Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
In a paper which I communicated to this Society in 1815, and which was published in the Seventh volume of their Transactions, I described a new species of coloured fringes, produced between two plates of parallel glass. From a consideration of the theory of this class of phenomena, it was obvious that analogous, though much more complicated, systems of rings should be produced between plates with curved surfaces, but it was not till 1822 that I succeeded in detecting them; and so completely are these rings concealed by the superposition of similarly situated images, that, in consequence, of having forgotten my method of observation, I have experienced the greatest difficulty in rediscovering them.
My earliest experiments were performed with a double achromatic object-glass, made by Berge, having a diameter of inches, and 30 inches in focal length. The inner surfaces of the crown and flint glass lenses were ground to different radii, as shewn in the section of it at AB, CD, Fig. 5, Plate IX.; and the outer surface of the flint-glass lens was concave, so that there was left between the lenses a meniscus of air A 2, B 3 A.
page 192 note * This flame has a greenish-colour, in consequence of the rays which form it having passed through twice the thickness of the crown-glass lens A B.