The head of the third person and the hands held against his head act like three tinfoil sheets of a condenser, separated by two sheets of paper. The words spoken in the transmitter cause the current to fluctuate and the induction coil raises the potential of the current sufficiently to charge the condenser and cause a slight vibration of the paper dielectric. The vibrations correspond in strength and speed to those of the voice, and so the words spoken in the transmitter are audible to the person over whose ears the paper is pressed.
Everything about the apparatus must be as dry as possible, to insure its successful operation. The people holding the wires in their hands should stand on a carpeted floor. Always be very careful to tighten the adjusting screw and block the interrupter on the coil, so that by no means can it possibly commence to operate, or the person listening, instead of "hearing things" will become the victim of a rather painful, practical joke.
Geissler Tubes
The most beautiful and surprising effects may be obtained by lighting Geissler tubes with a coil. The tubes are made in intricate and varied patterns of special glass, containing fluorescent minerals and salts, and are filled with different rarefied gases. When the tubes are connected to the secondary of a spark-coil by means of a wire fastened to the little rings at the end, and the coil is set in operation, they light up in the most wonderful way imaginable. The rarefied gases and minerals in the glass throw out beautiful iridescent colors, lighting up a dark room with a weird flickering light. Every tube is usually of a different pattern and has a combination of different colors. The most beautiful tubes are those provided with a double wall containing a fluorescent liquid, which heightens the color effects when the tube is lighted.
Fig. 168.—Geissler Tubes.
Eight to ten tubes may be lighted at once on an ordinary coil by connecting them in series.
Ghost Light
If you grasp the bulb of an old incandescent electric lamp in one hand and touch the base to one side of the secondary when the coil is in operation the bulb will emit a peculiar greenish light in the dark.