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| Written by David Thomson | ||||||||||
The following commentaries are interspersed with the complete text of Maxwell's paper, "A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field," submitted on October 27, 1864. The commentaries will examine Maxwell's work from the perspective of the Aether Physics Model. Maxwell's writings are in blue text, commentaries are in black. (1) The most obvious mechanical phenomenon in electrical and magnetical experiments is the mutual action by which bodies in certain states set each other in motion while still at a sensible distance from each other. The first step, therefore, in reducing these phenomena into scientific form, is to ascertain the magnitude and direction of the force acting between the bodies, and when it is found that this force depends in a certain way upon the relative position of the bodies and on their electric or magnetic condition, it seems at first sight natural to explain the facts by assuming the existence of something either at rest or in motion in each body, constituting its electric or magnetic state, and capable of acting at a distance according to mathematical laws. In this way mathematical theories of statical electricity, or magnetism, of the mechanical action between conductors carrying currents, and of the induction of currents have been formed. In these theories the force acting between the two bodies is treated with reference only to the condition of the bodies and their relative position, and without any express consideration of the surrounding medium. These theories assume, more or less explicitly, the existence of substances the particles of which have the property of acting on one another at a distance by attraction or repulsion. The most complete development of a theory of this kind is that of M. W. Weber1, who has made the same theory include electrostatic and electromagnetic phenomena. In doing so, however, he has found it necessary to assume that the force between two electric particles depends on their relative velocity, as well as on their distance. This theory, as developed by MM. W. Weber and C. Neumann2, is exceedingly ingenious, and wonderfully comprehensive in its application to the phenomena of statical electricity, electromagnetic attractions, induction of currents and diamagnetic phenomena; and it comes to us with the more authority, as it has served to guide the speculations of one who has made so great an advance in the practical measurement, and by actually determining electrical quantities with an accuracy hitherto unknown. (2) the mechanical difficulties, however, which are involved in the assumption of particles acting at a distance with forces which depend on their velocities are such as to prevent me from considering this theory as an ultimate one, though it may have been, and may yet be useful in leading to the coordination of phenomena. The relativistic approach to electricity and magnetism were first proposed by Weber and Neumann, not by Albert Einstein. It is questionable whether Albert Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity is even unique, and not merely an extension of Weber's and Neumann's work. Maxwell considered the relativistic approach, but found it to be inferior. As Maxwell stated, the relativistic approach may be useful, but it is not the ultimate. I have therefore preferred to seek an explanation of the fact in another direction, by supposing them to be produced by actions which go on in the surrounding medium as well as in the excited bodies, and endeavouring to explain the action between distant bodies without assuming the existence of forces capable of acting directly at sensible distances. Maxwell proposed that instead of action at a distance, there must be a structure to the surrounding medium, which carries forces. This structure exists in both space and particles. (3) The theory I propose may therefore by called a theory of the Electromagnetic Field, because it has to do with the space in the neighbourhood of the electric or magnetic bodies, and it may be called a Dynamical Theory, because it assumes that in that space there is matter in motion, by which the observed electromagnetic phenomena are produced. (4) The electromagnetic field is that part of space which contains and surrounds bodies in electric or magnetic conditions. Maxwell clearly understood the electromagnetic field to be a structure of itself, not an abstract mathematical construct. He considered the electromagnetic field to be dynamic, and although he referred to the Aether as "matter in motion," he clearly understood space and the electromagnetic field to be two aspects of the same thing. In the Aether Physics Model, each quantum particle quantifies as an Aether unit encapsulating primary angular As explained in the APM, the double loxodrome structure represents the electromagnetic charge, while the + and - signs represent the locations of spherical electrostatic charge. Maxwell and his contemporaries did not recognize that magnetism and electrostatics each existed as the result of two distinctly different manifestations of charges. For more information concerning the structure of the quantum Aether unit see our paper, A New Foundation for Physics, and our book, Secrets of the Aether. It may be filled with any kind of matter, or we may endeavor to render it empty of all gross matter, as in the case of Geissler's tubes and other so-called vacua. There is always, however, enough of matter left to receive and transmit the undulations of light and heat, and it is because the transmission of these radiations is not greatly altered when transparent bodies of measurable density are substituted for the so-called vacuum, that we are obliged to admit that the undulations are those of an aetherial substance, and not of the gross matter, the presence of which merely modifies in some way the motion of the aether. Maxwell clearly understood the Aether to be non-material in that it was not gross matter. He also understood that matter must be capable of modifying the Aether. These assumptions are quantified as actual properties of the Aether in the APM. We have therefore some reason to believe, from the phenomena of light and heat, that there is an aethereal medium filling space and permeating bodies, capable of being set in motion and of transmitting that motion from one part to another, and of communicating that motion to gross matter so as to heat it and affect it in various ways. Heat is a concept not well understood in modern physics. This is because modern physics has not yet identified heat as a phenomenon that occurs at various levels of reality. For example, there is heat of onta (subatomic particles), heat of atoms, and heat of molecules. Heat is defined in the APM as a unit equal to velocity squared meaning that heat is a distributed velocity, or an expanding-contracting condition. Explosions and implosions are extreme manifestations of heat. In the expanding-contracting condition, heat manifests as particles bouncing against each other. This topic is explained in greater detail in Secrets of the Aether.
