The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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The inversion of the images.  
All the images of objects which pass through a window [glass pane]  
from the free outer air to the air confined within walls, are seen  
on the opposite side; and an object which moves in the outer air  
from east to west will seem in its shadow, on the wall which is  
lighted by this confined air, to have an opposite motion.  
7
7.  
THE PRINCIPLE ON WHICH THE IMAGES OF BODIES PASS IN BETWEEN THE  
MARGINS OF THE OPENINGS BY WHICH THEY ENTER.  
What difference is there in the way in which images pass through  
narrow openings and through large openings, or in those which pass  
by the sides of shaded bodies? By moving the edges of the opening  
through which the images are admitted, the images of immovable  
objects are made to move. And this happens, as is shown in the 9th  
which demonstrates: [Footnote 11: per la 9a che dicie. When  
Leonardo refers thus to a number it serves to indicate marginal  
diagrams; this can in some instances be distinctly proved. The ninth  
sketch on the page W. L. 145 b corresponds to the middle sketch of  
the three reproduced.] the images of any object are all everywhere,  
and all in each part of the surrounding air. It follows that if one  
of the edges of the hole by which the images are admitted to a dark  
chamber is moved it cuts off those rays of the image that were in  
7
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Page
75 76 77 78 79

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225