It need scarcely be said that by the introduction of the spectroscope a new method of observation, and a new power of gaining facts, has dawned, and the sooner it is used all over the world with the enormous instruments which are required, the better it will be for science.
These then are some of the chief points of spectroscopic theory which makes the spectroscope one of the most powerful instruments of research in the hands of the modern astronomer.
CHAPTER XXIX.
THE CHEMISTRY OF THE STARS (CONTINUED): THE TELESPECTROSCOPE.
We have now to speak of the methods of using these spectroscopes for the purpose of astronomical observations. For a certain class of observations of the sun no telescope is necessary, but some special arrangements have to be made.
Thus while Dr. Wollaston and Fraunhofer were contented with simple prisms, when Kirchhoff observed the solar spectrum, and made his careful maps of the lines, he used an instrument like Fig. [173], and for the purpose of comparing the spectrum of the sun with that of each of the chemical elements in turn, he used a small reflecting prism, covering one-half of the slit, Fig. [188], so that any light thrown sideways on to the slit would be caught by this prism, and reflected on to the slit as if it came from an object near the source of light at which the spectroscope is pointing, so that one-half of the slit can be illuminated by the sun, while the other is illuminated by another light; and on looking through the eyepiece one sees the two spectra, one above the other; so that we are able to compare the lines in the two spectra.
The sunlight, whether coming from the sun itself or a bright cloud, is reflected, into the comparison prism, Fig. [189], of the spectroscope. An instrument called a heliostat can be used for this, reflecting the light either directly into the prism or through the medium of other reflectors.
Fig. 188.—Comparison Prism, showing the path of the Ray.
The heliostat is a mirror, mounted on an axis, which moves at the same rate as the sun appears to travel, so that wherever the sun is, the reflector, once adjusted, automatically throws the beam into the instrument, so that the light of the moving sun can be observed without moving the spectroscope.