[EXPERIMENTS ON THE PROGRESS OF HEAT IN MINERAL SUBSTANCES.]
I CAUSED ten bullets to be made of forged and beaten iron; the first, of half-inch diameter; the second, of an inch; and soon progressively to five inches: and as all the bullets were made of iron of the same forge, their weights were found nearly proportionable to their volumes.
The bullet of half an inch weighed 190 grains, Paris weight; that of an inch, 1522 grains; that of an inch and a half, 5136 grains; that of two inches, 12173 grains; that of two inches and an half, 23781 grains; that of three inches, 41085 grains; that of three inches and a half, 65254 grains; that of four inches, 97388 grains; that of four inches and an half, 138179 grains; and that of five inches, 190211 grains. All these weights were taken with very good scales, and those bullets which were found too heavy, were filed.
While these bullets were making, the thermometer exposed to the open air was at the freezing point, or some degrees below; but in the pit where the bullets were suffered to cool, the thermometer was nearly ten degrees above that point; that is to say, to the degree of temperature of the pits of the observatory, and it is this degree which I have here taken for that of the actual temperature of the earth. To know the exact moment of their cooling to this actual temperature, other bullets of the same matters, diameters, and not heated, were made use of for comparison, and which were felt at the same time as the others. By the immediate touch of the hand, or two hands, on the two bullets, we could judge of the moment when they were equally cold; and as the greater or less smoothness or roughness of bodies makes a great difference to the touch; (a smooth body, whether hot or cold, appearing much more so than a rough body, even of the same matter, although they are both equally so) I took care that the cold bullets were rough, and like those which had been heated, whose surfaces were sprinkled over with little eminences produced by the fire.
EXPERIMENTS.
I. The bullet of half an inch was heated white in two minutes, cooled so as to be held in the hand in 12, and to the actual temperature in 39 minutes.
II. That of an inch, heated white in five minutes and a half, cooled so as to be held in the hand, in 351/2 minutes, and to the actual temperature in one hour and 23 minutes.
III. That of an inch and an half, heated white in nine minutes, cooled so as to be held in the hand in 58 minutes, and to the actual temperature in two hours and 35 minutes.