karl bühler digital

Home > Book > Chapter

Publication details

Publisher: Birkhäuser

Place: Basel

Year: 1986

Pages: 153-187

ISBN (Hardback): 9780817632038

Full citation:

, "Unipolar induction", in: Frontiers of physics: 1900–1911, Basel, Birkhäuser, 1986

Unipolar induction

a case study of the interaction between science and technology

pp. 153-187

in: Arthur I. Miller, Frontiers of physics: 1900–1911, Basel, Birkhäuser, 1986

Abstract

Unipolar induction, discovered in 1832 by Michael Faraday, is the case of electromagnetic induction in which a conductor and magnet are in relative rotatory motion. Attempts by scientists and engineers in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to understand unipolar induction by using magnetic lines of force displayed striking national differences that influenced where the first largescale unipolar dynamo was built. This episode is described, as well as the effect of unipolar induction on Albert Einstein's thinking toward the special theory of relativity, in sections 1–6. The analysis of electromagnetic induction in cases where the source of the magnetic field is in motion relative to the conductor is provided in sections 7–9.

Publication details

Publisher: Birkhäuser

Place: Basel

Year: 1986

Pages: 153-187

ISBN (Hardback): 9780817632038

Full citation:

, "Unipolar induction", in: Frontiers of physics: 1900–1911, Basel, Birkhäuser, 1986