REPEATING GONIOMETER. 



161 



brought to perfection without at the same time inducing 

 a corresponding amelioration in the latter. In propor 

 tion as the crystallographic ideas of Haiiy acquired more 

 exactness, it was found necessary to employ, for the meas 

 urement of the angles of the crystals, methods of increas 

 ing precision. 



Wollaston supplied this want by the invention of the 

 reflective goniometer which bears his name.* Malus 



hesitated fully to adopt the idea, after it had occurred to him as the 

 only mode of representing polarization, on the ground of being unable 

 to reconcile it with mechanical notions; and this more precisely as 

 to the notion of transverse vibrations alone being produced, which 

 constituted this theory in all its simplicity; whereas Young had (as 

 we have just seen) believed both these and longitudinal vibrations to 

 coexist. To establish this point, he expressly says, was the main dif 

 ficulty which embarrassed him.i Translator. 



* The essential principle of the reflective goniometer of Wollaston 

 is extremely simple, and consists in this: a piece of crystal or any 



Ann. de Chimie, 1831, torn. xvii. p. 184. 



