... the conductor by the current. But the existence of induced currents and of electromagnetic actions at a distance from a primary circuit from which they draw their energy has led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium... A Dictionary of Electrical Words, Terms and Phrases - Page 137by Edwin James Houston - 1898 - 990 pagesFull view - About this book
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Electronic journals - 1884 - 556 pages
...energy, have led us, under the guidance of Faraday nnd Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding tlio conductor as playing a very important part in the...believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another, it must have... | |
| Thomas Preston - Light - 1890 - 494 pages
...electro-magnetic actions at a distance, however, lead us to look upon the medium around the conductors as playing a very important part in the development of the phenomena. It is, in fact, the storehouse of the energy. Upon this basis Maxwell founded his theory of electricity... | |
| American Philosophical Society - Anthropology - 1897 - 564 pages
...from which they draw their energy, has led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...important part in the development of the phenomena." I am not prepared to abandon this intermediate point of view for the reasons which I shall presently... | |
| John Henry Poynting - Physics - 1920 - 810 pages
...from which they draw their energy has led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another it must have passed... | |
| Ray Harbaugh Dotterer - Logic - 1924 - 364 pages
...situated at a distance from each other, lead us to look upon the medium surrounding the conductors as playing a very important part in the development of the phenomena. It is, in fact, the storehouse of the energy. . . . When we speak of the charge of an electrified conductor... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Mathematics - 1885 - 490 pages
...from which they draw their energy, has led us, under the guidance of FARADAY and MAXWELL, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another it must have passed... | |
| 1954 - 814 pages
...from which they draw their energy has led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another it must have passed... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - Electronic journals - 1884 - 570 pages
...which they draw their energy, have led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another, it must have... | |
| 646 pages
...from which they draw their energy, has led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a...important part in the development of the phenomena." I am not prepared to abandon this intermediate point of view for the reasons which I shall presently... | |
| |