Page:Life in Motion.djvu/61

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FARADIC CURRENTS
41

that we called cramp or tetanus. It is apparently the suddenness with which the electric current enters the nerve and the suddenness with which it leaves it that irritates the nerve. The nerve is not irritated so as to cause contraction of the muscle during the passage of the current through it. Hence we would expect that currents or shocks of extremely short duration would be very irritating, and this is exactly what experiment proves. We obtain such almost instantaneous currents by the use of an instrument called an induction coil or inductorium.

To explain this to you let me show you a famous and far-reaching experiment first made by Faraday in the laboratory downstairs, by which he discovered the method of obtaining what has since been called Faradic electricity, or electricity by induction. Here is a galvanometer, an instrument used for detecting electric currents. It consists of a coil of wire, in the centre of which is a freely suspended magnetic needle, so hanging that the needle is in the same plane as the coil of wire. A small silvered mirror is attached to the needle, and you observe the mirror reflects upon this