the two
electric ones, which are previously
difficult to confine in vessels;
the repulsive ethers of heat
and light are given out; and
what remains is a combination
of the two electric ethers;
which in this state are attracted
by all bodies, and form atmospheres
round them.
These
combined electric atmospheres
must possess less heat and
light after their explosion;
which they seem afterwards
to acquire at the time they
are again separated from each
other, probably from the combined
heat and combined light of
the cushion and glass, or
of the cushion and resin;
by the contact of which they
are separated; and not from
the diffused heat of them;
but no experiments have yet
been made to ascertain this
fact, this combination of
the vitreous and resinous
ethers may be esteemed the
residuum after their explosion.
2.
Hence the essence of explosion
consists in two bodies, which
are previously united with
heat and light, so strongly
attracting each other, as
to set at liberty those two
repulsive ethers; but it happens,
that these explosive materials
can generally be brought into
each other's vicinity in a
state of sufficient density;
unless they are also previously
combined with some other material
beside the light and heat
above spoken of: as in the
nitrous acid, the oxygen is
previously combined with azote;
and is thus in a condensed
state, before it is brought
into the contact or vicinity
of the carbone; there are
however bodies which will
slowly explode; or give out
heat and light, without being
previously combined with other
bodies; as phosphorus in the
common atmosphere, some dead
fish in a certain degree of
putridity, and some living
insects probably by their
respiration in transparent
lungs, which is a kind of
combustion.
But
the two electric ethers are
condensed by being brought
into vicinity with each other
with a nonconductor between
them; and thus explode violently,
as soon as they communicate,
either by rupturing the interposed
nonconductor, or by a metallic
communication. This curious
method of a previous condensation
of the two exploding matters,
without either of them being
combined with any other material
except with the ethers of
heat and light, distinguishes
this ethereal explosion from
that of most other bodies;
and seems to have been the
cause, which prevented the
ingenious Dr. Franklin, and
others since his time, from
ascribing the powerful effects
of the electric battery, and
of lightning in bursting trees,
inflaming combustible materials,
and fusing metals, to chemical
explosion; which it resembles
in every other circumstance,
but in the manner of the previous
condensation of the materials,
so as violently to attract
each other, and suddenly set
at liberty the heat and light,
with which one or both of
them were combined.
3.
This combination of vitreous
and resinous electric ethers
is again destroyed or weakened
by the attractions of other
bodies; as they separate intirely,
or exist in different proportions,
forming atmospheres round
conducting and nonconducting
bodies; and in this they resemble
other combinations of matters;
as oxygen and azote, when
united in the production of
nitrous acid, are again separated
by carbone; which attracts
the oxygen more powerfully,
than that attracts the azote,
with which it is combined.
This
mode of again separating the
combined electric ethers by
pressing them, as they surround
bodies in different proportions,
into each other's atmospheres,
as by the glass and cushion,
has not been observed respecting
the decomposition of other
bodies; when their minute
particles are brought so near
together as to decompose each
other; which has thence probably
contributed to prevent this
decomposition of the two combined
electric ethers from being
ascribed to chemical laws;
but, as far as we know, the
attractive and repulsive atmospheres
round the minute particles
of bodies in chemical operations
may act in a similar manner;
as the attractive and repulsive
atmospheres, which accompany
the electric ethers surrounding
the larger masses of matter,
and that hence both the electric
and the chemical explosions
are subject to the same laws,
and also the decomposition
again of those particles,
which were combined in the
act of explosion.
4.
It is probable that this theory
of electric and magnetic attractions
and repulsions, which so visibly
exist in atmospheres round
larger masses of matter, may
be applied to explain the
invisible attractions and
repulsions of the minute particles
of bodies in chemical combinations
and decompositions, and also
to give a clear idea of the
attractions of the great masses
of matter, which form the
gravitations of the universe.
