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Wilhelm Eduard Weber was German physicist who studied magnetism and electricity. Working with mathematician Karl Gauss, he made sensitive magnetometers to measure magnetic fields, and instruments to measure direct and alternating currents. He also built an electric telegraph. The SI unit of magnetic flux, the weber, is named after him. Weber defined an electromagnetic unit for electric current which was applied to measurements of current made by the deflection of the magnetic needle of a galvanometer. In 1846, he developed the electrodynamometer, in which a current causes a coil suspended within another coil to turn when a current is passed through both. In 1852, Weber defined the absolute unit of electrical resistance. |
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Wilhelm Eduard Weber was born on October 24, 1804, in Wittenberg, Germany
(about 60 miles southwest of Berlin), in a family of 12 children. Weber
was the son of Michael Weber who was a professor of divinity. The family
Weber lived in the Languth House on the Schlossstrasse. Today the house
is better known as "the house with the golden globe".
Languth House as it appears today |
Young Wilhelm Weber |
William was the second of three brothers. Two of his brothers, Ernst Heinrich Weber and Eduard Friedrich Weber, became noted scientists worked in anatomy and physiology. In 1815, after the Universities Halle and Wittenberg were merged, Wilhelm's father Michael moved his family to Halle. William had received his first lessons from his father, but was now sent to the Orphan Asylum and Grammar School at Halle. Then Wilhelm attended the Francke Institute and the University. Wilhelm Weber entered the University of Halle in 1822 where he studied physics and wrote his doctoral dissertation (Ph.D.) in 1826 on the acoustic theory of reed organ pipes. He remained teaching at Halle until 1831 when he was made professor of physics at Göttingen on the recommendation of the mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss. |
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At Göttingen, Weber built a 3-km telegraph to connect the physics
laboratory with the astronomical observatory where Gauss worked, and this
was the first practical telegraph to operate anywhere in the world. Wilhelm
Eduard Weber together with his friend Gauss investigated terrestrial magnetism.
Gauss and Weber organized a network of observation stations in 1836-41
to correlate measurements of terrestrial magnetism made around the world.
The marble board (inscription: "First electrical telegraph") is fixed at the front wall of the observatory |
Weber's telegraph |
The Gauss-Weber telegraph, 1833 |
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During the time that Weber worked with Gauss on measuring magnetic strength he developed sensitive magnetometers and other magnetic instruments. This picture shows a portable magnetometer built by Wilhelm Weber in 1839. |
Wilhelm Weber was Gauss’s assistant and leading experimental collaborator when he started working on the experimental validation of the Ampère force. He accomplished this research over the period 1832-1846. Weber’s discovery made a revolution in physics, the full implications of which are still unrealized. Worse, today, the underlying discovery itself is almost buried.
Ampère's
experimental conclusions drew on a series of brilliant geometrical deductions,
derived from the observation of configurations of current-carrying wires
in which the forces, presumably, cancelled each other, producing no observable
motion. To validate the Ampère Law, one needed to be absolutely
sure that the lack of motion was not due to friction in the joints of the
apparatus, or related effects. Gauss and his young assistant, Wilhelm Weber,
devised a new apparatus, the electrodynamometer, which could directly measure,
to within fractions of a second of arc, the angular displacement produced
in a multiply wound electric coil by another electrical coil perpendicular
to it. By reducing the effects of each of the two coils to that of circular
current loops, Ampère's simple law for the force exerted by a current
loop could be applied. Placing the coils in different positions, and at
different distances from each other, allowed for determinations of the
electrodynamic force, geometrically equivalent to those which Ampère
had deduced form his null experiments.
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Weber improved the tangent galvanometer invented by Hermann von Helmholtz and built an electrodynamometer suitable for studying the force produced by one electric current on another: when the same current passes through two concentric coils placed at right angles to each other, the resulting torque depends on the square of the current. The picture shows the electrodynamometer constructed in 1841 by Wilhelm Weber and used in the final determination of the validity of Ampere's electrodynamics. It consists of two perpendicular electrical coils. The outer coil is suspended in such a way that its rotation, under the influence of the inner coil, can be precisely determined by observing the deflection of the mirror image of a meter stick in a telescope, as in the Gauss-designed magnetometer. The inner coil can be removed, and placed at various distances. |
Weber's Electrodynamometer #10135 Siemens Bros., London |
Weber's Electrodynamometer #10405 Unsigned |
This electrodynamometer was designed by Wilhelm Weber in 1845. In this
electrodynamometer the magnetic field is provided by a current carrying
coil instead of a permanent magnet. The instrument is operated in the null
mode, i.e., the fiber suspending the rotating coil is turned so as to bring
the coil back to its rest position, the current then being read from the
angle of rotation of the fiber. This was a secondary standard for current
measurement until the 1920s when it was replaced by the more convenient
direct reading meter patented by Edward
Weston. (Reference: John T. Stock and Denys Vaughn, The Development
of Instruments to Measure Current, Science Museum, 1983, p.39-40.)
