Glass Radiometer
How does it work?
A Crookes' radiometer has four vanes suspended inside a glass bulb.
Inside the bulb, there is a good vacuum. When you shine a light on the
vanes in the radiometer, they spin -- in bright sunlight, they can spin
at several thousand rotations per minute!
The vacuum is important to
the radiometer's success. If there is no vacuum (that is, if the bulb
is full of air), the vanes do not spin because there is too much drag.
If there is a near-perfect vacuum, the vanes do not spin unless they are
held in a frictionless way. If the vanes have a frictionless support
and the vacuum is complete, then photons bouncing off the silver side of
the vanes push the vanes, causing them to rotate. However, this force
is exceedingly small.
If there is a good but incomplete vacuum, then a different effect called thermal transpiration occurs along the edges of the vanes. The effect looks as though the light is pushing against the black faces. The black side of the vane moves away from the light.
Height: 17 cm
Diameter: 8 cm
[Ref. 1241] [$, £, CHF...]
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