A Manual Of Photography
Forfatter: Robert Hunt
År: 1853
Forlag: John Joseph Griffin & Co.
Sted: London
Udgave: 3
Sider: 370
UDK: 77.02 Hun
Third Edition, Enlarged
Illustrated by Numerous Engrabings
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150 SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS ON PHOTOGRAPHY.
that the whole plate had been previously by accident slightly
affected by light, and that the exposure through the holes to
another sort of light had destroyed the former effect I was
naturally led to that explanation, having before observed that
one kind of light destroys the effect of another; as, for examp e,
that the effect of the light from the north is destroyed by the
light from the south, when certain vapours existing in the lattei
portion of the atmosphere impart a yellow tint to the light of
the sun. But after repeated experiments, taking great care to
protect the plate from the least exposure to light, and recol-
lecting some experiments of M. Moser, (see Chapter on Ther-
mography,) I found that the affinity for mercury had been im-
parted to the surface of the daguerreotype plate by the contact
of the metallic plate having the round holes, while the space
under the hole had received no similar action. But it must he
observed that this phenomenon does not take place every time
some days it is frequent, and in some others it manifest
itself at all. Considering that the plate furnished with round
holes is of copper, and that the daguerreotype plate is ot silver
plated on copper, it is probable that the deposit ot mercury is
due to an electric or galvanic action determined ^îhe contact
of the two metals ; and perhaps the circumstance that the action
does not take place every time, will lead to the supposition t ia
it is developed by some peculiar electric state of the ambient
atmosphere ; and by a degree of dampness in the air which
would increase the electric current. May we not hope that the
conditions being known in which the action is produced, and by
availing ourselves of that property, it will be possible to increase
on the daguerreotype plate the action of light ? for it is not
improbable that the affinity for mercury imparted to the plate
is also due to some electrical influence of light. How could we
otherwise explain that affinity for mercury given by some rays
and withdrawn by some others, long before light has acted as a
chemical agent ? , . . -. . tin a
“ The question of the actinic focus is involved in another kind
of mystery, which requires some attention I KE found that
with the same lenses there exists a constant variation in the
distance between the two foci. They are never in the same
relation to each other : they are sometimes more or less sepa-
rate ; in some lights they are very distant, and in some oth
they are very near, and even coincide. For this reason I con-
stantly try their position before I operate. 1 have not beeil able
to discover the cause of that singular phenomenon, but I can
state positively that it exists. At first, 1 thought that some
variations in the density or dispersive power of the atmosphere