One evening, just after tea, Rollo came to his father, who was sitting by the side of the fire, and said,— "Father, I wish we could see the air, as we can the water, and then perhaps we could try experiments with it." "O, we can try experiments with the air as it is," said his father. "Can we?" said Rollo; "I don't see how." "We cannot see the air, it is true; but then we can see its effects, and so we can experiment upon it." "Well, at any rate," said Rollo, "we can't build a dam, and make it spout through a hole, like water." "No," said his father, "not exactly. In your dam, for instance, when it was full, you had water on one side of the board, and no water on the other; and then, by opening a "Why can't we do that, sir?" said Rollo. "Because," replied his father, "we are all surrounded and enveloped with air. It spreads in every direction all around us, and rises many miles above us. Whereas, in respect to water, you had one little stream before you, which you could manage just as you pleased. If you were down at the bottom of the sea, then the water would be all around you and above you; and there, even if you could live there, you could not have a dam." "No, sir," said Rollo, "the water would be everywhere." "Yes," replied his father, "and the air is everywhere. If, however, we could get it away from any place, as, for instance, from this room, then bore a hole through the wall, the weight of the air outside would crowd a portion of it through the hole, exactly as the weight of the water above the board in your "I wish we could try it," said Rollo. "We can try it, in substance," said his father, "in this room; or—no, the china closet will be better." There was a china closet, which had two doors in it. One door opened into the parlor, where Rollo and his father were sitting. The other door opened into the back part of the entry. Rollo's father explained how he was going to perform the experiment, thus:— "If we could, by any means, get all the air out of the closet for a moment, then the pressure of the air outside would force a jet of it in through the key-holes of the doors, and the crevices." "And how can we get the air out?" said Rollo. "We can't," said his father, "get it all out; but we can get a part of it out by shutting the door quick. The door will carry with it a part of the air that was in the closet, and then the outside air will be spouted in, through the key-hole of the other door. Only we can't see it, as we can the water." "No," said Rollo; "but I can put my hand there, and feel it." "A better way," said his father, "would be to hold a lamp opposite to the key-hole, and see if it blows the flame." Rollo tried the experiment, in the way his father had described. He went into the closet with the lamp. He held the lamp opposite to the key-hole, and pretty near to it, and then he asked Nathan to shut the other door suddenly. Nathan, who was standing all ready by the other door, which was about half open, put his two hands against it, and pushed it to, with all his strength, producing a great concussion. "O Nathan," said his father, "you need not be quite so violent as that." "It succeeded, father, it succeeded," said Rollo. "I'm glad it succeeded," said his father; "but Nathan need not have shut the door with so much force." "I wanted to drive out all the air," said Nathan. "I'll show you how to do it," said his father. Rollo's father accordingly arose, and came "For," said he, "there is so large a space between the edge of the door and the wall, that the air that is put in motion by the movement of the door, can pass directly round the edge, back into the closet again. It is only when the door is almost shut, when the edge of it comes close to the casing all around, that the movement of the door drives the air out." Then he took hold of the latch of the door, and put it almost to, very gently. He turned the latch so as to prevent its snapping against the catch, and then pushed it suddenly into its place three or four times, opening the door only a very little way every time. "Now," said he, "hold the lamp at the key-hole, and watch the flame, while I shut the door two or three times in this way." Rollo did so, Nathan standing all the time by his side. They observed that the flame of the lamp was driven into the room every time the door was shut; proving that, "Let us stop up the key-hole," said Rollo, "and then it can't get in." "Yes," said his father, "there are a great many little crevices all around the closet, where the air can come in." "Couldn't we stop those up too?" said Rollo. "No," said his father, "not so as to make the closet air-tight. For, if the crevices could all be stopped exactly, the air would come in through the very wood itself." "How?" said Rollo. "Why, there are little pores in wood, that is, little channels that the sap flowed in when the wood was growing, and the air can pass through these." Here Rollo's father observed that Rollo was looking very intently at the table; and he asked him what he was doing: he said he was trying to find some of the pores. "You can't see them there," said his father. "St. Domingo mahogany is a very hard and close-grained kind of wood. If it was summer, and you could dig down and After some more conversation on this subject, Rollo asked his father if he could not think of some other experiments for them to try. His father said that he did not just then think of any experiment, but that, if Rollo and Nathan would come and sit down by the fire, he would give them some information on the subject. Rollo's mother said that she should like to hear too. They accordingly waited until she was ready, and then, when all were seated, Mr. Holiday began thus:— "Air is in many respects much like water." "Yes," interrupted Rollo, "just like water, only thinner, because, you see——" "You must not interrupt me," said his father, "unless to ask some question, which is necessary to understand what I say. It is entirely irregular for a pupil, instead of listening to his teacher, to interrupt, in order to tell something that he knows himself." Rollo's father smiled, as he said this, but Rollo looked rather ashamed. Then his father proceeded: "There is one very remarkable difference between them. Water is not compressible by force; but air is." "What is the meaning of compressible?" said Nathan. "Compressible things," said his father, "are those that can be compressed, that is, pressed together, so as to take up less room than they did before. Sponge is compressible. A pillow is compressible. But iron is not compressible, and water is not compressible." "I should think it was," said Nathan; "it is very soft." "It is very yielding," replied his father, "when you press it, but it is not pressed into any smaller space. It only moves away. If you have a tumbler half full of water, and press