Experimental Researches In Electricity by Michael Faraday

Experimental Researches In Electricity

Michael Faraday
832 pages
Hardcover
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Experimental Researches In Electricity by Michael Faraday Read more Continue reading Read less BOOK DESCRIPTION
In the 1820s and 1830s, Michael Faraday (1791-1867) undertook crucial work in electromagnetism which forms the basis of modern electromagnetic technology. In the first of this three-volume collection of his papers, published between 1839 and 1855, he describes his early experiments and their frustrating pitfalls. --This text refers to an alternate kindleedition edition. REVIEW
If by anything I have here written [in the Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism] I may assist any student in understanding Faraday's modes of thought and expression, I shall regard it as the accomplishment of one of my principal aims---to communicate to them the same delight which I have found myself in reading Faraday's Researches." --James Clerk Maxwell, Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism --This text refers to an alternate kindleedition edition. ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Michael Faraday: An Electric Personality
A major figure in nineteenth-century science, Michael Faraday (1791-1867) made immense contributions to the study of electricity and magnetism, discovering the laws of electromagnetic induction and electrolysis. His experiments are the foundation of subsequent electromagnetic technology. He also had a sense of humor. When the Prime Minister of England William Gladstone asked Faraday what the usefulness of electricity would be, Faraday famously replied, "Why, Sir, there is every possibility that you will soon be able to tax it!" In addition to being a great experimenter, Faraday had the gift of exposition for a popular audience, as seen in the books which Dover has reprinted, The Forces of Matter (2010) , Experimental Researches in Electricity (2004) , and perhaps his most famous single book for the general reader, The Chemical History of a Candle (2003) .



It is reliably reported that Einstein had a photograph of Faraday on the wall of his study alongside portraits of Isaac Newton and James Clerk Maxwell.



In the Author's Own Words:
"The world little knows how many of the thoughts and theories which have passed through the mind of a scientific investigator have been crushed in silence and secrecy by his own severe criticism and adverse examination: that in the most successful instances not a tenth of the suggestions, the hopes, the wishes, the preliminary conclusions have been realized." - Michael Faraday









--This text refers to an alternate kindleedition edition. Read more Continue reading Read less
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