Bennet s electroscope consisted of a pair of very thin narrow leaves of gold hung from a conducting rod.
A gold leaf electroscope.
Electroscopes are placed in a glass case to diminish the effects of wind and ions in the air.
Abraham bennet a clergyman and man of science first described the instrument in philosophical transactions in 1787.
Two gold leaves are also attached at the bottom end of the rod.
It is also determine the type of charge.
It consists of a vertical metal rod which has two parallel strips of thin flexible gold leaf hang to it.
This instrument is used for the detection of charge and measuring static electricity.
The gold leaf electroscope.
It is a simple device to detect the presence of charge on any body.
This is an instrument for detecting and measuring static electricity or voltage.
As you can see from the picture there is a metal conductor sphere and a metal rod attached to this sphere.
The mouth of the jar is sealed.
It consists of an evacuated glass jar placed on a nonconducting surface like wood.
Invented by abraham bennet in 1787 this electroscope is comparatively more sensitive than a pith ball one.
The whole of this part of the electroscope is insulated from the body of the instrument.
It works on the principle that the like charges repel each other.
To prevent the gold leaf from drafts of air it is kept in a glass bottle.
It consists of a vertical metal rod usually brass from the end of which hang two parallel strips of thin flexible gold leaf a disk or ball terminal is attached to the top of the rod where the charge to be.
Gold leaf electroscope was developed by abraham bennet in the year 1787 which is more sensitive than pith ball electroscope.
Gold leaves are at the bottom of the rod.
The gold leaf electroscope was developed in 1787 by british clergyman and physicist abraham bennet as a more sensitive instrument than pith ball or straw blade electroscopes then in use.
Metal rod has a metal knob at its top.
It consists of a metal rod which is fitted in an insulating box.
A metal disc is connected to a narrow metal plate and a thin piece of gold leaf is fixed to the plate.
Gold leaf electroscope.
The gold leaf electroscope like the one illustrated here first appeared in the latter part of the 18th century.
It consists of a vertical conductive rod with a metal ball on the top and two thin and parallel strips of gold leaf attached at the bottom.