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N rays

The so-called N rays (or N-rays) were a phenomenon described by French scientist René-Prosper Blondlot, subsequently shown to be illusory.

In 1903, Blondlot, a distinguished physicist working at the University of Nancy, perceived changes in the brightness of an electric spark in a spark gap which he attributed to a novel form of radiation, naming it the N-ray, for the University of Nancy. Blondlot, Augustin Charpontier, Arsène d'Arsonval and many others claimed to be able to detect rays emanating from most substances, including the human body. Physicists Gustave le Bon and P. Audollet and spiritualist Carl Hunter even claimed the discovery as their own, leading to a commission of the Académie des sciences to decide priority.

The "discovery" excited international interest and many physicists worked to replicate the effects. However, notable physicists Lord Kelvin, William Crookes, Otto Lummer and Heinrich Rubens all failed to do so. Following his own failure, US physicist Robert W. Wood was prevailed upon to travel to France to investigate further. His thorough investigations, published in the September 29 1904 edition of Nature, showed that these were a purely subjective phenomenon, with the scientists involved having recorded data that matched their expectations. The incident is used as a cautionary tale among scientists on the dangers of error introduced by experimenter bias.

N rays were cited as an example of pathological science by Irving Langmuir.

External links and references

  • http://skepdic.com/blondlot.html and references therein
  • Klotz, I M (year?) The N-ray affair, Scientific American

Referenced By

Pathological science | René-Prosper Blondlot | Robert W. Wood

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "N rays".

 

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