Discovery of Magneto-electricity:
Explanation of Argo’s
magnetism of rotation:
Terrestrial magneto-electric
induction: The
extra current.
The work thus referred to, though
sufficient of itself to secure no mean scientific
reputation, forms but the vestibule of Faraday’s
achievements. He had been engaged within these
walls for eighteen years. During part of the
time he had drunk in knowledge from Davy, and during
the remainder he continually exercised his capacity
for independent inquiry. In 1831 we have him
at the climax of his intellectual strength, forty
years of age, stored with knowledge and full of original
power. Through reading, lecturing, and experimenting,
he had become thoroughly familiar with electrical
science: he saw where light was needed and expansion
possible. The phenomena of ordinary electric induction
belonged, as it were, to the alphabet of his knowledge:
he knew that under ordinary circumstances the presence
of an electrified body was sufficient to excite, by
induction, an unelectrified body. He knew that
the wire which carried an electric current was an electrified
body, and still that all attempts had failed to make
it excite in other wires a state similar to its own.
What was the reason of this failure?
Faraday never could work from the experiments of others,
however clearly described. He knew well that
from every experiment issues a kind of radiation, luminous
in different degrees to different minds, and he hardly
trusted himself to reason upon an experiment that
he had not seen. In the autumn of 1831 he began
to repeat the experiments with electric currents,
which, up to that time, had produced no positive result.
And here, for the sake of younger inquirers, if not
for the sake of us all, it is worth while to dwell
for a moment on a power which Faraday possessed in
an extraordinary degree. He united vast strength
with perfect flexibility. His momentum was that
of a river, which combines weight and directness with
the ability to yield to the flexures of its bed.
The intentness of his vision in any direction did
not apparently diminish his power of perception in
other directions; and when he attacked a subject,
expecting results he had the faculty of keeping his
mind alert, so that results different from those which
he expected should not escape him through preoccupation.
He began his experiments ‘on
the induction of electric currents’ by composing
a helix of two insulated wires which were wound side
by side round the same wooden cylinder. One of
these wires he connected with a voltaic battery of
ten cells, and the other with a sensitive galvanometer.
When connection with the battery was made, and while
the current flowed, no effect whatever was observed
at the galvanometer. But he never accepted an
experimental result, until he had applied to it the
utmost power at his command. He raised his battery
from 10 cells to 120 cells, but without avail.
The current flowed calmly through the battery wire
without producing, during its flow, any sensible result
upon the galvanometer.
‘During its flow,’ and
this was the time when an effect was expected-but
here Faraday’s power of lateral vision, separating,
as it were, from the line of expectation, came into
play-he noticed that a feeble movement
of the needle always occurred at the moment when he
made contact with the battery; that the needle would
afterwards return to its former position and remain
quietly there unaffected by the flowing current.
At the moment, however, when the circuit was interrupted
the needle again moved, and in a direction opposed
to that observed on the completion of the circuit.
This result, and others of a similar
kind, led him to the conclusion ’that 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 thus generated were called
induced currents, while the current which generated
them was called the inducing current. It was immediately
proved that the current generated at making the circuit
was always opposed in direction to its generator,
while that developed on the rupture of the circuit
coincided in direction with the inducing current.
It appeared as if the current on its first rush through
the primary wire sought a purchase in the secondary
one, and, by a kind of kick, impelled backward through
the latter an electric wave, which subsided as soon
as the primary current was fully established.
Faraday, for a time, believed that
the secondary wire, though quiescent when the primary
current had been once established, was not in its
natural condition, its return to that condition being
declared by the current observed at breaking the circuit.
He called this hypothetical state of the wire the
electro-tonic state: he afterwards abandoned
this hypothesis, but seemed to return to it in later
life. The term electro-tonic is also preserved
by Professor Du Bois Reymond to express a certain
electric condition of the nerves, and Professor Clerk
Maxwell has ably defined and illustrated the hypothesis
in the Tenth Volume of the ‘Transactions of
the Cambridge Philosophical Society.’
The mere approach of a wire forming
a closed curve to a second wire through which a voltaic
current flowed was then shown by Faraday to be sufficient
to arouse in the neutral wire an induced current, opposed
in direction to the inducing current; the withdrawal
of the wire also generated a current having the same
direction as the inducing current; those currents
existed only during the time of approach or withdrawal,
and when neither the primary nor the secondary wire
was in motion, no matter how close their proximity
might be, no induced current was generated.