(5) Now the energy communicated to the body in heating it must have formerly existed in the moving medium, for the undulations had left the source of heat some time before they reached the body, and during that time the energy must have been half in the form of motion of the medium and half in the form of elastic resilience. This is an important point, and one which is amply illustrated in the APM, all action involves both the object acting and the environment in which it is acting. The environment carries half the energy in the form of potential energy, whereas the object carries the other half in the form of kinetic energy. Maxwell will clarify this shortly. From these conditions Professor W. Thomson has argued3, that the medium must have a density capable of comparison with that of gross matter, and has even assigned an inferior limit to that density. (6) We may therefore receive, as a datum derived from a branch of science independent of that with which we have to deal, the existence of a pervading medicum, of small but real density, capable of being set in motion, and of transmitting motion from one part to another with great, but not infinite, velocity. Hence the parts of this medium must be so connected that the motion of one part In the above paragraph, Maxwell correctly induces the connectivity of Aether units to produce the fabric of Aether. He also induces the small density of the Aether. However, in the APM, the Aether density is not so much as small as it is reciprocal to gross matter density. This was an alien concept for the scientists of the 19th Century. It did not occur to them that there is a reciprocal nature between matter and Aether (between objects and environment). Maxwell also realizes that there is a non-zero communication time between Aether units, which we now know is the speed of light; another property of the Aether. The medium is therefore capable of receiving and storing up two kinds of energy, namely, the "actual" energy depending on the motions of its parts, and "potential" energy, consisting of the work which the medium will do in recovering from displacement in virtue of its elasticity. The propagation of undulations consists in the continual transformation of one of these forms of energy into the other alternately, and at any instant the amount of energy in the whole medium is equally divided, so that half is energy of motion, and half is elastic resilience. (7) A medium having such a constitution may be capable of other kinds of motion and displacement than those which produce the phenomena of light and heat, and some of these may be of such a kind that they may be evidenced to our senses by the phenomena they produce. An example of these unusual phenomena of the Aether would be the ability for one section of the Aether to separate itself from another section of Aether. For example, a vehicle can be made such that it produces an electromagnetic resonance with standing waves around its outer surface, which causes the space of the vehicle to become disconnected from the space of the environment (much like a soap bubble causes the atmosphere inside the bubble to separate from the atmosphere outside the bubble). When the space is disconnected, the ability to transmit force between the vehicle and its environment is severed, and thus the force of gravity transmitted by a planet would have no effect on the vehicle. It would appear to our senses as being "antigravitational." (8) Now we know that the luminiferous medium is in certain cases acted on by magnetism; for Faraday4 discovered that when a plane polarized ray traverses a transparent diamagnetic medium in the direction of the lines of magnetic force produced by magnets or currents in the neighborhood, the plane of polarization is caused to rotate. This rotation is always in the direction in which positive electricity must be carried round the diamagnetic body in order to produce the actual magnetization of the field. M. Verdet5 has since discovered that if a paramagnetic body, such as solution of perchloride of iron in ether, be substituted for the diamagnetic body, the rotation is in the opposite direction. Now Professor W. Thomson6 has pointed out that no distribution of forces acting between the parts of a medium whose only motion is that of the luminous vibrations, is sufficient to account for the phenomena, but that we must admit the existence of a motion in the medium depending on the magnetization, in addition to the vibratory motion which constitutes light. Or, as we would say in today's understanding of physics, magnetism and photons are two distinct and different phenomena. This would preclude magnetism from being quantified in terms of photons. It is true that the rotation by magnetism of the plane of polarization has been observed only in media of considerable density; but the properties of the magnetic field are not so much altered by the substitution of one medium for another, or for a vacuum, as to allow us to suppose that the dense medium does anything more than merely modify the motion of the ether. We have therefore warrantable grounds for inquiring whether there may not be a motion of the ethereal medium going on wherever magnetic effects are observed, and we have some reason to suppose that this motion is one of rotation, having the direction of the magnetic force as its axis. In the Aether Physics Model, the Aether