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plane mirror on stand

  • Images (1)
  • Documents (1)

plane mirror on stand

Date: 1937-1939
Inventory Number: 1996-1-0680
Classification: Mirror
Subject:
physics, optics,
Maker: Wilmer C. Anderson
User: Department of Physics, Harvard University (founded 1884)
Cultural Region:
United States,
Place of Origin:
Cambridge,
Dimensions:
32 × 31 × 31 cm (12 5/8 × 12 3/16 × 12 3/16 in.)
Material:
steel, cast iron,
Description:
This eight-inch mirror is mounted on a heavy stand, which has three feet and leveling screws. The mirror is supported by two columns and a circular base. It can rotate sideways using two horizontal screws that finely move a vertical pin centered between them. When in use, the mirror is inclined forward and set in a clamp. The clamp is formed by two screws, again to allow a fine up-and-down motion of the mirror. These fine motions were to better target the reflection of the light beam used in the experiment.
In Collection(s)
  • Exhibit 2008--The Matter of Fact
Signedunsigned
FunctionThis mirror was part of a larger experimental set-up devised by Wilmer C.
Anderson to measure the speed of light. According to the description in the Review of Scientific Instruments, the set-up consisted of a light source (a 500-Watt Point-O-Lite bulb), Nicol prisms, a Kerr cell (a photoelectric cell that replaced the human eye; it is really the innovation here), and mirrors. The present mirror, from Anderson's description, was probably the one he identified as M2 or M3.

In the same article, Anderson said that after a series of 651 measurements, the mean result for the speed of light was 299,765 km/s ± 15 km/s. Two years later, he was able to get an even more precise number using 2895 observations: 299,776 km/s ± 14 km/s.

The origins of Anderson's work is found in his Ph.D. dissertation at Harvard University, completed in 1936 and entitled A High-Frequency Method for Measuring the Velocity of Light.
Primary SourcesWilmer C. Anderson, "A Measurement of the Velocity of Light," Review of Scientific Instruments 8 (1937): 239-247.

Wilmer C. Anderson, "Final Measurements of the Velocity of Light," Journal of the Optical Society of America 31 (1941): 187-197.

Time, 27 March 1939 (online here.)

"Light Measured by Harvard Device; Meter Records Speed With Least Error Ever Known," New York Times, March 17, 1939, 19.
ProvenanceFrom the Department of Physics, Harvard University.

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