Page:A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism - Volume 1.djvu/451

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355.]
GREAT RESISTANCES.
409

Four conductors of great resistance may also be arranged as in Wheatstone's Bridge, and the bridge itself may consist of the electrodes of an electrometer instead of those of a galvanometer. The advantage of this method is that no permanent current is required to produce the deviation of the electrometer, whereas the galvanometer cannot be deflected unless a current passes through the wire.

354.] When the resistance of a conductor is so great that the current which can be sent through it by any available electromotive force is too small to be directly measured by a galvanometer, a condenser may be used in order to accumulate the electricity for a certain time, and then, by discharging the condenser through a galvanometer, the quantity accumulated may be estimated. This is Messrs. Bright and Clark's method of testing the joints of submarine cables.

355.] But the simplest method of measuring the resistance of such a conductor is to charge a condenser of great capacity and to connect its two surfaces with the electrodes of an electrometer and also with the extremities of the conductor. If is the diffference of potentials as shewn by the electrometer, the capacity of the condenser, and the charge on either surface, the resistance of the conductor and the current in it, then, by the theory of condensers,



By Ohm's Law,


,

and by the definition of a current,


.


Hence


,


and ,

where is the charge at first when .

Similarly


where is the original reading of the electrometer, and the same after a time . From this we find


,

which gives in absolute measure. In this expression a knowledge of the value of the unit of the electrometer scale is not required.