We
are so accustomed to see bodies
attract each other, when they
are in absolute contact, as
dew drops or particles of
quicksilver forming themselves
into spheres, as water rising
in capillary tubes, the solution
of salts and sugar in water,
and the cohesion with which
all hard bodies are held together,
that we are not surprised
at the attractions of bodies
in contact with each other,
but ascribe them to a law
affecting all matter. In similar
manner when two bodies in
apparent contact repel each
other, as oil thrown on water;
or when heat converts ice
into water and water into
steam; or when one hard body
in motion pushes another hard
body out of its place; we
feel no surprise, as these
events so perpetually occur
to us, but ascribe them as
well as the attractions of
bodies in contact with each
other, to a general law of
nature.
But
when distant bodies appear
to attract or repel each other,
as we believe that nothing
can act where it does not
exist, we are struck with
astonishment; which is owing
to our not seeing the intermediate
ethers, the existence of which
is ascertained by the electric
and magnetic facts above related.
From
the facts and observations
above mentioned electricity
and magnetism consist each
of them of two ethers, as
the vitreous and resinous
electric ethers, and the arctic
and antarctic magnetic ethers.
But as neither of the electric
ethers will pass through glass
or resin; and as neither of
the magnetic ethers will pass
through any bodies except
iron; and yet the attractive
and repulsive powers accompanying
all these ethers permeate
bodies of all kinds; it follows,
that ethers more subtile than
either the electric or magnetic
ones attend those ethers forming
atmospheres round them; as
those electric and magnetic
ethers themselves form atmospheres
round other bodies.
This
secondary atmosphere of the
electric one appears to consist
of two ethers, like the electric
one which it surrounds: but
these ethers are probably
more subtile as they permeate
all bodies; and when they
unite by the reciprocal approach
of the bodies, which they
surround, they do not appear
to emit heat and light, as
the primary electric atmospheres
do; and therefore they are
simpler fluids, as they are
not previously combined with
heat and light. The secondary
magnetic atmospheres are also
probably more subtile or simple
than the primary ones.
Hence
we may suppose, that not only
all the larger insulated masses
of matter, but all the minute
particles also, which constitute
those masses, are surrounded
by two ethereal fluids; which
like the electric and magnetic
ones attract each other forcibly,
and as forcibly repel those
of the same denomination;
and at the same time strongly
adhere to the bodies, which
they surround. Secondly that
these ethers are of the finer
kind, like those secondary
ones, which surround the primary
electric and magnetic ethers;
and that therefore they do
not explode giving out heat
and light when they unite,
but simply combine, and become
neutral; and lastly, that
they surround different bodies
in different proportions,
as the vitreous and resinous
electric ethers were shown
to surround silver and zinc
and many other metals in different
proportions in No. IX. of
this note.
5.
For the greater ease of conversing
on this subject, we shall
call these two ethers, with
which all bodies are surrounded,
the masculine and the feminine
ethers; and suppose them to
possess the properties above
mentioned. We should here
however previously observe,
that in chemical processes
it is necessary, that the
bodies, which are to combine
or unite with each other,
should be in a fluid state,
and the particles in contact
with each other; thus when
salt is dissolving in water,
the particles of salt unite
with those of the water, which
touch them; these particles
of water become saturated,
and thence attract some of
the saline particles with
less force; which are therefore
attracted from them by those
behind; and the first particles
of water are again saturated
from the solid salt; or in
some similar processes the
saturated combinations may
subside or evaporate, as in
the union of the two electric
ethers, or in the explosion
of gun-powder, and thus those
in their vicinity may approach
each other. This necessity
of a liquid form for the purpose
of combination appears in
the lighting of gunpowder,
as well as in all other combustion,
the spark of fire applied
dissolves the sulphur, and
liquifies the combined heat;
and by these means a fluidity
succeeds, and the consequent
attractions and repulsions,
which form the explosion.
The
whole mixed mass of matter,
of which the earth is composed,
we suppose to be surrounded
and penetrated by the two
ethers, but with a greater
proportion of the masculine
ether than of the feminine.
