Prelude to solar energy: Pouillet, Herschel, Forbes and the solar constant

Annals of Science 38 (4):457-476 (1981)
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Abstract

Inspired by early-nineteenth-century discoveries about heat transfer, the French physicist Claude Pouillet measured the influx of solar radiation at the earth and, in 1838, asked what these observations revealed about the temperature of the sun and of space itself. At about the same time, the British natural philosophers John Herschel and J. D. Forbes made similar measurements in order to better understand the sun's influence on climate. This paper tells how and why Pouillet, Herschel and Forbes made the first estimates of the solar constant, estimates which would acquire new importance with the discovery of the laws of thermodynamics by the mid century

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Citations of this work

Amateurs and the Rise of Astrophysics 1840–1910.Karl Hufbauer - 1986 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 9 (3):183-190.
Thermodynamics and Sources of Solar Heat, 1846–1862.Frank A. J. L. James - 1982 - British Journal for the History of Science 15 (2):155-181.

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