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Description

Larmor writes: 'The electrical ideas of Clerk Maxwell, which were cultivated partly in relation to mechanical models of electrodynamic action, led him to the general principle that electrical currents always flow round complete circuits. To verify this principle for the case of the current which charges a condenser, it was necessary to postulate an electrodynamic action of the same type as that of a current for the electric displacement across the dielectric, in which the excitation of the dielectric may he supposed, after Faraday, to consist.'

Annotations in pencil and ink.

Subject: Electricity

Received 30 April 1891. Read 14 May 1891. Communicated by Joseph John Thomson.

A version of this paper was published in volume 49 of the Proceedings of the Royal Society as 'On the theory of electrodynamics'.

Reference number
PP/17/39
Earliest possible date
1891
Physical description
Ink and graphite pencil on paper
Page extent
34 pages
Format
Manuscript

Creator name

Joseph Larmor

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Citation

Joseph Larmor, Paper, 'On the theory of electrodynamics' by Joseph Larmor, 1891, PP/17/39, The Royal Society Archives, London, https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/pp_17_39/paper-on-the-theory-of-electrodynamics-by-joseph-larmor, accessed on 10 December 2024

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  • Proceedings Papers

    Dates: 1882 - 1894

    The archival collection known as 'Proceedings Papers' is comprised of manuscripts and occasional proofs of scientific papers sent to the Royal Society which were read before meetings of Fellows and printed in full in the Proceedings of the Royal Society.

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