Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I ELECTRIC DISPLACEMENT AND FARADAY TUBES OF FORCE
- CHAPTER II PASSAGE OF ELECTRICITY THROUGH GASES
- CHAPTER III CONJUGATE FUNCTIONS
- CHAPTER IV ELECTRICAL WAVES AND OSCILLATIONS
- CHAPTER V ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
- CHAPTER VI DISTRIBUTION OF RAPIDLY ALTERNATING CURRENTS
- CHAPTER VII ELECTROMOTIVE INTENSITY IN MOVING BODIES
- APPENDIX: The Electrolysis of Steam
- INDEX
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I ELECTRIC DISPLACEMENT AND FARADAY TUBES OF FORCE
- CHAPTER II PASSAGE OF ELECTRICITY THROUGH GASES
- CHAPTER III CONJUGATE FUNCTIONS
- CHAPTER IV ELECTRICAL WAVES AND OSCILLATIONS
- CHAPTER V ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
- CHAPTER VI DISTRIBUTION OF RAPIDLY ALTERNATING CURRENTS
- CHAPTER VII ELECTROMOTIVE INTENSITY IN MOVING BODIES
- APPENDIX: The Electrolysis of Steam
- INDEX
Summary
In the twenty years which have elapsed since the first appearance of Maxwell's Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism great progress has been made in these sciences. This progress has been largely—perhaps it would not be too much to say mainly—due to the influence of the views set forth in that Treatise, to the value of which it offers convincing testimony.
In the following work I have endeavoured to give an account of some recent electrical researches, experimental as well as theoretical, in the hope that it may assist students to gain some acquaintance with the recent progress of Electricity and yet retain Maxwell's Treatise as the source from which they learn the great principles of the science. I have adopted exclusively Maxwell's theory, and have not attempted to discuss the consequences which would follow from any other view of electrical action. I have assumed throughout the equations of the Electromagnetic Field given by Maxwell in the ninth chapter of the second volume of his Treatise.
The first chapter of this work contains an account of a method of regarding the Electric Field, which is geometrical and physical rather than analytical. I have been induced to dwell on this because I have found that students, especially those who commence the subject after a long course of mathematical studies, have a great tendency to regard the whole of Maxwell's theory as a matter of the solution of certain differential equations, and to dispense with any attempt to form for themselves a mental picture of the physical processes which accompany the phenomena they are investigating.
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- Information
- Notes on Recent Researches in Electricity and MagnetismIntended as a Sequel to Professor Clerk-Maxwell's Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, pp. v - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1893