Page:A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism - Volume 1.djvu/446

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404
MEASUREMENT OF RESISTANCE.
[351.

original coils and , and in this way we can continually increase the accuracy of the comparison.

The adjustment by means of the wire with sliding contact piece is more quickly made than by means of a resistance box, and it is capable of continuous variation.

The battery must never be introduced instead of the galvanometer into the wire with a sliding contact, for the passage of a powerful current at the point of contact would injure the surface of the wire. Hence this arrangement is adapted for the case in which the resistance of the galvanometer is greater than that of the battery.

On the Measurement of Small Resistances.

351.] When a short and thick conductor is introduced into a circuit its resistance is so small compared with the resistance occasioned by unavoidable faults in the connexions, such as want of contact or imperfect soldering, that no correct value of the

Fig. 33.

resistance can be deduced from experiments made in the way described above.

The object of such experiments is generally to determine the specific resistance of the substance, and it is resorted to in cases when the substance cannot be obtained in the form of a long thin wire, or when the resistance to transverse as well as to longitudinal conduction has to be measured.

Fig. 34.

Sir W. Thomson,[1] has described a method applicable to such cases, which we may take as an example of a system of nine conductors.

  1. Proc. R. S., June 6, 1861.