The classical theory of light had thus been rounded out long before Wood came on the scene. But vast new possibilities in physical optics had been opened up in 1859 when the spectroscope came into use for detecting the chemical nature of substances. A spectroscope is nothing more than a prism mounted between a source of light and an adjustable eyepiece (or photographic plate) for accurate observation. The prism bends each color of light that enters it at a different angle; it is the spreading out (the scientist calls it
This discovery made the spectroscope one of the major instruments of modern science, and opened almost illimitable fields for physical optics. For light became not only something to be examined in itself, but a powerful tool for examining the nature of the physical world. The minutest traces of substances revealed themselves in their spectra; and the most distant nebulae and stars showed their composition — and even their velocity and direction — in their spectra. The subject became more complicated as it developed, for it was found that the same substance gave different spectra depending on the physical state in which it was. Thus the analysis of spectra revealed not only the chemical composition of substances, but the physical condition in which they existed as well. And different types of spectra were investigated: the
FISH-EYE VIEWS: Photographs Wood made with his “fish-eye” camera (see here
).MORE FISH-EYE VIEWS.
When Wood came on the scene at the end of the nineteenth century, physical optics was in this exciting stage of evolution. And physics in general was in one of its greatest transitional stages — the stage between the atom and Newtonian physics and the electron and Einstein. Wood’s role was to be the daring experimentalist whose work would continually challenge the formulations of the theoretical and mathematical physicists, and thus bring them closer to the ultimate truth. And equally important, his experimental demonstrations would confirm the truth of many of their purely theoretical conclusions. His first major contribution to physical optics is a beautiful example of this — and also an example of the amazing scope of his special field of science. Here is his account.