Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 February 1887 — The Resistance of the Atmosphere. [ARTICLE]

The Resistance of the Atmosphere.

Everybody has noticed that if we move a fan gently the air parts before it with little effort, while, when we try to fan violently, the same air is felt to react; yet if we go on to say that if the motion is still more violent the atmosphere will resist like a solid, against which the fan, if made of iron, would break in pieces. This may seem to some an unexpected property of the “nimble” air through which we move daily. Yet this is the case, and if the motion is only so quick that the air cannot get out of the way a body hurled against it will rise in temperature like a shot striking an armor-plate. It is all a question of speed, - and that of the meteorite is known to be immense. One has been seen'to fly over this country from the Mississippi to the Atlantic in an inappreciably short time, probably in less than two minutes; and though at a presumable lieigkhof over fifty miles, the velocity with which it shot by gave every one the impression that it went just above his head, and some witnesses of the unexpected apparition looked the next day to see if it had struck the r chimneys. The heat developed by arrested motion in the case of a miss of iron moving twenty miles a second can be calculated, and is found to be much more than enough, not only to melt it, but to turn it into vapor, though what probably does happen is, apeording to Professsor Newton, that the melted surfaee-poitions are wiped away by the pressure of the air and volatized to form the luminous train, the interior remaining cold, until the difference of temperature causes a fracture, when the stone breaks and pieces fall —some of them at red-hot heat, some of them, possibly, at the temperature of outer space, or far below that of freezing mercury. —The Century.