quantifies as a quantum rotating magnetic field. this quantum rotating magnetic field pre-exists physical matter. In fact, it is the primary nature of the Aether unit, which gives structure to subatomic particles, and thus matter. (9) We may now consider another phenomenon observed in the electromagnetic Here we have evidence of a force causing an electric current in spite of resistance; electrifying the extremities of a body in opposite ways, a condition which is sustained only by the action of the electromotive force, and which, as soon as that force is removed, tends, with an equal and opposite force, to produce a counter current through the body and to restore the original electrical state of the body; and finally, if strong enough, tearing to pieces chemical compounds and carrying their components in opposite directions, while their natural tendency is to combine, and to combine with a force which can generate an electromotive force in the reverse direction. This, then, is a force acting on a body caused by its motion through the electromagnetic field, or by changes occurring in that field itself; and the effect of the force is either to produce a current and heat the body, or to decompose the body, or, when it can do neither, to put the body in a state of electric polarization, -a state of constraint in which opposite extremities are oppositely electrified, and from which the body tends to relieve itself as soon as the disturbing force is removed. According to the theory which I propose to explain, this "electromotive force" is the force called into play during the communication of motion from one part of the medium to another, and it is by means of this force that the motion of one part causes motion in another part. when electromotive force acts on a conducting circuit, it produces a current, which as it meets with resistance, occasions a continual transformation of electrical energy into heat, which is incapable of being restored again to the form of electrical energy by any reversal of the process. This assumption by Maxwell has since been proven incorrect. Properly engineered transistor materials do convert heat directly into electricity. In addition, electrical circuits have been engineered to extract heat from the environment, instead of generate heat. (11) But when electromotive force acts on a dielectric it produces a state of polarization of its parts similar in distribution to the polarity of the parts of a mass of iron under the influence of a magnet, and like the magnetic polarization, capable of being described as a state in which every particle has its opposite poles in opposite conductions7. In a dielectric under the action of electromotive force, we may conceive that the electricity in each molecule is so displaced that one side is rendered positively and the other negatively electrical, but that the electricity remains entirely connected with the molecule, and does not pass from one molecule to another. The effect of this action on the whole dielectric mass is to produce a general displacement of electricity in a certain direction. This displacement does not amount to a current, because when it has attained to a certain value it remains constant, but it is the commencement of a current, and its variations constitute currents in the positive or the negative direction according The above paragraph is a profound assessment of the nature of electricity. There are two distinctly different types of electricity being described by Maxwell. There is the current of flowing electrons where electrons move from one molecule to the next, and there is flip-flopping of electrons which do not leave their molecules. The flip-flopping electrons are the beginning of a current, but not an actual current. If the flip-flop is just one half cycle and held, then the molecules will display the positive-negative polarity of the Aether units as evidenced by the surface molecules exhibiting positive and negative charges on their surfaces. The relation between the electromotive force and the amount of electric displacement it produces depends on the nature of the dielectric, the same electromotive force producing generally a greater electric displacement in the solid dielectrics, such as glass or sulphur, than in air. (12) Here, then, we perceive another effect of electromotive force, namely, electric displacement, which according to our theory is a kind of elastic yielding to the action of the force, similar to that which takes place in structures and machines owing to the want of perfect rigidity of the connexions. (13) The practical investigation of the inductive capacity of dielectrics is rendered difficult on account of two disturbing phenomena. the first is the conductivity of the dielectric, which, though in many cases exceedingly small, is not altogether insensible. The second is the phenomenon called electric absorption8, in virtue of which, when the dielectric is exposed to electromotive force, the electric displacement gradually increases, and when the electromotive force is removed, the dielectric does not instantly return to its primitive state, but only discharges a portion of its electrification, and when left to itself gradually acquires electrification on its surface, as the interior gradually becomes depolarized. Almost all solid dielectrics exhibit this phenomenon, which gives rise to the residual charge in the Leyden jar, and to several phenomena of electric cables described by Mr. F. Jenkin9. (14) We have here two other kinds of yielding besides the yielding of the perfect dielectric, which we have compared to a perfectly elastic body. The yielding due to conductivity may be compared to that of a viscous fluid (that is to say, a fluid having great internal friction), or a soft solid on which the smallest force produces a permanent alteration of figure increasing with the time during which the force acts. The yielding due to electric absorption may be compared to that of a cellular elastic body containing a thick fluid in its cavities. Such a body, when subjected to pressure, is compressed by degrees on account of the gradual yielding of the thick fluid; and when the pressure is removed it does not at once recover its figure, because the elasticity of the substance of the body has gradually to overcome the tenacity of the fluid before it can regain complete equilibrium. Several solid bodies in which no such structure as we have supposed can be found, seem to possess a mechanical property of this kind10; and it seems probably that the (15) It appears therefore that certain phenomena in electricity and magnetism lead to the same conclusion as those of optics, namely, that there is an aethereal medium pervading all bodies, and modified only in degree by their presence; that the parts of this medium are capable of being set in motion by electric currents and magnets; that this motion is communicated from one part of the medium to another by forces arising from the connexions of those parts; that under the action of these forces there is a certain yielding depending on the elasticity of these connexions; and that therefore energy in two different forms may exist in the medium, the one form being the actual energy of motion of its parts, and the other being the potential energy stored up in the connexions, in virtue of their elasticity. Maxwell has made it plain and clear his equations depend upon an Aether composed of quantum Aether units, which are joined to one another to produce an Aether fabric. All the properties of materials and the behaviors of materials in space get these properties from the Aether, and the effect that matter has on the Aether. He again emphasized that energy is stored half in the object and half in the medium. The objects can be onta (subatomic particles), atoms, or molecules, or any macro structures created with these more primary structures. (16) Thus, then, we are led to the conception of a complicated mechanism capable of a vast variety of motion, but at the same time so connected that the motion of one part depends, according to definite relations, on the motion of other parts, these motions being communicated by forces arising from the relative displacement of connected parts, in virtue of their elasticity. Such a mechanism must be subject to the general laws of Dynamics, and we ought to be able to work out all the consequences of its motion, provided we know the form of the relation between the motions of the parts. (17) We know that when an electric current is established in a conducting circuit, the neighboring part of the field is characterized by certain magnetic properties, and that if two circuits are in the field, the magnetic properties of the field due to the two currents are combined. Thus each part of the field is in connexion with both currents, and the two currents are put in connexion with each other in virtue of their connexion with magnetization of the field. The first result of this connexion that I propose to examine, is the induction of one current by another, and by the motion of conductors in the field. The second result, which is deduced from this, is the mechanical action between conductors carrying currents. The phenomenon of the induction of currents has been deduced from their mechanical action by Helmholtz11 and Thomson12. I have followed the reverse order, and deduced the mechanical action from the laws of induction. I have then described experimental methods of determining the quantities L, M, N, on which these phenomena depend. When Maxwell deduced the mechanical action from the laws of induction, he extended an error prevalent in physics at that time, which continues through today. The error arose by incorrectly converting units from the cgs system of units to the MKS system of units. Five units retained their expression in terms of distributed charge (conductance, inductance, capacitance, permeability, and permittivity). However, all other electrical related units were incorrectly notated with single dimension charge. For example, current in the cgs system of units was expressed as charge per time: $$current = \frac{{gm \cdot c{m^3}}}{{se{c^3}}}$$ When converted to MKS, this should have been notated as: $$current = \frac{{cou{l^2}}}{{sec}}$$ However, current ended up being notated as: $$current = \frac{{coul}}{{sec}}$$ Current is just one of dozens of incorrectly converted units. In Maxwell's work, he worked backward from inductance and discovered a unit, which he interpreted as current squared: $$currentsquared = \frac{{cou{l^2}}}{{se{c^2}}}$$ Since Maxwell incorrectly interpreted the charge dimensions, he thought he was looking at current squared. But this unit is a unit of electric stroke. It is equal to charge times resonance (frequency squared). In other