 
         
          
             
          
        
          
             
          
          
             
          
          
             
          
          
             
          
          
          
            Extracted from: Henry Heil Chemical Co., Catalogue
            and price list of Chemical Apparatus,
            1903
          
          
             
          
          
          
             
          
          
            Extracted from:
             Report on Machinery and Processes of the
            Industrial Arts, and Apparatus the Exact Sciences,
            F. A. P. Barnard, 1869
          
          
           A form of the instrument
            superior to either of these has been contrived by
            Hoffmann, of Paris, the very able constructor to whose
            skill the investigators of the higher optics have been
            so much indebted, and who has furnished to Father
            Secchi and to Mr. Huggins the instruments which have
            enabled them to prosecute so successfully the spectral
            analysis of stellar and nebular light. In Mr.
            Hoffmann's direct-vision spectroscope, the apparatus
            for dispersion consists of five prisms, three of crown
            glass and two of flint glass, cemented together into
            one system with their refracting angles alternately in
            opposite directions. The arrangement resembles that of
            the group of letters AVAVA, in which the cross-line of
            the letters A indicates the path of the light through
            the system. The dispersion is differential, the angles
            of the prisms being so chosen as to compensate the mean
            refraction; and the mean ray emerges parallel to the
            direction of incidence. But as the extreme rays of the
            spectrum produced by the dispersion are necessarily not
            parallel to the same direction, the tube is jointed at
            a point just behind the system of prisms, and the part
            near the eye has a liberty of lateral motion sufficient
            to enable the observer to bring any portion of the
            spectrum into the field of vision. The angles actually
            given to the several prisms at their summits are ninety
            degrees for the two flint-glass prisms, represented in
            the group of letters above by the two Vs, and also for
            the central prism of crown glass. The angles of the
            extreme crown-glass prisms are only sixty-nine
            degrees.
          
          
           It is obvious that by
            increasing the number of prisms a larger dispersion
            might be obtained; but this would render the instrument
            more cumbrous, and would diminish the intensity of the
            illumination. The system of prisms occupies of course a
            position in the tube immediately in front of the
            objective of the telescope. But in front of the system
            itself is another lens designed to render the rays
            parallel as they fall on the prisms; and the tube,
            which is extended beyond this lens, carries at its
            extremity the variable aperture through which the
            narrow beam of light to be observed is admitted. In
            order to compare this light with that coming from a
            different source, a small reflecting prism is placed in
            front of the opening which it covers only in part, and
            which is sustained by a support fastened to the tube by
            a ring clamp. A micrometer very finely divided on glass
            is introduced into the field of view within the
            instrument, by means of which the observer may measure
            the distances between the spectral lines.