Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
Sign in
Books Books
" The electromagnetic theory of light, as proposed by him is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation. "
Proceedings of the Royal Society. Section A, Mathematical and Physical Science - Page ix
by Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1908
Full view - About this book

Light Visible and Invisible: A Series of Lectures Delivered at the Royal ...

Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1897 - 518 pages
...theory of light, as proposed by him, is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data...to calculate the velocity of propagation." Maxwell then sets out new equations to express the relations between the electric and magnetic displacements...
Full view - About this book

Michael Faraday: His Life and Work

Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1898 - 338 pages
...theory/ of light, as proposed by him, is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper,* except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation. During the rest of this year (1846) and the next Faraday did very little research, though he continued...
Full view - About this book

The Life of William Thomson, Baron Kelvin of Largs, Volume 2

Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1910 - 848 pages
...light, as proposed by him (Faraday), is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation " (Phil. Trans, civ. p. 466). and the result gave a value of 2-93 x io10 cm. per second. But in the...
Full view - About this book

Revolution in Science

I. Bernard Cohen - 1985 - 742 pages
...light, as proposed by him [Faraday], is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation." I agree with CWF Everitt that Maxwell's remarks about Faraday's "Thoughts on Ray Vibrations" may be...
Limited preview - About this book

The Scientific Letters and Papers of James Clerk Maxwell: Volume 1, 1846-1862

James Clerk Maxwell - 1990 - 836 pages
...paper 'Thoughts on ray-vibrations', Phil. Mag., ser. 3, 28 (1846 : 345-50 (= Electricity, 3: 447-52) ; 'The electromagnetic theory of light, as proposed...no data to calculate the velocity of propagation.' Compare Kohlrausch and Weber. ' Elektrodynamische Maassbestimmungen insbesondere Zuruckfuhrung der...
Limited preview - About this book

The Tests of Time: Readings in the Development of Physical Theory

Lisa M. Dolling, Arthur F. Gianelli, Glenn N. Statile - 2003 - 762 pages
...theory of light, as proposed by him is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation. The general equations are then applied to the calculation of the coefficients of mutual induction of...
Limited preview - About this book

History of Wireless

T. K. Sarkar, Robert Mailloux, Arthur A. Oliner, M. Salazar-Palma, Dipak L. Sengupta - 2006 - 577 pages
...theory of light, as proposed by him, is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation. 5.3 MAXWELL'S ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY OF LIGHT In his treatise Electricity and Magnetism, Maxwell developed...
Limited preview - About this book

Proceedings of the Royal Society. Section A, Mathematical and Physical Science

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1908 - 640 pages
...distinctly set forth by Professor Faraday in his ' Thoughts on* ' Scientific Papers,' vol. 1, p. 507. Eay Vibrations/ ' Phil. Mag.,' 1864. The electromagnetic...appear from his correspondence with Stokes, recently published-^ This is the suitable place to insert a summing up of his own ideas on this subject by Thomson,...
Full view - About this book

Albany Medical Annals, Volume 31

1910 - 752 pages
...theory of light, as proposed by him, is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develop in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation." These speculations of Faraday's were in part the result of his intuitive perception of the doctrine...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF