The results which I had by this time obtained with magnets led me to believe that the battery current through one wire, did, in reality, induce a similar current through the other wire, but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the... Series 1-14 [Phil. trans., 1831-38] 1839 - Page 3by Michael Faraday - 1839Full view - About this book
| 1870 - 624 pages
...battery ' current through the one wire did, in reality, induce a similar ' current through the other, but that it continued for an instant ' only, and partook more of the nature of the electric wave ' from a common Leyden jar than of the current from a Voltaic ' battery.' The short intermittent... | |
| Henry Minchin Noad - 1861 - 108 pages
...other helix could be perceived. The force of the induced current, which partook of the nature of an electrical wave, passed through from the shock of a common Leyden jar, was greater on making than on breaking contact; the direction of the current was, on making contact,... | |
| 1868 - 346 pages
...the battery current through the one wire did in reality induce a similar current through the other; but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the nature of the electric wave from a common Leyden jar than of the current from a voltaic battery." The momentary currents... | |
| John Tyndall - 1868 - 192 pages
...the battery current through the one wire did in reality induce a similar current through the other ; but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the nature of the electric wave from a common Leyden jar than of the current from a voltaic battery.' The momentary currents... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 636 pages
...the battery current through the one wire did in reality induce -a similar current through the other ; but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the nature of the electric wave from a common Leyden jar than of the current from a voltaic battery." The momentary currents... | |
| Thomas Ruggles Pynchon - 1874 - 638 pages
...that it continued for an instant tnly, and partook more of the nature of an electrical wave paired through from the shock of a common Leyden jar, than of the current from a voltaic batter}-, and therefore might mnpnctize a steel needle, though it scarcely affected the galvanometer.... | |
| Thomas Ruggles Pynchon - 1874 - 638 pages
...this time obtained with magnets led me to believe that the battery current through one wire did in reality induce a similar current through the other wire, but that it continued for an instant cnly, and partook more of the nature of an electrical wave parsed through from the shock of a common... | |
| Leslie Stephen - 1889 - 474 pages
...the battery current through the one wire did in reality induce a similar current through the other, but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the nature of the electric wave from a common Leyden jar, than of the current from a voltaic battery.' The momentary... | |
| John Tyndall - 1890 - 206 pages
...the battery current through the one wire did in reality induce a similar current through the other; but that it continued for an instant only, and partook more of the nature of the electric ware from a common Leyden jar than of the current from a voltaic battery.' The momentary currents... | |
| Florian Cajori - 1899 - 344 pages
...phenomenon in these experiments was that the induced effect was not continuous; it was instantaneous "and partook more of the nature of the electrical...through from the shock of a common Leyden jar, than the current from a voltaic battery." * These epoch-making results threw light upon the mysterious experiment... | |
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