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xii | CONTENTS |
Chapter III.
Induction of Electric Currents..
528. Faraday's discovery. Nature of his methods | 162 |
529. The method of this treatise founded on that of Faraday | 163 |
530. Phenomena of magneto-electric induction | 164 |
531. General law of induction of currents | 166 |
532. Illustrations of the direction of induced currents | 166 |
533. Induction by the motion of the earth | 167 |
534. The electromotive force due to induction does not depend on the material of the conductor | 168 |
535. It has no tendency to move the conductor | 168 |
536. Felici's experiments on the laws of induction | 168 |
537. Use of the galvanometer to determine the time-integral of the electromotive force | 170 |
538. Conjugate positions of two coils | 171 |
539. Mathematical expression for the total current of induction | 172 |
540. Faraday's conception of an electrotonic state | 173 |
541. His method of stating the laws of induction with reference to the lines of magnetic force | 174 |
542. The law of Lenz, and Neumann's theory of induction | 176 |
543. Helmholtz's deduction of induction from the mechanical action of currents by the principle of conservation of energy | 176 |
544. Thomson's application of the same principle | 178 |
545. Weber's contributions to electrical science | 178 |
Chapter IV.
Induction of a Current on Itself..
546. Shock given by an electromagnet | 180 |
547. Apparent momentum of electricity | 180 |
548. Difference between this case and that of a tube containing a current of water | 181 |
549. If there is momentum it is not that of the moving electricity | 181 |
550. Nevertheless the phenomena are exactly analogous to those of momentum | 181 |
551. An electric current has energy, which may be called electrokinetic energy | 182 |
552. This leads us to form a dynamical theory of electric currents | 182 |