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ART. 140 - Notes on Electricity and Magnetism. II. The Self-Induction and Resistance of Compound Conductors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

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Summary

In his inaugural address to the Society of Telegraph Engineers, and in a subsequent communication to the Royal Society, Prof. Hughes has described a series of interesting experiments, which have attracted a good deal of attention in consequence both of the official position and known experimental skill of the author. Some of the conclusions which he advances can hardly be sustained, and have met with severe criticism at the hands of Weber, Heaviside, and others. There are certain other points raised by him, or suggested by his work, which seem worthy of consideration; and I propose in the present paper to give an account of some investigations, mainly experimental, carried on during the summer months, which may, I hope, tend to settle some controverted questions.

Prof. Hughes's first apparatus consists of a Wheatstone's quadrilateral, with a telephone in the bridge, one of the sides of the quadrilateral being the wire or coil under examination, and the other three being the parts into which a single German-silver wire is divided by two sliding contacts. If the battery-branch be closed, and a suitable interrupter be introduced into the telephone-branch, balance may be obtained by shifting the contacts. Provided that the interrupter introduces no electromotive force of its own, the balance indicates the proportionality of the four resistances.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 551 - 578
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1900

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