The Senses of Animals. 



299 



the aether-vibrations. 

 Professor Langley : 



Quality of radiations. 



Limit of photography, arti- 



ficial source 

 Limit of photography, solar 



source 

 Limit of violet to normal 



eyes 



Limit of red to normal eyes 

 Probable inferior limit of 



temperature-sensations.. 

 Longest waves hitherto re- 



cognized with bolometer 



The figures are those given by 



Wave-lengths in 

 thousandths of 

 a millimetre, 



0-185 . 

 0'295 . 



0-36 . 

 . 0'81 . 



. 9'25* . 

 . 30'0 



Number of 



ibrations per Effects on man. 

 second in billions. 



160 



833) 

 370$ 



30 

 1 



none known 



temperature- 



sense 

 none known 



From this table it will be seen that, apart from the 

 possible extension of sight beyond human limits, there are 

 possibilities of another sense for the ultra-violet actinic 

 vibrations as different from sight as is the infra-red 

 temperature-sense. Moreover, the temperature-sense for 

 us has no scale ; there is nothing corresponding to pitch 

 in sound or colour in sight. It may not be so with lower 

 organisms. Insects, for example, may be sensitive to tones 

 of heat. The bee may enjoy a symphony of solar radiance. 



I am not saying that it is so; I am merely suggesting 

 possibilities which we have not sufficient knowledge to 

 authoritatively deny. We have no right to impose the 

 limits of human sensation on the entire organic world. 

 Insects may have " permanent possibilities of sensation " 

 denied to us. 



Even within our limits there may be, as we have 

 already seen, great and inconceivable differences. We saw 



* Professor Langley finds that the maximum effect with a radiating 

 source at 170 C. is at about 5-0 thousandths of a millimetre wave-length. 

 100 C. 7-5 



C. 11-0 



We are sensitive to radiations from a body at 100 C. But when the 



temperature falls below the normal temperature of the body we are not 



sensitive to heat- vibrations, but to loss of heat from the surface exposed. The 



lirnft of sensibility to heat-vibrations, therefore, probably lies between 7'5 and 



II thousandths of a millimetre. I have taken about 9-25 as the limit. 



