Herstmonceux sunshine recorder

Sunshine recorder with lens and 2 record cards. On the base is inscribed "CASELLA LONDON 284/48". Used at the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux.

Sunshine recorders are positioned on a local meridian (north-south line) and record the number of hours of sunshine. Each day, a new card strip is placed into the grooves behind the glass sphere. As the Sun crosses the sky, the sphere acts as a magnifying lens, burning a line into the card that’s specially designed to scorch rather than burst into flames. The strip varies in length and position according to the seasons.
The idea was first devised by John Francis Campbell in 1853 and was later developed by the physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes in 1879. Although simple to use and easy to maintain, the instruments are susceptible to variable results and need human intervention to replace the card strip each day, hence modern meteorological observatories rely on electronic sensors instead.

Object Details

ID: AST0767
Collection: Astronomical and navigational instruments
Type: Sunshine recorder
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Casella
Date made: 1948
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Overall: 180 mm x 210 mm x 220 mm
Parts: Herstmonceux sunshine recorder