Faraday has been called a purely inductive
philosopher. A great deal of nonsense is, I fear,
uttered in this land of England about induction and
deduction. Some profess to befriend the one, some
the other, while the real vocation of an investigator,
like Faraday, consists in the incessant marriage of
both. He was at this time full of the theory of
Ampere, and it cannot be doubted that numbers of his
experiments were executed merely to test his deductions
from that theory. Starting from the discovery
of Oersted, the illustrious French philosopher had
shown that all the phenomena of magnetism then known
might be reduced to the mutual attractions and repulsions
of electric currents. Magnetism had been produced
from electricity, and Faraday, who all his life long
entertained a strong belief in such reciprocal actions,
now attempted to effect the evolution of electricity
from magnetism. Round a welded iron ring he placed
two distinct coils of covered wire, causing the coils
to occupy opposite halves of the ring. Connecting
the ends of one of the coils with a galvanometer,
he found that the moment the ring was magnetised,
by sending a current through the other coil, the galvanometer
needle whirled round four or five times in succession.
The action, as before, was that of a pulse, which
vanished immediately. On interrupting the circuit,
a whirl of the needle in the opposite direction occurred.
It was only during the time of magnetization or demagnetization
that these effects were produced. The induced
currents declared a change of condition only, and
they vanished the moment the act of magnetization
or demagnetization was complete.
The effects obtained with the welded
ring were also obtained with straight bars of iron.
Whether the bars were magnetised by the electric current,
or were excited by the contact of permanent steel magnets,
induced currents were always generated during the rise,
and during the subsidence of the magnetism. The
use of iron was then abandoned, and the same effects
were obtained by merely thrusting a permanent steel
magnet into a coil of wire. A rush of electricity
through the coil accompanied the insertion of the
magnet; an equal rush in the opposite direction accompanied
its withdrawal. The precision with which Faraday
describes these results, and the completeness with
which he defines the boundaries of his facts, are
wonderful. The magnet, for example, must not be
passed quite through the coil, but only half through;
for if passed wholly through, the needle is stopped
as by a blow, and then he shows how this blow results
from a reversal of the electric wave in the helix.
He next operated with the powerful permanent magnet
of the Royal Society, and obtained with it, in an
exalted degree, all the foregoing phenomena.
And now he turned the light of these
discoveries upon the darkest physical phenomenon of
that day. Arago had discovered, in 1824, that
a disk of non-magnetic metal had the power of bringing
a vibrating magnetic needle suspended over it rapidly
to rest; and that on causing the disk to rotate the
magnetic needle rotated along with it. When both
were quiescent, there was not the slightest measurable
attraction or repulsion exerted between the needle
and the disk; still when in motion the disk was competent
to drag after it, not only a light needle, but a heavy
magnet. The question had been probed and investigated
with admirable skill both by Arago and Ampere, and
Poisson had published a theoretic memoir on the subject;
but no cause could be assigned for so extraordinary
an action. It had also been examined in this country
by two celebrated men, Mr. Babbage and Sir John Herschel;
but it still remained a mystery. Faraday always
recommended the suspension of judgment in cases of
doubt. ‘I have always admired,’ he
says, ’the prudence and philosophical reserve
shown by M. Arago in resisting the temptation to give
a theory of the effect he had discovered, so long
as he could not devise one which was perfect in its
application, and in refusing to assent to the imperfect
theories of others.’ Now, however, the
time for theory had come. Faraday saw mentally
the rotating disk, under the operation of the magnet,
flooded with his induced currents, and from the known
laws of interaction between currents and magnets he
hoped to deduce the motion observed by Arago.
That hope he realised, showing by actual experiment
that when his disk rotated currents passed through
it, their position and direction being such as must,
in accordance with the established laws of electro-magnetic
action, produce the observed rotation.
Introducing the edge of his disk between
the poles of the large horseshoe magnet of the Royal
Society, and connecting the axis and the edge of the
disk, each by a wire with a galvanometer, he obtained,
when the disk was turned round, a constant flow of
electricity. The direction of the current was
determined by the direction of the motion, the current
being reversed when the rotation was reversed.
He now states the law which rules the production of
currents in both disks and wires, and in so doing
uses, for the first time, a phrase which has since
become famous. When iron filings are scattered
over a magnet, the particles of iron arrange themselves
in certain determinate lines called magnetic curves.
