Faraday as a Discoverer

Faraday as a Discoverer

by John Tyndall
Faraday as a Discoverer

Faraday as a Discoverer

by John Tyndall

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Overview

The experimental researches of Faraday are so voluminous, their descriptions are so detailed, and their wealth of illustration is so great, as to render it a heavy labour to master them. The multiplication of proofs, necessary and interesting when the new truths had to be established, are however less needful now when these truths have become household words in science. I have therefore tried in the following pages to compress the body, without injury to the spirit, of these imperishable investigations, and to present them in a form which should be convenient and useful to the student of the present day. While I write, the volumes of the Life of Faraday by Dr. Bence Jones have reached my hands. To them the reader must refer for an account of Faraday's private relations. A hasty glance at the work shows me that the reverent devotion of the biographer has turned to admirable account the materials at his command. The work of Dr. Bence Jones enables me to correct a statement regarding Wollaston's and Faraday's respective relations to the discovery of Magnetic Rotation. Wollaston's idea was to make the wire carrying a current rotate round its own axis: an idea afterwards realised by the celebrated Ampere. Faraday's discovery was to make the wire carrying the current revolve round the pole of a magnet and the reverse.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781514771952
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 06/30/2015
Pages: 100
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.21(d)

About the Author

John Tyndall FRS was an important 19th-century Irish physicist. His scientific prominence developed in the 1850s as a result of his research into diamagnetism. Later, he produced discoveries in the fields of infrared radiation and air physical characteristics, establishing the link between atmospheric CO2 and what is now known as the greenhouse effect in 1859. Tyndall also authored over a dozen science books that introduced a large number of people to cutting-edge 19th-century experimental physics. From 1853 to 1887, he taught physics at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in London. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1868. Tyndall was born at Leighlinbridge, Co. Carlow, Ireland. His father was a local police constable, descended from Gloucestershire emigrants who arrived in southeast Ireland around 1670. Tyndall attended the local schools (Ballinabranna Primary School) in County Carlow until his late teens and was most likely an assistant teacher near the conclusion of his tenure there. Technical drawing and mathematics were particularly important subjects in school, with some applications to land surveying. In his late teens, he was engaged as a draftsman by the Ordnance Survey of Ireland in 1839, and he later went to the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain in 1842.

Table of Contents

1. Parentage; 2. Early research; 3. Discovery of magneto-electricity; 4. Points of character; 5. Identities of electricity; 6. Laws of electro-chemical composition; 7. Origin of power in the voltaic pile; 8. Researches on frictional electricity; 9. Rest needed; 10. Magnetization of light; 11. Discovery of diamagnetism; 12. Supplementary remarks; 13. Magnetism of flame and gases; 14. Speculations; 15. Unity and convertibility of natural forces; 16. Summary; 17. Illustrations of character.
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