There are two ways by which the heat or the warmth of one body passes off to the other bodies around it. One is called radiation, the other conduction. Rollo learned the meaning of these terms, and the distinction between them, under the following circumstances:— One pleasant morning, late in the autumn, Rollo’s father said that he was going away on some business, about fifteen miles, and he told Rollo’s mother that, if she would like to take a ride, he should be very glad to have her go too. She said that she should like to go very much, and she proposed that Rollo should go with them. Mr. Holiday had no objection to this arrangement, and accordingly Jonas was ordered to put both horses into the carryall, and bring it up to the front door. “And, on the whole, Jonas,” said Mr. There were two seats to the carryall. Rollo sat with Jonas on the front seat, and his father and mother behind. They had a very pleasant ride in the forenoon, but at noon it looked rather cloudy, as if it might be going to rain. Rollo said he was afraid that it would rain before they should get home. “No matter for that,” said Jonas. “Why, then we shall get wet,” said Rollo. “No matter for that,” said Jonas. They were detained longer than they had expected to be at the place where Mr. Holiday had his business to do, so that it was rather late when they set out on their return home. After they had rode about an hour, it looked still more like rain, and at length, Rollo felt a little drop upon his cheek. He said, in a complaining tone,— “There, Jonas, it is going to rain, for it begins to sprinkle now.” “Rollo,” said Jonas, “when it rains, the best way is to let it rain; for there is no knowing what good may come of it.” “I don’t think any good can come to us,” Jonas was driving pretty fast, and the rattling of the wheels made so much noise, that Rollo’s father and mother did not hear what he and Jonas were saying. Nor did Rollo hear the conversation in which his father and mother were engaged. They were, in fact, discussing the expediency of not attempting to get home that evening, but of stopping, instead, at a little village a few miles before them. As it was growing cold and late, and as there was every appearance of an approaching storm, they concluded to do this; and so, to Rollo’s surprise, when they came into the village, his father said to Jonas,— “Jonas, you may drive up to this hotel on the right; we are going to stop here for the night.” Jonas and Rollo were both glad to hear this. Jonas drove up to the door, and Rollo and his father and mother were soon transferred from their places in the carryall, which were beginning to be cold, and cheerless, and uncomfortable, to a pleasant little Now, it happened that, in this little parlor, the fire was made in what might be called a fireplace-stove, that is, a stove made in the form of a fireplace. It stood out upon the hearth, and from the top of it a stove pipe ascended towards the top of the room, and there passed back into the chimney. The fire was not built in this room until the party which was to occupy it arrived, but the room became warm very quick. Rollo was surprised that the room became warm so quick, and his father said that such an arrangement as that, namely, a stove standing out upon the hearth, with a pipe above, warmed a room very quickly; and one reason was, that it operated by conduction as well as by radiation, whereas a fire in a common fireplace could only warm the room by radiation. Then Rollo wanted to know what conduction and radiation meant. His father explained them to him while they were waiting for the tea to be brought in. So Rollo held his hand up before the fire as his father had directed. “Do you feel the warmth of the fire upon your hand?” “Yes, sir,” said Rollo. “The heat comes from the fire to your hand very swiftly through the air, and makes your hand feel warm.” “How do you know it comes so swift, sir?” said Rollo. “I will show you,” said his father. So his father looked about the room, and he saw a large book lying upon a table between the windows. He got the book, and brought it to the fire. “Now,” said he, “I will hold the book between your hand and the fire. Then the heat cannot come to your hand.” So Mr. Holiday held the book between Rollo’s hand and the fire, and Rollo said that he could not feel the heat. “Now,” said his father, “I will take the book away suddenly, and we will observe So saying, Mr. Holiday suddenly withdrew the book. “Yes, sir,” said Rollo; “I feel it immediately.” Rollo’s father then told him to go back from the fire as far as he could go, and still feel the heat upon his hand, and then he interposed the book between the fire and his hand just as before. Rollo still found that he could feel the heat from the fire instantly, after his father took the book away. “Now, that is radiation,” said Mr. Holiday. “Radiation?” replied Rollo. “Yes,” said his father. “Heat radiates from a fire, in all directions, through the air. Heat radiates, too, from all bodies that are hot, or warmer than the air around them. Go and hold your hand near the stove pipe, and see if you can feel the heat radiating from the stove.” Rollo did so. He said he could feel the “Yes,” said his father; “that is because the pipe is not so hot as the fire. If the pipe was as hot as the fire, it would be red hot, and then you could feel the radiation as far as you do that of the fire. However, there is some radiation, though the pipe is not very hot. There is always radiation when the thing is warmer than the air around it. There is radiation from your face.” Here Rollo put his hand up towards his face, to try whether he could feel the radiation. “You can’t feel it very well with your hand,” said his