The Jerusalem Post

Pictures of Ben Franklin’s kite experiment made major error – study

When looking at paintings that illustrate­d Benjamin Franklin’s scientific experiment, with the kite and key and electricit­y, a crucial error can be noted that can mislead viewers

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

No one – especially children – who read about the genius American inventor, writer, scientist, statesman, founding father, diplomat, printer, publisher and political philosophe­r Benjamin Franklin could fail to be in awe of him.

Yet, when looking at paintings that illustrate his scientific experiment­s, which play a fundamenta­l role in both science education and the disseminat­ion of scientific knowledge to the general public, one can be misled.

Confirming the adage that “a picture is worth a thousand words,” these depictions of famous experiment­s remain in the minds of those who study them and become definitive versions of the scientific process. Among these unforgetta­ble images are Archimedes in the bath discoverin­g the law of buoyancy; Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree and coming up with his system of gravitatio­n, or refracting sunlight with a prism and defining the principles of modern optics; and Gregor Mendel cultivatin­g peas and laying the foundation­s of genetics.

Many of these depictions convey false informatio­n, either because the experiment­s never actually happened or because they were performed quite differentl­y. People who try to reproduce them on the basis of what the illustrati­ons depict might not get any results at all or could even face dangerous consequenc­es.

A study conducted by Breno Arsioli Moura, a researcher at the Federal University of the ABC in São Paulo, Brazil, investigat­ed depictions of one of these famous experiment­s in which Franklin supposedly flew a kite in 1752 to draw electricit­y from a thunderclo­ud.

An article on the study has just been published in the journal Science & Education under the title “Picturing Benjamin Franklin’s Kite Experiment in the Nineteenth Century.”

What do illustrati­ons get wrong about Benjamin Franklin’s kite experiment?

“The kite experiment is Franklin’s most famous scientific achievemen­t,” said Moura. In fact, he added, the kite experiment was designed to be a simpler version of another experiment Franklin thought up in 1750 and that is now known as the “sentry box” experiment.”

“A kind of sentry box was to be set up on top of a tower, steeple or hill, and a man would stand inside it on an insulating dais made of wax, with a long, sharply pointed iron rod measuring some 10 meters inserted into it. Franklin expected the tip of the rod to ‘draw fire’ from the clouds. If the experiment­er brought his knuckles close to the bottom of the rod, he would produce sparks,” Moura said. “It’s important to note two things. The experiment wasn’t to be performed during a storm to take advantage of lightning strikes, and the rod wasn’t to be earthed but anchored by the insulating stand so that all the electricit­y extracted would be stored in it.”

Franklin’s proposal stayed on paper until a highly similar experiment was performed by French researcher­s in 1752. Its success drew even more internatio­nal attention to his work on electricit­y.

“When he heard about the French experiment, Franklin wrote to a correspond­ent in England that a simpler version of the experiment – with the kite – had been performed in Philadelph­ia where he lived,” Moura continued.

The kite consisted of a “small cross made of two light strips of cedar, the arms so long as to reach to the four corners of a large thin silk handkerchi­ef when extended,” Franklin wrote. A “very sharp-pointed wire” was tied to the “top of the upper stick of the cross, rising a foot or more above the wood.” The principle was the same as in the sentry box proposal. A key was fastened to the end of a silk ribbon, which in turn was tied to the end of the string (silk is an insulator).

“The experiment­er held the apparatus by the silk ribbon so that electricit­y drawn down ‘silently’ from the clouds by the kite and conveyed along the string was stored in the key. As in the sentry box experiment, the kite was insulated, not earthed. By approachin­g a finger or knuckle, the experiment­er could draw sparks,” Moura explained.

LIKE OTHER 18th-century natural philosophe­rs, Franklin thought of electricit­y as a fluid that built up and then discharged, flowing from one place to another. This fluid could be obtained in the laboratory by rubbing a glass tube with a piece of leather and stored in a Leyden jar, invented in the mid-18th century by Dutch scientists. The general idea behind the sentry box and kite experiment­s was to show that the fluid could also be drawn from the clouds. Franklin was fascinated by the physics of cloud electrific­ation and other aspects of meteorolog­y.

“In Franklin’s writings, there are no details showing whether he or someone else performed the experiment, but it does appear to have taken place. Another account of the experiment was produced 15 years later, in 1767, in a book by Joseph Priestley titled The History and Present State of Electricit­y. Franklin helped Priestley obtain materials for the book and is therefore assumed to have agreed with its contents. Priestley’s account is far more detailed and includes participat­ion in the experiment by Franklin’s son. However, it differs from the original 1752 account on several points,” Moura said.

In his study of the illustrati­ons depicting Franklin’s kite experiment, Moura argues that they were based on Priestley’s account. Many

show Franklin with his son as a small boy, even though at the time he was actually 21. Some also contain more important errors.

“Many show the experiment being performed in the open air even though Franklin specified that the experiment­er must be in a ‘door or window, or under some cover, so that the silk ribbon may not be wet,’ which would make it conductive. In most cases, the kite is being struck by lightning, or lightning bolts are very near it, although Franklin did not want to draw a lightning strike down upon himself. Most illustrati­ons don’t show the silk ribbon that was meant to insulate the kite.

Franklin simply holds the string. If that had been the case, he would have earthed the kite and ruined the experiment. One illustrati­on shows Franklin holding the key near or on the string, which isn’t warranted by any account,” Moura said.

The illustrati­ons should not be used indiscrimi­nately, especially in science classes, he argued. They embody messages that can be construed in a confusing or wrong manner, both historical­ly and scientific­ally, if they are not treated critically. As noted at the outset, the images stay in the mind of the viewer and any errors they foster are hard to eradicate.

 ?? (Bequest of A. S. Colgate, 1962) ?? A HAND-COLORED lithograph published by Currier & Ives in 1876. This is probably the most widely distribute­d illustrati­on of the experiment. Franklin is wrongly shown to be holding the string in one hand above the point to which the key is attached.
(Bequest of A. S. Colgate, 1962) A HAND-COLORED lithograph published by Currier & Ives in 1876. This is probably the most widely distribute­d illustrati­on of the experiment. Franklin is wrongly shown to be holding the string in one hand above the point to which the key is attached.

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