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25cm with Lights Black and White World Globes Hd Students In Chinese and English Geographic Globesfor Office Home Decoration

£9.9£99Clearance
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Brush, S. G.; Everitt, C. W. F. (1969). "Maxwell, Osborne Reynolds, and the Radiometer". Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences. 1: 105–125. doi: 10.2307/27757296. JSTOR 27757296. Radiometers are now commonly sold worldwide as a novelty ornament; needing no batteries, but only light to get the vanes to turn. They come in various forms, such as the one pictured, and are often used in science museums to illustrate "radiation pressure" – a scientific principle that they do not in fact demonstrate.

The air pressure inside the bulb needs to strike a balance between too low and too high. A strong vacuum inside the bulb does not permit motion, because there are not enough air molecules to cause the air currents that propel the vanes and transfer heat to the outside before both sides of each vane reach thermal equilibrium by heat conduction through the vane material. High inside pressure inhibits motion because the temperature differences are not enough to push the vanes through the higher concentration of air: there is too much air resistance for "eddy currents" to occur, and any slight air movement caused by the temperature difference is damped by the higher pressure before the currents can "wrap around" to the other side. [6] Movement with radiation [ edit ] Maxwell, J. Clerk (1 January 1879). "On stresses in rarefied gases arising from inequalities of temperature". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 170: 231–256. doi: 10.1098/rstl.1879.0067.The Crookes radiometer (also known as a light mill) consists of an airtight glass bulb containing a partial vacuum, with a set of vanes which are mounted on a spindle inside. The vanes rotate when exposed to light, with faster rotation for more intense light, providing a quantitative measurement of electromagnetic radiation intensity. In 2010 researchers at the University of California, Berkeley succeeded in building a nanoscale light mill that works on an entirely different principle to the Crookes radiometer. A gold light mill, only 100 nanometers in diameter, was built and illuminated by laser light that had been tuned. The possibility of doing this had been suggested by the Princeton physicist Richard Beth in 1936. The torque was greatly enhanced by the resonant coupling of the incident light to plasmonic waves in the gold structure. [16] See also [ edit ] a b c Gibbs, Philip (1996). "How does a light-mill work?". math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/index.html. Usenet Physics FAQ . Retrieved 8 August 2014.

Worrall, J. (1982). "The pressure of light: The strange case of the vacillating 'crucial experiment' ". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science. 13 (2): 133–171. Bibcode: 1982SHPSA..13..133W. doi: 10.1016/0039-3681(82)90023-1.Loeb, Leonard B. (1934) The Kinetic Theory of Gases (2nd Edition);McGraw-Hill Book Company; pp 353–386

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