father, “because your hand is warm, and so that radiates too. But if you hold your hand up very near to your face, perhaps you will feel both to be warmer, for your hand will radiate to your face, and your face will radiate to your hand.” Rollo then put his hand up very near to his cheek, and, after holding it there a minute, he said that he perceived that it felt warm. “Yes, father,” said Rollo, “I understand what radiation is; now tell me about conduction.” “Very well,” said his father; “suppose you had an iron crowbar here, and should put one end into the fire, among the burning coals, and let it remain there while you took hold of the other end with your hand. Now, the heat would gradually extend along the bar, from the hot end in the fire towards your hand, through the substance of the iron.” “Would it, sir?” said Rollo. “Yes,” replied his father; “so that at last the end in your hand would begin to feel hot. Did you never try it with a pin in the lamp?” “Yes, sir,” said Rollo; “if I hold a pin in the lamp, it burns my fingers.” “The heat,” said his father, “is conducted along through the pin to your fingers. There is a radiation from the lamp at the same time, but the radiation is not enough to burn you at that distance. That is, if you hold your finger near the lamp, as near as the length “It burns me pretty quick, father,” said Rollo. “Yes,” replied his father, “because the pin is very short. But if it was a knitting-needle, or an iron rod longer still, it would take some time for the heat to pass from one end to the other. Heat moves quickly by radiation, and slowly by conduction. “Now, if you should go to the stove,” continued Mr. Holiday, “and put your hand upon it, you would burn it by conduction; that is, the heat would be conducted through the iron to your hand. But if you should hold your hand before the fire so near that “But you must understand,” continued his father, “that there may be conduction from air, as well as from iron. If you come into a room which is very warm,—that is, where all the air in it is very warm, although the fire may be gone out,—then the warmth you feel comes to your face and hands by conduction from the air which touches your face and hands, just as your hand would be burned by touching the iron that is hot. But if you come into a room where the air is not very warm, but where there is a great blazing fire, then you feel warmed by radiation. Do you understand this?” “Yes, sir,” said Rollo. “I believe I do.” “I will ask you some questions then, and see if you can answer them. When we toast bread, is the heat applied by radiation or conduction?” “By——radiation, sir,” said Rollo. “Yes; when we bake bread in an oven, is it by radiation or conduction?” “By conduction,” said Rollo. “Yes,” said his father, “because you perceive “When things are boiled, is the heat applied by radiation or conduction?” said his father. “By conduction from the water,” said Rollo. “Yes; and when they are roasted?” “By radiation,” replied Rollo. “Very well,” rejoined his father. “I believe you understand the distinction very well. Some other time, I will tell you more about both radiation and conduction. But now I see the tea is coming in.” Rollo looked around, and saw a girl coming in, bringing a waiter with two tea-pots upon it, and a plate of toast covered with a bright cover, and some other things. She put them all upon the table, and then said to Mr. Holiday,— “Your tea is ready, sir.” So Rollo and his father and mother took “In the first place,” replied his father, “it warms the room by radiation just like any other fire, as you observed by holding your hand before it. But then it also warms the air in the room by conduction, in this way; the heat of the fire heats the iron of the stove and of the pipe. The heat is conducted through the iron to the outside, and there some of it radiates, and the rest is conducted into the air which happens to touch it. Exactly as if you put your hand against the stove pipe, the heat is conducted through to your hand. So it is conducted to the air, which touches the pipe. This air becomes heated, and swells, and so grows light, and rises out of the way, and more cold air comes in to the stove pipe, and gets heated in the same way by conduction. So the air is continually coming up against the stove and pipe at all parts, and it gets “I wish I had a tuft to try it,” said Rollo. “It would be a very good experiment.” Rollo had no tuft, but he had that evening an opportunity to witness the effect of the ascending current of heated air, in a way which he did not anticipate; for, after tea, they had the table out, for Rollo’s father to do some writing, while his mother sat in a rocking-chair near, reading. Rollo wanted to write, and so his father let him have a pen and ink. He said that he would write a little note to his cousin Lucy. It was a very small note, on a little piece of paper, and when he had written down one side, he undertook to dry what he had written by means of the radiation from the lamp, and accordingly held up his paper very near the QUESTIONS.In what two ways is heat conveyed from one body to another? Relate the circumstances which led Rollo and his father and mother to spend the night at a tavern. What sort of a stove did they find in the little parlor? What is radiation of heat? How did Mr. Holiday demonstrate it to Rollo? How did he prove that heat passes swiftly when it is radiated? How did Mr. Holiday explain and illustrate conduction? By which mode is the greatest quantity of heat conveyed? Which communicates heat most rapidly? What were some of the questions which Mr. Holiday put to Rollo to ascertain whether he understood the distinction? What incident occurred to Rollo in the evening? |