About This Book
The paper traces the development of instruments used to detect and exploit electrical and magnetic phenomena, beginning with electrostatic devices, physiological detectors used in early experiments, and the emergence of contact-based voltaic cells. It surveys how voltaic circuits were instrumented, describes the sudden recognition of magnetic effects of currents and the near-simultaneous invention of early electromagnetic detectors, evaluates priority claims and technical designs such as multipliers and magnetic condensers, and illustrates representative models and museum examples. The author concludes by assessing the technical merits of the first instruments and the experimental steps that led from rudimentary electroscopes to purpose-built electromagnetic apparatus.
About the Author
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