IC 6468 Iceland Apar and Optical Fluorite

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. Herbert Hughes
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
20
File Size:
673 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 1, 1931

Abstract

Iceland spar is a variety of calcite ( calcium carbonate ) characterized by its purity , transparency , and perfection of crystalline structure . It takes its name from the country in which it was discovered . The actual demand for it is small , but the supplies of high - grade optical spar are so meager that the search for it has become international in its scope . Iceland spar is a scientific necessity , for without it research precision and technology would be hampered considerably . The earliest students of mineralogy were familiar with calcite , but the transparent variety was not discovered until early in the seventeenth century , when crystals of it were found in the bed of a stream in Iceland . It received little attention until 1669 , when Erasmus Bartholinus first recognized its powers of double refraction . The results of his investigation were published in a book , " Experimenta Crystalli Islandici , " which appeared in 1670. The law governing the action of the rerracted rays was discovered by Christian Huygens eight years later . The polarization of light rays in passing through Iceland spar was discovered in 1809 by Etienne Louis Malus , a French physicist , who published a paper describing the phenomenon . His work was closely followed by that of William Nicol , who in 1828 designed the Nicol prism which is still used as the source of polarized light in most optical instruments .
Citation

APA: H. Herbert Hughes  (1931)  IC 6468 Iceland Apar and Optical Fluorite

MLA: H. Herbert Hughes IC 6468 Iceland Apar and Optical Fluorite. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.

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