a ball down into it, you could not crowd the water into any smaller space than it occupied at first; but, as fast as the ball went down, the water would come up around the sides of the ball." "But suppose," said Rollo, "that the ball was just big enough to fit the tumbler all around; then the water could not come up." "And then," said his father, "you could not crowd the ball down." "Could not a very strong man?" said Nathan. "No," replied his father, "the water cannot be sensibly compressed. But now, if the tumbler contained only air, and if a ball were to be put in at the top, just large enough to fit the tumbler exactly, and if a strong man were to crowd it down with all his strength, he would, perhaps, compress the air into half the space which it occupied before." "Perhaps the tumbler would break," said Nathan. "Yes," replied his father, "and the tumbler will answer only for a supposition; but for a real experiment it would be best to have a cylinder of iron." "What is a cylinder?" said Nathan. "An iron vessel, shaped like a tumbler, only as large at the bottom as it is at the top, would be a cylinder. Now, if there was a cylinder of iron, with the inside turned perfectly true, and a brass piston fitted to it——" "What is a piston?" said Nathan. "A piston," said his father, "is a sort of stopper, exactly fitted to the inside of a cylinder, so as to slide up and down. It is made to fit perfectly, and then it is oiled, so as to "Now," continued his father, "if a strong man had a cylinder like this, with a piston fitted to it, and a strong handle across the top of the piston rod, perhaps he might press the air into one half the space which it occupied before. That is, if the cylinder was full of air when he put the piston in, perhaps he could get the piston down half way to the bottom. Then the air would be twice as dense as it was before; that is, there would be twice as much of it in the same space as there was before. It would be twice as compact and heavy. This is called condensing air. The philosophers have ingenious instruments for condensing air. "If, however, a man condenses air in this way, by crowding down a piston, he does not begin the condensation when the piston begins to descend. The air is condensed a great deal before he begins. All the air around us is condensed." "How comes it condensed?" said Rollo. "Why, you recollect that, when you bored a hole through the board in the bottom of your dam, the water spouted out." "No, father," said Rollo, "we pulled the plug out; Jonas bored the hole." "Well," said his father, "the water spouted out." "Yes," said Rollo. "What made it?" said his father. "Why, the water above it was heavy, and pressed down upon it, and crowded it out through the hole." "Yes," said his father, "and the deeper the water, the more heavily it was pressed." "Yes, sir," said Rollo, "and the farther it spouted." "Because it was pressed down by the load of such a high column of water." "Yes, sir," said Rollo. "Well," replied his father, "it is just so with the air. The air all around us is pressed down by the load of all that is above us. We are, in fact, down at the bottom of a great ocean of air, and the air here is loaded down very heavy." "How heavy?" said Rollo. "O, very heavy indeed," said his father. "Why, air is pretty light," said Rollo. "Yes," replied his father, "but then the column of it is very high." "How high?" said Rollo. "Why, between thirty and forty miles. But it grows thinner and thinner towards the top; so it is not as heavy, by any means, as a column of air would be, thirty miles high, and as dense all the way up as it is here." "What makes it grow thinner and thinner towards the top?" said Rollo. "Because," said his father, "that which is near the top, has not as much load of air above it, to press it down." "And that which is at the top," said Rollo, "has none above it, to press it down." "No," replied his father. "And how thin is it there?" "Nobody knows," said his father. "What, nobody at all?" said Nathan. "No, I believe not; at least I do not; and I don't know that any body does." "How do they know, then, how high it is?" said Rollo. "The philosophers have calculated in some way or other, though I don't exactly know how. I believe they have ascertained "And how high must it be?" said Nathan. "Why, between thirty and forty miles," said Rollo; "father told us once." "And yet," continued his father, "water, thirty or forty feet deep, would produce as great a pressure as a column of air of thirty or forty miles. That is, the air around presses about as heavily, and would force a jet of air through a hole with about as much force, as water would, coming out at the bottom of a dam, as high as a common three-story house." These explanations were all very interesting to Rollo and to his mother; but Nathan found it rather hard to understand them all, and he began to be somewhat restless and uneasy. At length he said,— "And now, father, haven't you almost done telling about the air?" "Why, yes," said his father; "I have told you enough for this time; only you must remember it all." "I don't think I can remember it quite all," said Nathan. "Well, then, remember the general principle, at any rate," said his father, "which is this—that we live at the bottom of a vast ocean of air, and that the lower portions of this air are pressed down by the load of all the air above; that, being so pressed, the lower air is condensed,—so that we live in the midst of air that is pressed down, and condensed, by the load of all that is above it; and that, consequently, whenever the air is taken away, even in part, from any place, as you removed some of it from the china closet, the pressure upon the air outside forces the air in through every opening it can find." "I think that is a little too much for me to remember," said Nathan. Nathan's father and mother laughed on hearing this, though Nathan did not know what they were laughing at. His father told him that he could not expect him to remember all; and that, to pay him for his particular attention, he would tell him a story. So he took Nathan up in his lap, and told QUESTIONS.Why cannot experiments be performed upon the pressure of air, as conveniently as upon the pressure of water? How did Rollo's father contrive to remove a part of the air from the china closet? Where did they expect that the air would be forced into the closet? How were they to make this effect visible? Did the experiment succeed? Suppose the key-hole had been stopped up; where would the air have been forced in? Suppose all the crevices had been closed. Is water compressible? Is air compressible? What is the shape of a cylinder? What is a piston? How might air be compressed by means of a cylinder and piston? What was the general principle which Rollo's father stated, in conclusion? |