When a stone is elevated above
the surface of the earth,
we suppose it also to be surrounded
with an atmosphere of the
two ethers, but with a greater
proportion of the feminine
than of the masculine, and
that these ethers adhere strongly
by cohesion both to the earth
and to the stone elevated
above it. Now the greater
quantity of the masculine
ether of the earth becomes
in contact with the greater
quantity of the feminine ether
of the stone above it; which
it powerfully attracts, and
at the same time repels the
less quantity of the masculine
ether of the stone. The reciprocal
attractions of these two fluids,
if not restrained by counter
attractions, bring them together
as in chemical combination,
and thus they bring together
the solid bodies, which they
reciprocally adhere to; if
they be not immovable; which
solid bodies, when brought
into contact, cohere by their
own reciprocal attractions,
and hence the mysterious affair
of distant attraction or gravitation
becomes intelligible, and
consonant to the chemical
combinations of fluids.
To
further elucidate these various
attractions, if the patient
reader be not already tired,
he will please to attend to
the following experiment:
let a bit of sponge suspended
on a silk line be moistened
with a solution of pure alcali,
and another similar piece
of sponge be moistened with
a weak acid, and suspended
near the former; electrize
one of them with vitreous
ether, and the other with
resinous ether; as they hang
with a thin plate of glass
between them: now as these
two electric ethers appear
to attract each other without
intermixing; as neither of
them can pass through glass;
they must be themselves surrounded
with secondary ethers, which
pass through the glass, and
attract each other, as they
become in contact; as these
secondary ethers adhere to
the primary vitreous and resinous
ethers, these primary ones
are drawn by them into each
other's vicinity by the attraction
of cohesion, and become condensed
on each side of the glass
plane; and then when the glass
plane is withdrawn, the two
electric ethers being now
in contact rush violently
together, and draw along with
them the pieces of moistened
sponge, to which they adhere;
and finally the acid and alcaline
liquids being now brought
into contact combine by their
chemical affinity.
The
repulsions of distant bodies
are also explicable by this
idea of their being surrounded
with two ethers, which we
have termed masculine and
feminine for the ease of conversing
about them; and have compared
them to vitreous and resinous
electricity, and to arctic
and antarctic magnetism. As
when two particles of matter,
or two larger masses of it,
are surrounded both with their
masculine ethers, these ethers
repel each other or refuse
to intermix; and in consequence
the bodies to which they adhere,
recede from each other; as
two cork halls suspended near
each other, and electrised
both with vitreous or both
with resinous ether, repel
each other; or as the extremities
of two needles magnetised
both with arctic, or both
with antarctic ether, repel
each other; or as oil and
water surrounded both with
their masculine, or both with
their feminine ethers, repel
each other without touching;
so light is believed to be
reflected from a mirror without
touching its surface, and
to be bent towards the edge
of a knife, or refracted by
its approach from a rarer
medium into a denser one,
by the repulsive ether of
the mirror, and the attractive
ones of the knife-edge, and
of the denser medium. Thus
a polished tea-cup slips on
the polished saucer probably
without their actual contact
with each other, till a few
drops of water are interposed
between them by capillary
attraction, and prevent its
sliding by their tenacity.
And so, lastly, one hard body
in motion pushes another hard
body out of its place by their
repulsive ethers without being
in contact; as appears from
their not adhering to each
other, which all bodies in
real contact are believed
to do. Whence also may be
inferred the reason why bodies
have been supposed to repel
at one distance and attract
at another, because they attract
when their particles are in
contact with each other, and
either attract or repel when
at a distance by the intervention
of their attractive or repulsive
ethers.
Thus
have I endeavoured to take
one step further back into
the mystery of the gravitation
and repulsion of bodies, which
appeared to be distant from
each other, as of the sun
and planets, as I before endeavoured
to take one step further back
into the mysteries of generation
in my account of the production
of the buds of vegetables
in Phytologia. With what success
these have been attended I
now leave to the judgment
of philosophical readers,
from which I can make no appeal.
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