The Heliograph (4K)

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • The Heliograph is basically a mirror that uses the light from the sun to flash a message across a distance, often using Morse code. They were widely used in the 19th and early 20th centuries for military and also for surveying purposes. Advanced models came with a tripod.
    Signals could routinely be sent over distances of 30 miles or more. The equipment was light and did not need any electrical power. However anyone in or near the line of sight could potentially read the message! Although they are no longer in common use, they are frequently supplied as part of emergency survival kits, allowing the user to signal to a distant ship or airplane.
    This 4 inch metal Heliograph comes from one of the UK suppliers of emergency survival kits, and the fascinating thing for us is the simple physics involved in the aiming mechanism.
    If you simply use a mirror to reflect light for a short distance you will be able to see the bright patch of the reflection, and direct it where you want. However at any distance, this will not work, and an aiming mechanism is needed.
    The Heliograph has a small hole in the centre, with a series of concentric circles arranged around the hole. There is a small sighting device, a small stick which is known as the Foresight, attached by a piece of string, and this has a small hole in one end. The user holds the mirror up to their eye, and holds the sighting device as far away as the string will allow. Line up the hole in the sighting device with the place where you want to shine the light, and then adjust the mirror so that the small black circle caused by the viewing hole in the mirror, exactly lines up with the hole in the aiming device. You will now be shining the reflection of the sun's light in exactly the direction you have chosen. Hopefully rescue will not take too long!
    The British poet Rudyard Kipling wrote a poem about the heliograph - allpoetry.com/...

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