In 1831, Faraday for the first time called these curves
’lines of magnetic force’; and he showed
that to produce induced currents neither approach
to nor withdrawal from a magnetic source, or centre,
or pole, was essential, but that it was only necessary
to cut appropriately the lines of magnetic force.
Faraday’s first paper on Magneto-electric Induction,
which I have here endeavoured to condense, was read
before the Royal Society on the 24th of November,
1831.
On January 12, 1832, he communicated
to the Royal Society a second paper on Terrestrial
Magneto-electric Induction, which was chosen as the
Bakerian Lecture for the year. He placed a bar
of iron in a coil of wire, and lifting the bar into
the direction of the dipping needle, he excited by
this action a current in the coil. On reversing
the bar, a current in the opposite direction rushed
through the wire. The same effect was produced
when, on holding the helix in the line of dip, a bar
of iron was thrust into it. Here, however, the
earth acted on the coil through the intermediation
of the bar of iron. He abandoned the bar and
simply set a copper plate spinning in a horizontal
plane; he knew that the earth’s lines of magnetic
force then crossed the plate at an angle of about
70degrees. When the plate spun round, the lines
of force were intersected and induced currents generated,
which produced their proper effect when carried from
the plate to the galvanometer. ’When the
plate was in the magnetic meridian, or in any other
plane coinciding with the magnetic dip, then its rotation
produced no effect upon the galvanometer.’
At the suggestion of a mind fruitful
in suggestions of a profound and philosophic character-I
mean that of Sir John Herschel-Mr. Barlow,
of Woolwich, had experimented with a rotating iron
shell. Mr. Christie had also performed an elaborate
series of experiments on a rotating iron disk.
Both of them had found that when in rotation the body
exercised a peculiar action upon the magnetic needle,
deflecting it in a manner which was not observed during
quiescence; but neither of them was aware at the time
of the agent which produced this extraordinary deflection.
They ascribed it to some change in the magnetism of
the iron shell and disk.
But Faraday at once saw that his induced
currents must come into play here, and he immediately
obtained them from an iron disk. With a hollow
brass ball, moreover, he produced the effects obtained
by Mr. Barlow. Iron was in no way necessary:
the only condition of success was that the rotating
body should be of a character to admit of the formation
of currents in its substance: it must, in other
words, be a conductor of electricity. The higher
the conducting power the more copious were the currents.
He now passes from his little brass globe to the globe
of the earth. He plays like a magician with the
earth’s magnetism. He sees the invisible
lines along which its magnetic action is exerted, and
sweeping his wand across these lines evokes this new
power. Placing a simple loop of wire round a
magnetic needle he bends its upper portion to the west:
the north pole of the needle immediately swerves to
the east: he bends his loop to the east, and
the north pole moves to the west. Suspending a
common bar magnet in a vertical position, he causes
it to spin round its own axis. Its pole being
connected with one end of a galvanometer wire, and
its equator with the other end, electricity rushes
round the galvanometer from the rotating magnet.
He remarks upon the ’singular independence’
of the magnetism and the body of the magnet which carries
it. The steel behaves as if it were isolated from
its own magnetism.
And then his thoughts suddenly widen,
and he asks himself whether the rotating earth does
not generate induced currents as it turns round its
axis from west to east. In his experiment with
the twirling magnet the galvanometer wire remained
at rest; one portion of the circuit was in motion
relatively to another portion. But in the case
of the twirling planet the galvanometer wire would
necessarily be carried along with the earth; there
would be no relative motion. What must be the
consequence? Take the case of a telegraph wire
with its two terminal plates dipped into the earth,
and suppose the wire to lie in the magnetic meridian.
The ground underneath the wire is influenced like the
wire itself by the earth’s rotation; if a current
from south to north be generated in the wire, a similar
current from south to north would be generated in the
earth under the wire; these currents would run against
the same terminal plate, and thus neutralise each
other.
This inference appears inevitable,
but his profound vision perceived its possible invalidity.
He saw that it was at least possible that the difference
of conducting power between the earth and the wire
might give one an advantage over the other, and that
thus a residual or differential current might be obtained.
He combined wires of different materials, and caused
them to act in opposition to each other, but found
the combination ineffectual. The more copious
flow in the better conductor was exactly counterbalanced
by the resistance of the worse. Still, though
experiment was thus emphatic, he would clear his mind
of all discomfort by operating on the earth itself.
