Fig. 10.
Tin tray, with glass bottom, full of water; candle placed underneath.
Fig. 11.
Fig. 11. Same tray, with calico screen; showing the waves as they are produced by touching the surface of the water with the finger.
Should the above experiment be thought too troublesome or expensive to prepare, inertia may be demonstrated by filling a tea-cup or other convenient vessel with water, and after moving rapidly with it in any direction, if we stop suddenly, the rigidity of all parts of the cup we hold brings them simultaneously to a state of rest; but the mobility of the liquid particles allows of their continuing in motion in their original direction, and the liquid is spilled. Thus, carelessness in handing and spilling a cup of tea (though not to be recommended) serves to illustrate an important principle. The inertia of bodies in motion is further and lamentably illustrated by the accidents caused from the sudden stoppage of a railway train whilst in rapid motion, when heads and knees come in contact with frightful results.—It is more especially demonstrated by the earth, the moon, and the other planets continuing their motion for ever in the absence of any friction or resistance to oppose their onward progress. It is the friction arising from the roughness of the ground, the resistance of the air, and the force of the earth's attraction, which puts a stop to bodies set in motion about the surface of the earth.