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The pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria

Chapter 49: 45. A Jet of Steam supporting a Sphere.
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About This Book

A systematic practical handbook of machines and demonstrations that uses air, steam, heat, and water to produce mechanical effects. The text gives clear descriptions, construction details, and diagrams for siphons, valves, pumps, fountains, jets, self‑acting mechanisms, and ritual or theatrical contrivances driven by pressure and temperature changes. Explanations focus on the mechanical principles behind pneumatic and hydraulic behaviors and on ways to control flow and timing, with numbered propositions that pair instructional steps with illustrative figures for building and operating each apparatus.

45. A Jet of Steam supporting a Sphere.

Balls are supported aloft in the following manner. Underneath a cauldron (fig. 45), containing water and closed at the top, a fire is lighted. From the covering a tube runs upwards, at the extremity of which, and communicating with it, is a hollow hemisphere. If we put a light ball into the hemisphere, it will be found that the steam from the cauldron, rising through the tube, lifts the ball so that it is suspended.