CAROLINE.
What is the use of that neck, or tube, which bends down from the upper piece of the apparatus?
MRS. B.
It is of no use in sublimations; but in distillations (the general object of which is to evaporate, by heat, in closed vessels, the volatile parts of a compound body, and to condense them again into a liquid,) it serves to carry off the condensed fluid, which otherwise would fall back into the cucurbit. But this is rather foreign to our present subject. Let us return to the sulphur. You now perfectly understand, I suppose, what is meant by sublimation?
EMILY.
I believe I do. Sublimation appears to consist in destroying, by means of heat, the attraction of aggregation of the particles of a solid body, which are thus volatilised; and as soon as they lose the caloric which produced that effect, they are deposited in the form of a fine powder.
CAROLINE.
It seems to me to be somewhat similar to the transformation of water into vapour, which returns to its liquid state when deprived of caloric.
EMILY.