The explanation of all phenomena of electromagnetic attraction or repulsion, and of electromagnetic induction, is to be looked for simply in the inertia and pressure of the matter of which the motions constitute heat. Whether this matter is or is not... Reprint of Papers on Electrostatics and Magnetism - Page 418by William Thomson Baron Kelvin - 1872 - 592 pagesFull view - About this book
| American Philosophical Society - 1880 - 728 pages
...phenomena ; Faraday discovered the magnetic influence upon light and Sir William Thomson stated that "the explanation of all phenomena of electromagnetic...repulsion, and of electromagnetic induction is to he looked for simply in the inertia and pressure of the matter of which the motions constitute heat... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1881 - 508 pages
...magnetic axis of a magnetized body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta of these motions as the definite measure of the " magnetic moment." The...the spaces between molecular nuclei, or is itself moleuularly grouped ; or whether all matter is continuous, and molecular heterogeneousness consists... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1881 - 544 pages
...magnetic axis of a magnetized body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta of these motions as the definite measure of the " magnetic moment." The...the spaces between molecular nuclei, or is itself moleuularly grouped ; or whether all matter is continuous, and molecular heterogeneousness consists... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1881 - 544 pages
...magnetic axis of a magnetized body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta of these motions as the definite measure of the " magnetic moment." The...repulsion, and of electromagnetic induction, is to he looked for simply in the inertia and pressure of the matter of which the motions constitute heat.... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1882 - 718 pages
...phenomena ; Faraday discovered the magnetic influence upon light and Sir William Thomson stated that "the explanation of all phenomena of electromagnetic...of the matter of which the motions constitute heat ;" Maxwell* considered magnetic force as the effect of the centrifugal force of vortices, electromagnetic... | |
| Éleuthère Élie Nicolas Mascart, Jules François Joubert - 1883 - 696 pages
...axis of a magnetised body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta as the definite measure of ' magnetic moment' The explanation of all phenomena...repulsion, and of electromagnetic induction, is to be Ipoked for simply in the inertia and pressure of the matter of which the motions constitute heat Whether... | |
| William Peddie - 1896 - 608 pages
...measure of the "magnetic moment." The explanation of all phenomena of electro-magnetic attraction and repulsion, and of electro-magnetic induction, is to...not electricity, whether it is a continuous fluid mterpermeating the spaces between molecular nuclei, or is itself molecularly grouped ; or whether all... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1904 - 568 pages
...magnetic axis of a magnetized body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta of these motions as the definite measure of the " magnetic moment." The...not electricity, whether it is a continuous fluid interpermt-aUttf ii spaces between molecular nuclei, or ia itself molecu laxly gr<i .;• or whether... | |
| Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1910 - 502 pages
...moment. " The explanation," he wrote, " of all phenomena of electromagnetic attraction or repulsion, or of electromagnetic induction, is to be looked for simply in the inertia or pressure of the matter of which the motions constitute heat. Whether this matter is or is not electricity,... | |
| James Clerk Maxwell - 1954 - 548 pages
...magnetic axis of a magnetized body, and suggests the resultant moment of momenta of these motions as the definite measure of the '• magnetic moment." The explanation of all phenomena of electro -magnetic attraction or repulsion, and of electro-magnetic induction, is to be looked for simply... | |
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