Christiaan Huygens
Treatise on Light
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Table of contents
PREFACE
NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
PREFACE
wrote
this Treatise during my sojourn in France twelve years ago, and I
communicated it in the year 1678 to the learned persons who then
composed the Royal Academy of Science, to the membership of which the
King had done me the honour of calling, me. Several of that body who
are still alive will remember having been present when I read it, and
above the rest those amongst them who applied themselves particularly
to the study of Mathematics; of whom I cannot cite more than the
celebrated gentlemen Cassini, Römer, and De la Hire. And, although I
have since corrected and changed some parts, the copies which I had
made of it at that time may serve for proof that I have yet added
nothing to it save some conjectures touching the formation of Iceland
Crystal, and a novel observation on the refraction of Rock Crystal. I
have desired to relate these particulars to make known how long I
have meditated the things which now I publish, and not for the
purpose of detracting from the merit of those who, without having
seen anything that I have written, may be found to have treated of
like matters: as has in fact occurred to two eminent Geometricians,
Messieurs Newton and Leibnitz, with respect to the Problem of the
figure of glasses for collecting rays when one of the surfaces is
given.One
may ask why I have so long delayed to bring this work to the light.
The reason is that I wrote it rather carelessly in the Language in
which it appears, with the intention of translating it into Latin, so
doing in order to obtain greater attention to the thing. After which
I proposed to myself to give it out along with another Treatise on
Dioptrics, in which I explain the effects of Telescopes and those
things which belong more to that Science. But the pleasure of novelty
being past, I have put off from time to time the execution of this
design, and I know not when I shall ever come to an end if it, being
often turned aside either by business or by some new study.
Considering which I have finally judged that it was better worth
while to publish this writing, such as it is, than to let it run the
risk, by waiting longer, of remaining lost.There
will be seen in it demonstrations of those kinds which do not produce
as great a certitude as those of Geometry, and which even differ much
therefrom, since whereas the Geometers prove their Propositions by
fixed and incontestable Principles, here the Principles are verified
by the conclusions to be drawn from them; the nature of these things
not allowing of this being done otherwise.It
is always possible to attain thereby to a degree of probability which
very often is scarcely less than complete proof. To wit, when things
which have been demonstrated by the Principles that have been assumed
correspond perfectly to the phenomena which experiment has brought
under observation; especially when there are a great number of them,
and further, principally, when one can imagine and foresee new
phenomena which ought to follow from the hypotheses which one
employs, and when one finds that therein the fact corresponds to our
prevision. But if all these proofs of probability are met with in
that which I propose to discuss, as it seems to me they are, this
ought to be a very strong confirmation of the success of my inquiry;
and it must be ill if the facts are not pretty much as I represent
them. I would believe then that those who love to know the Causes of
things and who are able to admire the marvels of Light, will find
some satisfaction in these various speculations regarding it, and in
the new explanation of its famous property which is the main
foundation of the construction of our eyes and of those great
inventions which extend so vastly the use of them.I
hope also that there will be some who by following these beginnings
will penetrate much further into this question than I have been able
to do, since the subject must be far from being exhausted. This
appears from the passages which I have indicated where I leave
certain difficulties without having resolved them, and still more
from matters which I have not touched at all, such as Luminous Bodies
of several sorts, and all that concerns Colours; in which no one
until now can boast of having succeeded. Finally, there remains much
more to be investigated touching the nature of Light which I do not
pretend to have disclosed, and I shall owe much in return to him who
shall be able to supplement that which is here lacking to me in
knowledge.
NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
onsidering
the great influence which this Treatise has exercised in the
development of the Science of Optics, it seems strange that two
centuries should have passed before an English edition of the work
appeared. Perhaps the circumstance is due to the mistaken zeal with
which formerly everything that conflicted with the cherished ideas of
Newton was denounced by his followers. The Treatise on Light of
Huygens has, however, withstood the test of time: and even now the
exquisite skill with which he applied his conception of the
propagation of waves of light to unravel the intricacies of the
phenomena of the double refraction of crystals, and of the refraction
of the atmosphere, will excite the admiration of the student of
Optics. It is true that his wave theory was far from the complete
doctrine as subsequently developed by Thomas Young and Augustin
Fresnel, and belonged rather to geometrical than to physical Optics.
If Huygens had no conception of transverse vibrations, of the
principle of interference, or of the existence of the ordered
sequence of waves in trains, he nevertheless attained to a remarkably
clear understanding of the principles of wave-propagation; and his
exposition of the subject marks an epoch in the treatment of Optical
problems. It has been needful in preparing this translation to
exercise care lest one should import into the author's text ideas of
subsequent date, by using words that have come to imply modern
conceptions. Hence the adoption of as literal a rendering as
possible. A few of the author's terms need explanation. He uses the
word "refraction," for example, both for the phenomenon or
process usually so denoted, and for the result of that process: thus
the refracted ray he habitually terms "the refraction" of
the incident ray. When a wave-front, or, as he terms it, a "wave,"
has passed from some initial position to a subsequent one, he terms
the wave-front in its subsequent position "the continuation"
of the wave. He also speaks of the envelope of a set of elementary
waves, formed by coalescence of those elementary wave-fronts, as "the
termination" of the wave; and the elementary wave-fronts he
terms "particular" waves. Owing to the circumstance that
the French word
rayon possesses the
double signification of ray of light and radius of a circle, he
avoids its use in the latter sense and speaks always of the
semi-diameter, not of the radius. His speculations as to the ether,
his suggestive views of the structure of crystalline bodies, and his
explanation of opacity, slight as they are, will possibly surprise
the reader by their seeming modernness. And none can read his
investigation of the phenomena found in Iceland spar without
marvelling at his insight and sagacity.S.P.T.
CHAPTER I
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!