words, Maxwell's "current squared" is actually "electric stroke," or "resonating charge." (18) I then apply the phenomena of induction and attraction of currents to the exploration of the electromagnetic field, and the laying down systems of lines of magnetic force which indicate its magnetic properties. By exploring the same field with a magnet, I show the distribution of its equipotential magnetic surfaces, cutting the lines of force at right angles. The "lines of force" envisioned by Maxwell are represented in the Aether Physics Model as the tubular double loxodromes in the Aether units. The tubular double loxodromes adjoin each other; thus the lines are the continuity of the tubular loxodromes from one Aether unit to the next. In order to bring these results within the power of symbolical calculation, I then express them in the form of the General Equations of the Electromagnetic Field. These equations express: (A) The relation between electric displacement, true conduction, and the total current, compounded of both. (B) The relation between the lines of magnetic force and the inductive coefficients of a circuit, as already deduced from the laws of induction. (C) The relation between the strength of a current and its magnetic effects, according to the electromagnetic system of measurement. (D) the value of the electromotive force in a body, as arising from the motion of the body in the field, the alternation of the field itself, and the variation of electric potential from one part of the field to another. (E) The relation between electric displacement, and the electromotive force which produces it. (F) The relation between an electric current, and the electromotive force which produces it. (G) The relation between the amount of free electricity at any point, and the electric displacements in the neighbourhood. (H) The relation between the increase of diminution of free electricity and the electric currents in the neighbourhood. There are twenty of these equations in all, involving twenty variable quantities. (19) I then express in terms of these quantities the intrinsic energy of the Electromagnetic Field as depending partly on its magnetic and partly on its polarization at every point. It is clear from proposed equation (E) that Maxwell considered electric displacement to be a key part of his theory. He differentiated it from proposed equation (F), which is about the electric current. These two equations are founded in the reality that there are two very distinct manifestations of charges, as quantified in the Aether Physics Model. Further, Maxwell directly states the Electromagnetic Field (Aether fabric) is composed of polarized magnetic and polarized electric structures. Once again, this corresponds exactly to the structure of the Aether as revealed in the APM. From this I determine the mechanical force acting, 1st, on a moveable conductor carrying an electric current; 2ndly, on a magnetic pole; 3rdly, on an electrified body. The last result, namely, the mechanical force acting on an electrified body, gives rise to an independent method of electrical measurement founded on its electrostatic effects. The relation between the units employed in the two methods is shown to depend on what I have called the "electric elasticity" of the medium, and to be a velocity, which has been experimentally determined by MM. Weber and Kohlrausch. I then show how to calculate the electrostatic capacity of a condenser, and the specific inductive capacity of a dielectric. The case of a condenser composed of parallel layers of substances of different electric resistances and inductive capacities is next examined, and it is shown that the phenomenon called electric absorption will generally occur, that is, the condenser, when suddenly discharged, will after a short time show signs of a residual charge. This residual charge described by Maxwell has been one of the topics of exploitation by many engineers attempting to build free energy devices. Since the full energy of the charge and discharge of the capacitor have been accounted for, the residual buildup of charge amounts to an potential arising without the need to expend energy. (20) The general equations are next applied to the case of a magnetic disturbance propagated through a non-conducting field, and it is shown that the only disturbances which can be so propagated are those which are transverse to the direction of propagation, and that the velocity of propagation is the velocity v, found from experiments such This velocity is so nearly that of light, that it seems we have a strong reason to conclude that light itself (including radiant heat, and other radiations if any) is an electromagnetic disturbance in the form of waves propagated through the electromagnetic field according to electromagnetic laws. Maxwell, along with others who had not yet understood the quantum photon, considered light to have a velocity. It is not entirely correct. Photons have velocity, however, light is a structure of moving photons. It is similar to a river of water. Rivers do not move at a velocity; their water molecules do. This incorrect expression has survived to the present day and should be updated to reflect modern understanding. What we consider to be the speed of light is really the speed of photons. $$c = 2.998 \times {10^8}\frac{m}{{sec}}$$ If so, the agreement between the elasticity of the medium