Page:A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism - Volume 2.djvu/471

 INDEX.

��The References are to the Articles.

��ABERRATION of light, 78. Absorption, electric, 53, 227, 329.

of light, 798.

Accumulators or condensers, 50, 226-228. Action at a distance, 105, 641-646, 846-

866.

Acyclic region, 19, 113. ^Ether, 782 n. Airy, Sir G. B., 454, 830. Ampere, Andre&quot; Marie, 482, 502-528,

638, 687, 833, 846. Anion, 237. Anode, 237. Arago s disk, 668, 669. Astatic balance, 504. Atmospheric electricity, 221. Attraction, electric, 27, 38, 103.

explained by stress in a medium, 105.

��Barclay and Gibson, 229, 789.

Battery, voltaic, 232.

Beetz, W., 255, 265, 442.

Betti, E., 173, 864.

Bifilar suspension. 459.

Bismuth, 425.

Borda, J. C., 3.

Bowl, spherical, 176-181.

Bridge, Wheatstone s*, 347, 756, 775, 778.

electrostatic, 353.

Bright, Sir C., and Clark, 354, 367.

Brodie, Sir B. C., 359.

Broun, John Allan, 462.

Brush, 56.

Buff, Heinrich, 271, 368.

��Capacity (electrostatic), 50, 226. of a condenser, 50, 87, 102, 196, 227- 229, 771, 774-780.

��Capacity, calculation of, 102, 196.

measurement of, 227-229.

in electromagnetic measure, 774, 775.

Capacity (electromagnetic) of a coil, 706,

756, 778, 779. Cathode, 237. Cation, 237. Cauchy, A. L., 827. Cavendish, Henry, 38. Cayley, A., 553. Centrobaric, 101. Circuits, electric, 578-584. Circular currents, 694-706.

solid angle subtended by, 695. Charge, electric, 31.

Clark, Latimer, 358, 629, 725. Classification of electrical quantities, 620-

629.

Clausius, R., 70, 256, 863. Clifford, W. K., 138. Coefficients of electrostatic capacity and

induction, 87, 102.

of potential, 87.

of resistance and conductivity, 297, 298.

of induced magnetization, 426.

of electromagnetic induction, 755.

of self-induction, 756, 757. Coercive force, 424, 444. Coils, resistance, 335-344.

electromagnetic, 694-706.

measurement of, 708.

comparison of, 752-757. Comparison of capacities, 229.

of coils, 752-757.

of electromotive forces, 358.

of resistances, 345-358. Concentration, 26, 77. Condenser, 50, 226-228.

��* Sir Charles VVheatstone, in his paper on New Instruments and Processes, Phil. Trans., 1843, brought this arrangement into public notice, with due acknowledgment of the original inventor, Mr. S. Hunter Christie, who had described it in his paper on Induced Currents, Phil. Trans., 1833, under the name of a Differential Arrange ment. See the remarks of Mr. Latimer Clark in the Society of Telegraph Engineers, May 8, 1872.

�� �