One of the greatest experimental scientists of all time, Michael Faraday  (1791-1867) developed the first electric motor, electric generator, and  dynamo--essentially creating the science of electrochemistry. This  book, the result of six lectures he delivered at London's Royal  Institution, concerns another form of energy--candlelight. Faraday  titled the lectures "The Chemical History of a Candle," choosing the  subject because, as he explained, "There is not a law under which any  part of this universe is governed which does not come into play and is  not touched upon [during the time a candle burns]." That statement is  the foundation for a book that explores the components, function, and  weight of the atmosphere; the function of a candle wick; capillary  attraction; the carbon content in oxygen and living bodies; the  production of carbon dioxide from coal gas and sugar; the properties of  carbonic acid; respiration and its analogy to the burning of a candle;  and much more. Unabridged republication of A Course of Six Lectures on  the Chemical History of a Candle, originally published by Chautauqua  Press, New York, n.d. New Introduction.
A Chemical History of a Candle
Labels: Science