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FLUORESCENCE . In a See also:paper read before the Royal Society of See also:Edinburgh in 1833, See also:Sir See also:David See also:Brewster described a remarkable phenomenon he had discovered to which he gave the name of " See also:internal See also:dispersion." On admitting a See also:beam of sunlight, condensed by a See also:lens, into a See also:solution of See also:chlorophyll, the See also:green colouring See also:matter of leaves (see fig. 1), he was surprised to find that the path of the rays within the fluid
was marked by a See also:bright See also:light of a See also:blood-red See also:colour, strangely contrasting with the beautiful green of the fluid when seen in moderate thickness. Brewster afterwards observed the same phenomenon in various See also:vegetable solutions and essential See also:oils, and in some solids, amongst which was fluor-spar. He believed this effect to be due to coloured particles held in suspension. A few years later, Sir See also: See also:Stokes, to whom the greater See also:part of our See also:present knowledge of the subject is due. Stokes's first paper " On the See also:Change of the Refrangibility of Light " appeared in 1852. He repeated the experiments of Brewster and Herschel, and considerably extended them. These experiments soon led him to the conclusion that the effect could not be due, as Brewster had imagined, to the scattering of light by suspended particles, but that the dispersed beam actually differed in refrangibility from the light which excited it. He therefore termed it " true internal dispersion " to distinguish it from the scattering of light, which he called " false internal dispersion." As this name, however, is See also:apt to suggest Brewster's view of the phenomenon, he after-wards abandoned it as unsatisfactory, and substituted the word " fluorescence." This See also:term, derived from fluor-spar after the See also:analogy of opalescence from See also:opal, does not presuppose any theory. To examine the nature of the fluorescence produced by quinine, Stokes formed a pure spectrum of the See also:sun's rays in the usual manner. A test-See also:tube, filled with a dilute solution of quinine sulphate, was placed just outside the red end of the spectrum and then gradually moved along the spectrum to the other extremity. No fluorescence was observed as See also:long as the tube remained in the more luminous portion, but as soon as the See also:violet was reached, a See also:ghost-like gleam of blue light shot right across the tube. On continuing to move the tube, the blue light at first increased in intensity and afterwards died away, but not until the tube had been moved a considerable distance into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum. When the blue gleam first appeared it extended right across the tube, but just before disappearing it was confined to a very thin stratum on the See also:side at which the exciting rays entered. Stokes varied this experiment by placing a See also:vessel filled with the dilute solution in a spectrum formed by a See also:train of prisms. The See also:appearance is illustrated diagrammatically in fig. 2. The greater part of the light passed freely as if through water, but from about See also:half-way between the
See also:Fraunhofer lines G and H to far beyond the extreme violet, the incident rays gave rise to light of a See also:sky-blue colour, which emanated in all directions from the portion of the fluid (represented See also: One such See also:combination consisted of a deep-blue solution of ammoniacal See also:copper sulphate and a yellow glass coloured with See also:silver. The two media together were almost opaque. The light of the sun being admitted through a hole in the window-shutter, a white See also:porcelain tablet was laid on a shelf fastened in front of the hole. If the vessel containing the blue solution was placed so as to See also:cover the hole, and the tablet was viewed through the yellow glass, scarcely any light entered the See also:eye, but if a paper washed with some fluorescent liquid were laid on the tablet it appeared brilliantly luminous. Different pairs of complementary absorbents were required according to the colour of the fluorescent light. This experiment shows clearly that the light which passed through the first absorbent and which would have been stopped by the second gave rise in the fluorescent substance to rays of a different See also:wave-length which were transmitted by the second absorbent. Scattered light, with which the true fluorescent light was often associated, was eliminated by this method, being stopped by the second absorbent. Stokes also used a method, analogous to See also:Newton's method of crossed prisms, for the purpose of analysing the fluorescent light. A spectrum was produced by means of a slit and a prism, the slit being See also:horizontal instead of See also:vertical. The resulting very narrow spectrum was projected on a white paper moistened with a fluorescent solution, and viewed through a second prism with its refracting edge per- pendicular to that of the first prism. In addition to the sloping spectrum seen under ordinary circumstances, another spectrum due to the fluorescent light alone, made its appearance, as seen in See also:figs. 3 and 4. In this spectrum the See also:colours do not run from See also:left to right, but in horizontal lines. Thus the dark lines of the solar spectrum See also:lie across the colours. The spectra in figs. 3 and 4 were obtained by V. See also:Pierre with an improved arrange- ment of Stokes's method. It will be seen that, in the case of chlorophyll, the whole spectrum, far into the ultra-violet, gives rise to a See also:short range of red fluorescent light, while the effective part of the exciting light in the case of aesculin (a See also:glucoside occurring in See also:horse-See also:chestnut bark) begins a little above the fixed See also:line G and the fluorescent light covers a wide range extending from See also:orange to blue. Besides the substances already mentioned, a large number of vegetable extracts and some inorganic bodies are strongly fluorescent. Stokes found that most organic substances show signs of fluorescence. Green fluor-spar from See also:Alston See also:Moor exhibits a violet, See also:uranium glass a yellowish-green fluorescence. See also:Tincture of See also:turmeric gives rise to a greenish light, and the See also:extract of seeds of Datura See also:stramonium a See also:pale green light. Ordinary See also:paraffin oil fluoresces blue. See also:Barium platinocyanide, which is much used in the fluorescent screens employed in See also:work with the See also:Rontgen rays, shows a brilliant green fluorescence with ordinary light. Crystals of See also:magnesium platinocyanide possess the remarkable See also:property of emitting a polarized fluorescent light,
C
: E ~ I'.hli,ll l' ' U
H
H
the colour and See also:plane of polarization depending on the position of the crystal with respect to the incident beam, and, if polarized light is used, on the plane of polarization of the latter.
