|
| |||||||||
|
| |||||||||
|
| |||||||||
|
| Introduction |
Myths and Origins |
The First magnetic Devices |
Animal Magnetism | | The Electromagnetic Revolution | Understanding at Last! | Magnetic Recording | Modern Magnets | |
|||||||||
|
| |||||||||
| |||||||||
|
| |||||||||
The responsewas electric, French and British scientists leading the competition for discoveries. The French Academy of Science boasted a wealth of talent which has never been surpassed- Poisson, Fresnel, Fourier, Laplace and particularly active in this new field Biot, Savart, Arago, and Ampère. Arago's experiments showed that current acts like an ordinary magnet, attracting iron and magnetizing needles. The following week Ampère read a paper in which he suggested that internal electrical currents were responsible for the existence of ferromagnetism and that these currents flowed perpendicular to the axis of the magnet. He suggestd to Arago that a current in a solenoid should show stronger magnetizing effects than that in a single wire and they jointly performed the successful experiment which Arago reported on 6 November 1820. Michael Faraday, who was regarded as the greatest experimental genius of his century, built his electromagnet at the Royal Institution in London with a link from an anchor chain and with it discovered both the law of electromagnetic induction, and the link between light and magnetism, the magneto-optic Faraday effect, which bears his name. He studied the magnetic properties of a host of ordinary materials and found that all are either ferromagnetic, diamagnetic or paramagnetic, although usually to a very small degree. He developed the concept of a magnetic field, and represented it by lines of force.
The harmonic solutions of the equations are light and other electromagnetic waves like the radio waves discovered in 1888 by H.R. Hertz. These four equations epitomize the electromagnetic revolution. Richard Feynman claimed that "ten thousand years from now, there can be little doubt that the most significant event of the 19th century will be judged as Maxwell's discovery of the laws of electrodynamics" The fruits of the electromagnetic revolution have been the electrification of the planet and global communications of images and information at the speed of light. |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||