WHAT IS STEAM?
Invert a glass goblet over a cup of hot water, when the vapour or steam will be seen to rise in it, to condense upon the cold glass, and then to run down its inside; thus showing that steam is vaporized water, and will, when the heat is abstracted from it, become water again.
THE STEAM-ENGINE SIMPLIFIED.
The steam-engine is much more intelligible than its name first suggests. That part by which the machinery is set in motion, may be compared to a syringe, or squirt, the rod of which is driven up and down by steam admitted above and below, one end of the rod being connected with the machinery to be worked. Thus, the piston is made to turn the wheels of a railway carriage, or the paddles of a steam-boat.
The elastic force of the steam, or vapour, by which the rod is driven up and down, may be explained by this simple experiment. Provide a test tube, put into it a little water, hold the thumb over the mouth, and cause the water to boil by holding it over a spirit-lamp. There will soon be felt a pressure against the thumb; when, if the tube be dipped into cold water, the thumb being still held at the end, a kind of suction will be felt against it. Now, the tube resembles the cylinder of the steam-engine, in which the piston moves up and down; to imitate which, wrap a little tow about the end of a piece of stick, grease it with tallow, and fit it moderately tight into the tube; when the water is made to boil, the stick will be raised, and when the end is dipped into cold water, the stick will fall as the piston rises and falls in the cylinder.
TO BOIL WATER BY STEAM.
Nearly fill a retort with water, and boil it over a lamp; then immerse the beak into a tumbler of cold water, and the disengaged steam will raise the water to the boiling temperature, though it be at a distance from the source of heat.
DISTILLATION IN MINIATURE.
Fill a kettle with water, and set it on the fire; fix a long metal tube to the spout, and as soon as the water boils, the steam will pass into the tube, and being condensed into water, will drip at the other end of the tube, which corresponds with the worm in the still; it soon, however, becomes as hot as the water, and then the condensation will cease: but, were the tube passed through cold water, as is the worm of the still in a tub, the whole water in the kettle might be boiled away, but reproduced in the tube, and collected from it without the loss of a drop. This simple process resembles distillation, and the kettle and tube the still.