Page:A history of the theories of aether and electricity. Whittacker E.T. (1910).pdf/278

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
258
The Mathematical Electricians of the

The next factor to be considered is the mutual induction of the current-elements in different parts of the wire. Assuming with Weber that the electromotive force induced in an clement ds due to another element ds′ carrying a current i′ is derivable from a vector-potential

,

Kirchhoff found for the vector-potential due to the entire wire the approximate value

,

where i denotes the strength of the current;[1] the vector-potential being directed parallel to the wire. Ohm's law then gives the equation

,

where k denotes the specific conductivity of the material of which the wire is composed; and finally the principle of conservation of electricity gives the equation

.

Denoting log (l/α) by γ, and eliminating e, i, w from these four equations, we have

,

which is, as might have been expected, the equation of telegraphy. When the term in a ∂V/∂t is ignored, as we have seen is in certain cases permissible, the equation becomes

,

  1. This expression was derived in a similar way to that for V, by an intermediate formula

    ,

    where θ und θ′ denote respectively the angles made with r by ds and ds′.