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ART. 88 - On the Absolute Measurement of Electric Currents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

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Summary

The accurate absolute measurement of currents seems to be more difficult than that of resistance. The methods hitherto employed require either accurate measurements of the earth's horizontal intensity, or accurate measurements of coils of small radius and of many turns. If in the latter measurement we could trust to the in extensibility of the wire, as some experimenters have thought themselves able to do, the mean radius could be accurately deduced from the total length of wire and the number of turns; but actual trial has convinced me that fine wire stretches very appreciably under the tension necessary for winding a coil satisfactorily. Kohlrausch's method, in which the same current is passed through an absolute galvanometer and through a coil suspended bifilarly in the plane of the meridian, is free from the above difficulty; but it is not easy so to arrange the proportions that the suspended coil shall be sufficiently sensitive, and the galvanometer sufficiently insensitive. In this method, as in that of the dynamometer, the calculation of the forces requires a knowledge of the moment of inertia of the suspended parts.

When the electromagnetic action is a simple attraction or repulsion, it can be determined directly by balancing it against known weights. In Mascart's recent determination a long solenoid is suspended vertically in the balance, and is acted upon by a flat coaxial coil of much larger radius, whose plane includes the lower extremity of the solenoid.

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Scientific Papers , pp. 126 - 127
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1900

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