220 FRAGMENTS OF SCIENCE. 



I stop the vibrating fork ; but the sound has not ceased. 

 The second fork has taken up the vibrations of its neigh 

 bor, and is now sounding in its turn. I dismount one of 

 the forks, and permit the other to remain upon its stand. 

 I throw the dismounted fork into strong vibration, but you 

 cannot hear it sound. Detached from its stand the amount 

 of motion which it can communicate to the air is too small 

 to make itself sensible to the ear at any distance. I now 

 bring the dismounted fork close to the mounted one, but 

 not into actual contact with it. Out of the silence rises a 

 mellow sound. &quot;Whence comes it ? From the vibrations 

 which have been transferred from the dismounted fork to 

 the mounted one. 



That motion should thus transfer itself through the air 

 it is necessary that the two forks should be in perfect unison. 

 If I place on one of the forks a morsel of wax not larger 

 than a pea, it is rendered thereby powerless to affect, or to 

 be affected by, the other. It is easy to understand this 

 experiment. The pulses of the one fork can affect the other, 

 because they are perfectly timed. A single pulse causes 

 the prong of the silent fork to vibrate through an infinitesi 

 mal space. But just as it has completed this small vibra 

 tion, another pulse is ready to strike it. Thus, the small 

 impulses add themselves together. In the five seconds 

 during which the forks were held near each other, the vi 

 brating fork sent 1,280 waves against its neighbor, and 

 those 1,280 shocks, all delivered at the proper moment, all, 

 as I have said, perfectly timed, have given such strength 

 to the vibrations of the mounted fork as to render them 

 audible to you all. 



Let me give you one other curious illustration of the 

 influence of synchronism on musical vibrations. Here are 

 three small gas-flames inserted in three glass tubes of dif 

 ferent lengths. Each of these flames can be caused to emit 

 a musical note, the pitch of which is determined by the 