Stokes's See also:Law.—In all the substances examined by Stokes, the fluorescent light appeared to be of lower refrangibility than the light which excited it. Stokes considered it probable that this lowering of the refrangibility of the light was a See also:general law which held for all substances. This is known as Stokes's law. It has been shown, however, by E. Lommel and others, that this law does not hold generally. Lommel distinguishes two kinds of fluorescence. The bodies which exhibit the first See also:kind are those which possess strong absorption bands, of which only one re-mains appreciable after great dilution. These bodies are always strongly coloured and show anomalous dispersion and (in solids) surface colour. In such cases, the maximum of intensity in the fluorescent spectrum corresponds to the maximum of absorption. Stokes's law is not obeyed, for a fluorescent spectrum can be produced by means of homogeneous light of lower refrangibility than a great part of the fluorescent light. The second kind of • fluorescence is the most See also:common, and is exhibited by bodies which show absorption only in the upper part of the spectrum, i.e. they are usually yellow or See also: The absorption bands also are different from those of substances of the first kind, for they readily disappear on dilution. A third class of bodies is formed by those substances which exhibit both kinds of fluorescence. Nature of Fluorescence.—No See also:complete theory of fluorescence has yet been given, though various attempts have been made to explain the phenomenon. Fluorescence is closely allied to See also:phosphorescence (q.v.), the difference consisting in the duration of the effect after the exciting cause is removed. Liquids which fluoresce only do so while the exciting light is falling on them, ceasing immediately the exciting light is cut off. In the case of solids, on the other See also:hand, such as fluor-spar or uranium glass, the effect, though very brief, does not See also:die away quite instantaneously, so that it is really a very brief phosphorescence. The property of phosphorescence has been generally attributed to some molecular change taking See also:place in the bodies possessing it. That some such change takes place during fluorescence is rendered probable by the fact that the property depends upon the See also:state of the sensitive substance; some bodies, such as barium platinocyanide, fluorescing in the solid state but not in solution, while others, such as See also:fluorescein, only fluoresce in solution. Fluorescence is always associated with absorption, but many bodies are absorbent without showing fluorescence. A satisfactory theory would have to See also:account for these facts as well as for the See also:production of waves of one See also:period by those of another, and the non-homogeneous See also:character of the fluorescent light. Quite recently W. Voigt has sought to give a theory of fluorescence depending on the theory of electrons. Briefly, this theory assumes that the electrons which constitute the See also:molecule of the sensitive See also:body can exist in two or more different configurations simultaneously, and that these are in dynamical See also:equilibrium, like the molecule in a partially dissociated See also:gas. If the electrons have different periods of vibration in the different configurations, then it would happen that the electrons whose period nearly corresponded with that of the incident light would absorb the See also:energy of the latter, and if they then underwent a transformation into a different configuration with a different period, this absorbed energy would be given out in waves of a period corresponding to that of the new configuration. Applications of Fluorescence.—The phenomenon of fluorescence can be utilized for the purpose of illustrating the See also:laws of reflection and See also:refraction in lecture experiments since the path of a See also:ray of light through a very dilute solution of a sensitive sub-stance is rendered visible. The existence of the dark lines in the ultra-violet portion of the solar spectrum can also be demonstrated in a See also:simple manner. In addition to the foregoing applications, Stokes made use of this property for studying the character of the ultra-violet spectrum of different See also:sources of See also:illumination and flames. He suggested also that the property would in some cases furnish a simple test for the presence of asmall quantity of a sensitive substance in an organic mixture. Fluorescent screens are largely used in work with Rontgen rays. There appears to be some prospect of light being thrown on the question of molecular structure by experiments on the fluorescence of vapours. Some very interesting experiments in this direction have been performed by R. W. See also:Wood on the fluorescence of See also:sodium vapour. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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