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2. On the After-glow of Cooling Iron at a Dull-Red Heat
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
The facts to be explained were observed by Messrs Gore and Barrett, and were described by the latter gentleman in the “Philosophical Magazine” for 1873.
The experiments are performed on an iron or steel wire of no great thickness. When this is heated to an intense white heat and allowed to cool, the following facts appear at the instant it has cooled down to a dull-red heat:—
1. The wire expands for an instant, and then continues its normal contraction.
2. The glow from the wire is at the same instant seen to increase.
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- Proceedings 1873-74
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- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1875
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