ACOUSTIC RAINBOW.
A sounding-plate, made of brass, nine inches long, and half a line in thickness, covered with a layer of water, may be employed to produce a rainbow in a chamber which admits the sun. On drawing a violin bow strongly across the plate, so as to produce the greatest possible intensity of tone, numerous drops of water fly perpendicularly and laterally upwards. The size of the drops is smaller as the tone is higher. The inner and outer rainbows are very beautifully seen in these ascending and descending drops, when the artificial shower is held opposite to the sun. When the eyes are close to the falling drops, each eye sees its appropriate rainbow; and four rainbows are perceived at the same time, particularly if the floor of the room is of a dark colour. The experiment succeeds best, if, when a finger is placed under the middle of the plate, and both of the angular points at one side are supported, the tone is produced at a point of the opposite side, a fourth of its length from one of its angles. An abundant shower of drops is thus obtained.
TRANSMISSION OF SOUND.
Suspend any sonorous body, as a bell, a glass, a silver spoon, or a tuning-fork, from a double thread, and put with the finger the extremities of the thread, one in each ear; if the body be then struck, the apparent loudness and depth of the sound will be surprising.
Again, if you shut your ears altogether, you will yet feel very sensible of the impression of any sound conveyed through the mouth, the teeth, or the head: if you put one end of a small stick or rod in the mouth, and touch with the other extremity a watch lying on the table, the beatings will become quite audible, though the ears be actually shut. So, also, if a log of wood be scratched at one end with a pin, a person who applies his ear to the other end will hear the sound distinctly.
Fogs and falling rain, but especially snow, powerfully obstruct the free propagation of sound; and the same effect is produced by a coating of fresh-fallen snow on the ground, though when glazed and hardened at the surface by freezing, it has no such influence.
Over water, or a surface of ice, sound is propagated with remarkable clearness and strength. Dr. Hutton relates, that on a quiet part of the Thames, near Chelsea, he could hear a person distinctly at 140 feet distance, while on the land the same could only be heard at 76 feet. Lieutenant Forster, in the third Polar expedition of Captain Parry, held a conversation with a man across the harbour of Port Bowen, a distance of 6696 feet, or about a mile and a quarter. This, however remarkable, falls short of what is related by Dr. Young, on the authority of the Rev. W. Derham, viz. that, at Gibraltar, the voice has been heard ten miles, perhaps, across the strait.
The cannonade of a sea-fight between the English and Dutch, in 1672, was heard across England as far as Shrewsbury, and even in Wales, a distance of upwards of 200 miles from the scene of action.
At Carisbrook Castle, in the Isle of Wight, is a well 210 feet in depth, and twelve feet in diameter, into which if a pin be dropped, it will be distinctly heard to strike the water. The interior is lined with very smooth masonry.