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APPENDIX L - ELECTRIC WAVES AND VIBRATIONS IN A SUBMARINE TELEGRAPH WIRE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2012

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Summary

§ 1. To simplify our problem, by avoiding the interesting subject of alternating electric currents of electricity in a solid conductor dealt with in §§ 9, 19, 29—35 of Art. cii. of my Mathematical and Physical Papers, Vol. III., I suppose for the present the central conductor and the surrounding sheath to be exceedingly thin copper tubes; so thin that the electric current carried by each is uniformly distributed through its substance, with the highest frequency of alternation which we shall have to consider. To simplify farther, by avoiding the exceedingly complex question of electric currents in the water above the cable and wet ground below it, I for the present suppose the outer sheath to be perfectly insulated. This supposition will make exceedingly little difference in respect to the solution of our problem for such frequencies of alternation as are used in submarine signalling; but it makes a vast difference and simplification for the very high frequencies, up to those of the vibrations constituting light, which must be considered. For brevity I shall call the system of two conductors, with air or gutta-percha or other insulating material between them, the cable. For simplicity we shall suppose the cable to be laid straight; and shall specify any place in the cable by x, its distance from any chosen point of reference O in the axis of the inner conductor.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1904

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