as calculated from the rapid alternations of luminous vibrations, and as found by the slow processes of electrical experiments, shows how perfect and regular the elastic properties of the medium must be when not encumbered with any matter denser than air. In Maxwell's day, the photon was not yet hypothesized. In the APM, the electron is quantified as Planck's constant. That is, Planck's constant is considered by modern science to be no more than a convenience constant, when in reality it is the quantification of the electron. The electron is primary angular momentum, which is encapsulated in an Aether unit. The photon is equal to the electron (h) being ejected from an atom at the speed of photons. Using Quantum Measurements Units (QMU,) the photon quantifies as: $$h \cdot c = phtn$$ $$phtn = 1.986 \times {10^{ - 25}}\frac{{kg \cdot {m^3}}}{{se{c^2}}}$$ The quantity referred to as light is equal to a stream of quantum photons. So if photons are generated from an atom at the fastest rate possible (quantum frequency Fq), we get the QMU for light: $$phtn \cdot {F_q} = ligt$$ $${F_q} = 1.236 \times {10^{20}}Hz$$ $$ligt = 2.454 \times {10^{ - 5}}\frac{{kg \cdot {m^3}}}{{se{c^3}}}$$ When atoms absorb photons, according to the APM they absorb parts of photon angular momentum until they fill an Aether unit spin position and regenerate an electron (or positron). The process of absorption is quantified as light losing its photon velocity: $$\frac{{ligt}}{c} = 8.187 \times {10^{ - 14}}joule$$ Later, Maxwell's equations will be evaluated in terms of the APM and will utilize this quantification of the electron (h), photon (phtn) and light (ligt). If the same character of the elasticity is retained in dense transparent bodies, it appears that the square of the index of refraction is equal to the product of the specific dielectric capacity and the specific magnetic capacity. Conducting media are shown to absorb such radiations rapidly, and therefore to be generally opaque. The conception of the propagation of transverse magnetic disturbances to the exclusion of normal ones is distinctly set forth by Professor Faraday13 in his "Thoughts on Ray Vibrations." It appears Maxwell is specifically stating that there are two distinct modes of propagation. There is transverse propagation, and then there is "normal" propagation. The normal propagation would be longitudinal, or scalar, propagation. Whereas longitudinal propagation occurs in two dimensions of length, longitudinal propagation occurs in only one dimension of length. Later, the big debate between Tesla and Hertz (as Tesla saw it) was between transverse signal propagation (Hertz waves), and longitudinal signal propagation (Tesla waves). Because of later alterations of Maxwell's equations by Heaviside, the longitudinal propagation technique was lost only because the new math did not support it. The electromagnetic theory of light, as proposed by him, is the same in substance as that which I have begun to develope in this paper, except that in 1846 there were no data to calculate the velocity of propagation. Maxwell has clarified that he induced the speed of photons directly from empirical data and then included this velocity into his work. (21) The general equations are then applied to the calculation of the coefficients of mutual induction of two circular currents and the coefficient of self-induction in a coil. The want of uniformity of the current in the different parts of the section of a wire at the commencement of the current is investigated, I believe for the first time, and the consequent correction of the coefficient of self-induction is found. These results are applied to the calculation of the self-induction of the coil used in the experiments of the committee of the British Association on Standards of Electric Resistance, and the value compared with that deduced from the experiments. 1. Electrodynamische Maassbestimmungen. Leipzic Trans. vol.i.1849,and Taylor's Scientific Memoirs, vol.v. ?rt.xiv. 2. "Explicare tentatur quomodo fiat ut lucis planum polarizationis per vires elecricas vel magneticas decli??tor," - Halis Sanomum, 1858 3. "On the Possible Density of the Luminiferous Medium, and on the Mechanical Value of a Cubic Mile of Sunlight," Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1854), p. 57. 4. Experimental Researches, Series 19. 5. Comptes Rendus (1856, second half year, p.529, and 1857, first half year, p.1209). 6. Proceedings of the Royal Society, June 1856 and June 1861. 7. Faraday, Exp. Res. series XI.; Mossotti, Mem. della Soc. Italiana (Modena), vol. xxiv. part 2. p. 49. 8. Faraday, Exp. Res 1233-1250 9. Reports of British Association, 1859, p.248; and Report of Committee of Board of Trade on Submarine Cables, pp. 136 & 464. 10. As, for instance, the composition of glue, treacle, &c., of which small plastic figures are made, which after being distorted gradually recover their shape. 11. "Conservation of Force," Physical Society of Berlin, 1847; and Taylor's Scientific Memoirs, 1853, p. 114. 12. Reports of the British Association, 1848; Philosophical Magazine, Dec. 1851 13. Philosophical Magazine, May 1846, or Experimental Researches, iii. p. 447. |



momentum. The Aether unit is the source of charge for the particle, but also the empty Aether units surrounding the particle still contain electric and magnetic dipoles as seen in the image to the right.