If, instead of drawing the knob of the jar over the surface of the glass, you only touch it here and there with it, and then throw on the mixed powders as before, separate star-shaped figures will be formed about these places. The stars will be better defined when a single powder is used; their rays are sometimes few and strong; at others, many and slight, and frequently they do not go entirely round the parts which have been touched by the phial. These different effects depend chiefly upon the quantity of the charge in the jar.
If the jar be charged negatively, the appearances will be very different, from those occasioned by positive electricity. Very few rays will now be observed, the powders for the most part disposing themselves in round figures, and generally a central spot of one powder will be surrounded by another of a different colour.
Some powders adhere but slightly to the glass, so as not to bear being touched; but if a piece of paper be laid upon the painted side, without disturbing the figures, and the edge of it be fastened all round to the edge of the glass, the figure may be preserved without injury. But a better method is to lay another pane of glass over the one with the figures upon it, and then to fasten them together with sealing-wax, or a piece of paper pasted over the edges.
If the powders of such colours as are used for enamel-painting be projected upon glass or porcelain, and these substances be afterwards exposed to a proper degree of heat, as that of an enameller’s furnace, the figures will be rendered indelible.
Take a piece of common writing paper, and hold it near the fire, so as to make it quite dry and very hot—lay it upon a dry table and pass the knob of a charged jar over it—then take up the paper by one corner, and holding it suspended, throw upon it a mixed powder of dragon’s blood and gum-arabic, in the way above mentioned.—The figures in this instance will be very beautiful, and may be made in various shapes, as letters, stars, or stripes. If the paper thus painted be held near the fire for a few seconds, the powder of dragon’s blood, being a resinous substance, will be melted and fastened to the paper, after which the gum-arabic may be taken off.
Powders of different colours may be projected upon the paper after the same manner, but unless they be of a resinous nature, so as to be easily melted by heat, it is very difficult to fasten them to the paper.
A little experience will enable the operator to make them in a neat and handsome manner. It will however be necessary to observe a few precautions.—The charge of the jar should not be too great or too small; for in the former case the figures will be confused and irregular; and in the latter they will be too faint.—These experiments should be performed as quickly as possible, for if the paper be suffered to cool too much, or the communicated electricity be dissipated, the desired effect will not be produced.
The Electrified Capillary Syphon.
Let a small bucket of metal be suspended from the prime-conductor, and put into it a syphon of glass or metal, so narrow at the outer extremity that the water may just drop from it.—Now, if the cylinder be turned, the water, which when not electrified came over only in drops, will run in a stream, or even be subdivided into a number of smaller ones.—If the experiment be made in the dark, the streams appear luminous.
The same phenomenon may be exhibited by a small bucket, with a jet pipe fixed in the bottom. This must be hung on the prime-conductor, as in the last experiment: or the experiment may be agreeably varied, by hanging one bucket from a positively, and another from a negatively electrified conductor: so that the two jets may be about three inches from each other.—The stream issuing from the one will be attracted by that issuing from the other, and both will unite into one: but, though both are luminous in the dark, before meeting, after this has taken place they will not be so, unless one of them was more powerfully electrified than the other.