EDISON’S TASIMETER
This interesting and remarkable
device is one of Edison’s many inventions not
generally known to the public at large, chiefly because
the range of its application has been limited to the
higher branches of science. He never applied
for a patent on the instrument, but dedicated it to
the public.
The device was primarily intended
for use in detecting and measuring infinitesimal degrees
of temperature, however remote, and its conception
followed Edison’s researches on the carbon telephone
transmitter. Its principle depends upon the variable
resistance of carbon in accordance with the degree
of pressure to which it is subjected. By means
of this instrument, pressures that are otherwise inappreciable
and undiscoverable may be observed and indicated.
The detection of small variations
of temperatures is brought about through the changes
which heat or cold will produce in a sensitive material
placed in contact with a carbon button, which is put
in circuit with a battery and delicate galvanometer.Partly
in section, the form of tasimeter which Edison took
with him to Rawlins, Wyoming, in July, 1878, on the
expedition to observe the total eclipse of the sun.
The substance on whose expansion the working of the
instrument depends is a strip of some material extremely sensitive to heat, such
as vulcanite. shown at A, and firmly clamped at B. Its lower end fits into a
slot in a metal plate, C, which in turn rests upon a carbon button. This latter
and the metal plate are connected in an electric circuit which includes a
battery and a sensitive galvanometer. A vulcanite or other strip is easily
affected by differences of temperature, expanding and contracting by reason of
the minutest changes. Thus, an infinitesimal variation in its length through
expansion or contraction changes the pressure on the carbon and affects the
resistance of the circuit to a corresponding degree, thereby causing a
deflection of the galvanometer; a movement of the needle in one direction
denoting expansion, and in the other contraction. The strip, A, is first put
under a slight pressure, deflecting the needle a few degrees from zero. Any
subsequent expansion or contraction of the strip may readily be noted by further
movements of the needle. The galvanometer is shown at B in the bridge
wire, and at C, D, and E there are shown the resistances
in the other arms of the bridge, which are adjusted
to equal the resistance of the tasimeter circuit.
The battery is shown at F. This arrangement tends
to obviate any misleading deflections that might arise
through changes in the battery.
The dial on the front of the instrument
is intended to indicate the exact amount of physical
expansion or contraction of the strip. This is
ascertained by means of a micrometer screw, S, which
moves a needle, T, in front of the dial. This
screw engages with a second and similar screw which
is so arranged as to move the strip of vulcanite up
or down. After a galvanometer deflection has
been obtained through the expansion or contraction
of the strip by reason of a change of temperature,
a similar deflection is obtained mechanically by turning
the screw, S, one way or the other. This causes
the vulcanite strip to press more or less upon the
carbon button, and thus produces the desired change
in the resistance of the circuit. When the galvanometer
shows the desired deflection, the needle, T, will
indicate upon the dial, in decimal fractions of an
inch, the exact distance through which the strip has
been moved.
With such an instrument as the above,
Edison demonstrated the existence of heat in the corona
at the above-mentioned total eclipse of the sun, but
exact determinations could not be made at that time,
because the tasimeter adjustment was too delicate,
and at the best the galvanometer deflections were
so marked that they could not be kept within the limits
of the scale. The sensitiveness of the instrument
may be easily comprehended when it is stated that
the heat of the hand thirty feet away from the cone-like
funnel of the tasimeter will so affect the galvanometer
as to cause the spot of light to leave the scale.
This instrument can also be used to
indicate minute changes of moisture in the air by
substituting a strip of gelatine in place of the vulcanite.
When so arranged a moistened piece of paper held several
feet away will cause a minute expansion of the gelatine
strip, which effects a pressure on the carbon, and
causes a variation in the circuit sufficient to throw
the spot of light from the galvanometer mirror off
the scale.
The tasimeter has been used to demonstrate
heat from remote stars (suns), such as Arcturus.