He went to the round lake near Kensington Palace,
and stretched 480 feet of copper wire, north and south,
over the lake, causing plates soldered to the wire
at its ends to dip into the water. The copper
wire was severed at the middle, and the severed ends
connected with a galvanometer. No effect whatever
was observed. But though quiescent water gave
no effect, moving water might. He therefore worked
at London Bridge for three days during the ebb and
flow of the tide, but without any satisfactory result.
Still he urges, ’Theoretically it seems a necessary
consequence, that where water is flowing there electric
currents should be formed. If a line be imagined
passing from Dover to Calais through the sea, and returning
through the land, beneath the water, to Dover, it traces
out a circuit of conducting matter one part of which,
when the water moves up or down the channel, is cutting
the magnetic curves of the earth, whilst the other
is relatively at rest.... There is every reason
to believe that currents do run in the general direction
of the circuit described, either one way or the other,
according as the passage of the waters is up or down
the channel.’ This was written before the
submarine cable was thought of, and he once informed
me that actual observation upon that cable had been
found to be in accordance with his theoretic deduction.
Three years subsequent to the publication
of these researches-that is to say, on
January 29, 1835-Faraday read before the
Royal Society a paper ’On the influence by induction
of an electric current upon itself.’ A
shock and spark of a peculiar character had been observed
by a young man named William Jenkin, who must have
been a youth of some scientific promise, but who,
as Faraday once informed me, was dissuaded by his
own father from having anything to do with science.
The investigation of the fact noticed by Mr. Jenkin
led Faraday to the discovery of the extra current,
or the current induced in the primary wire itself
at the moments of making and breaking contact, the
phenomena of which he described and illustrated in
the beautiful and exhaustive paper referred to.
Seven-and-thirty years have passed
since the discovery of magneto-electricity; but, if
we except the extra current, until quite recently
nothing of moment was added to the subject. Faraday
entertained the opinion that the discoverer of a great
law or principle had a right to the ’spoils’-this
was his term-arising from its illustration;
and guided by the principle he had discovered, his
wonderful mind, aided by his wonderful ten fingers,
overran in a single autumn this vast domain, and hardly
left behind him the shred of a fact to be gathered
by his successors.
And here the question may arise in
some minds, What is the use of it all? The answer
is, that if man’s intellectual nature thirsts
for knowledge, then knowledge is useful because it
satisfies this thirst. If you demand practical
ends, you must, I think, expand your definition of
the term practical, and make it include all that elevates
and enlightens the intellect, as well as all that
ministers to the bodily health and comfort of men.
Still, if needed, an answer of another kind might be
given to the question ‘What is its use?’
As far as electricity has been applied for medical
purposes, it has been almost exclusively Faraday’s
electricity. You have noticed those lines of wire
which cross the streets of London. It is Faraday’s
currents that speed from place to place through these
wires. Approaching the point of Dungeness, the
mariner sees an unusually brilliant light, and from
the noble phares of La Heve the same light
flashes across the sea. These are Faraday’s
sparks exalted by suitable machinery to sunlike splendour.
At the present moment the Board of Trade and the Brethren
of the Trinity House, as well as the Commissioners
of Northern Lights, are contemplating the introduction
of the Magneto-electric Light at numerous points upon
our coasts; and future generations will be able to
refer to those guiding stars in answer to the question.
What has been the practical use of the labours of
Faraday? But I would again emphatically say, that
his work needs no such justification, and that if
he had allowed his vision to be disturbed by considerations
regarding the practical use of his discoveries, those
discoveries would never have been made by him.
’I have rather,’ he writes in 1831, ’been
desirous of discovering new facts and new relations
dependent on magneto-electric induction, than of exalting
the force of those already obtained; being assured
that the latter would find their full development
hereafter.’
In 1817, when lecturing before a private
society in London on the element chlorine, Faraday
thus expressed himself with reference to this question
of utility. ’Before leaving this subject,
I will point out the history of this substance, as
an answer to those who are in the habit of saying
to every new fact. “What is its use?”
Dr. Franklin says to such, “What is the use
of an infant?” The answer of the experimentalist
is, “Endeavour to make it useful.”
When Scheele discovered this substance, it appeared
to have no use; it was in its infancy and useless state,
but having grown up to maturity, witness its powers,
and see what endeavours to make it useful have done.’