The design of the lighthouse light as we know it today, originated
at the beginning of the 18th Century. The French inventor Augustin
Fresnel had correctly deduced that light was pure energy that traveled
in waves, and he then spent his life developing lenses and reflectors
that could capture and concentrate light. The first lighthouse
optics that he designed combined highly polished prisms with an
array of lenses that captured light and concentrated it back into
a main beam. The design was concentric in arrangement, funneling
the light into a beam that was many times brighter than its source.
This light could be seen for more than 20 miles. Fresnel’s
design of concentric glass rings to concentrate light is still
used today in the production of automobile headlights, traffic
signals and projectors. Many of today’s lighthouses have
a system of rotating lenses, and the newer ones flash off and on
as a way of conserving energy.
Source: http://www.loc.gov/rr/scitech/mysteries/lighthouse.html
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Date Added: 2009-03-17 Views : 183