Micrographia - Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon by Robert Hooke
page 148 of 465 (31%)
page 148 of 465 (31%)
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Which proprieties, as they have been already manifested, in the Prisme and
falling drops of Rain, to be the causes of the colours there generated, may be easily found to be the efficients also of the colours appearing in thin _laminated_ transparent bodies; for the explication of which, all this has been premised. And that this is so, a little closer examination of the _Phænomena_ and the _Figure_ of the body, by this _Hypothesis_ will make evident. For first (as we have already observed) the _laminated_ body must be of a determinate thickness, that is, it must not be thinner then such a determinate quantity; for I have always observ'd, that neer the edges of those which are exceeding thin, the colours disappear, and the part grows white; nor must it be thicker then another determinate quantity; for I have likewise observ'd, that beyond such a thickness, no colours appear'd, but the Plate looked white, between which two determinate thicknesses were all the colour'd Rings; of which in some substances I have found ten or twelve, in others not half so many, which I suppose depends much upon the transparency of the _laminated_ body. Thus though the consecutions are the same in the scumm or the skin on the top of metals; yet in those consecutions in the same colour is not so often repeated as in the consecutions in thin Glass, or in Sope-water, or any other more transparent and glutinous liquor; for in these I have observ'd, _Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple; Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple; Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple; Red, Yellow, &c._ to succeed each other, ten or twelve times, but in the other more _opacous_ bodies the consecutions will not be half so many. And therefore secondly, the _laminated_ body must be transparent, and this I argue from this, that I have not been able to produce any colour at all |
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