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When Victoria became Queen of Britain in 1837 her uncle became ruler of Hanover and revoked the liberal constitution. Weber was one of 7 professors at Göttingen to sign a protest and all were dismissed. The results of a rigorous program of instrument building and experimentation was interrupted by Weber's expulsion from Göttingen University as a result of the political events of 1837. He remained at Göttingen without a position until 1843 when he became professor of physics at Leipzig. His the most important scientific results were finally published at Leipzig in 1846 in his book "Elektrodynamische Massenbestimmungen" (Electrodynamical Measurements, 1846). These results completely confirmed the deductions of Ampère, and also introduced a new physical principle. Wilhelm Eduard Weber, lithograph printed by Rudolf Hoffmann, ca. 1840, from the original artist Goettingen Petri |
The discovery of the phenomena of electrical and magnetic induction had introduced a new element into the considerations of electrical law, not taken up in Ampère's 1826 work. There thus existed, side by side, three seemingly valid descriptions of the electrical interaction: (1) the Coulomb-Poisson law, describing the interaction of two electrical masses at rest; (2) the Ampère law, describing the interaction of elements of moving electricity, and: (3) a description of the laws of induction, elaborated by Emil Lenz and Franz Neumann. In his Fundamental Electrical Law, stated in 1846, Weber achieved the unification of these various phenomena under a single conception.
Instead of the mathematical entities, described as current elements
by Ampère, Weber hypothesized the existence within the conductor
of positive and negative electrical particles. He assumed that the presence
of an electrical tension caused these particles to move at equal velocities
in opposite directions. If one regards an Ampère current element
as containing, at any given instant, a positive and a negative electrical
particle, passing each other, then in the pairwise relationship of two
current elements, there are four interactions to be considered. By the
Coulomb law, these interactions, consisting of two repulsions and two attractions,
cancel each other. However, the elementary experiments of Ampère
had shown that a motion is produced between the wires, implying the existence
of a force not described by the Coulomb law. For example, two parallel
conducting wires attract each other when the current in the two wires flows
in the same direction, and repel each other when the opposite is the case.
The situation is perfectly well explained under the Ampère force
law, when one takes into account the angular relationship of the respective
current elements. However, Weber's unifying approach was to assume that
the relative velocities of the electrical particles produced a modification
in the Coulomb electrostatic force, to produce the resultant force between
the wires. Considering all the configurations which Ampère had examined,
as well as those arising from the phenomena of induction, he was able to
formulate a general statement of the Fundamental Electrical Law. This showed
that the general law describing the force of interaction of two electrical
particles, depends upon the relative velocities and the relative accelerations
of the particles. The Coulomb electrostatic law thus becomes a special
case of Weber's general law, when the particles are at relative rest.
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In the Weber Electrical Law, there is a relative velocity, corresponding
to the constant c in his formula, at which the force between a pair of
electrical particles becomes zero. The Weber-Kohlrausch
experiment, carried out at Göttingen in 1854, was designed to determine
this value. It was found to be experimentally equal, in electrodynamic
units, to the product of the velocity of light, in vacuo, with the square
root of 2. That value, became known as the Weber constant. In electromagnetic
units, it was equal to the light velocity. Bernhard Riemann, who participated
in the experiment, soon wrote up the obvious conclusion of a deep connection
between light and electrodynamic, or electromagnetic phenomena. Unfortunately,
Weber failed to take any notice of this fact. However, this unexpected
link between electricity and optics became central to James Clerk Maxwell's
great development of electromagnetic field theory.
Wilhelm Eduard Weber |
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Another Weber's important result was the development of a system of
units that expressed electrical concepts in terms of mass, length, and
time. Gauss had previously done this for magnetism. Since force was expressed
in these dimensions, he was then able to find his law of electric force.
The principle was not very satisfactory because it did not conserve energy,
but with it Weber publicized the view that matter was made up of charged
particles held together by the force. Weber modified the central force
concepts which pervaded physics in his book "Elektrodynamische Massenbestimmungen"
(Electrodynamical Measurements, 1846) by presenting a force law which was
dependent on velocity and acceleration. Weber also linked the force
between atoms to the their potential energy. His work inspired the direction
that physics took in the latter half of the century. The units of Gauss
and Weber were adopted at an international conference in Paris in 1881.
The unit of magnetic flux (the weber) is named in his honor.
Wilhelm Weber and Karl Friedrich Gauss; painter: Karl-Conrad-Friedrich Bauer |
The SI unit of magnetic flux, weber (Wb), honors the German physicist Wilhelm Eduard Weber, one of the early researchers of magnetism. "Flux" is the rate (per unit of time) in which something crosses a surface perpendicular to the flow. If the something is a magnetic field, then the magnetic flux across a perpendicular surface is the product of the magnetic flux density, in teslas, and the surface area, in square meters. If a varying magnetic field passes perpendicularly through a circular loop of conducting material, the variation in the field induces a electric potential in the loop. If the flux is changing at a uniform rate of one weber per second, the induced potential is one volt. This means that numerically the flux in webers is equal to the potential, in volts, that would be created by collapsing the field uniformly to zero in one second. One weber is the flux induced in this way by a current varying at the uniform rate of one ampere per second. The weber is a large unit, equal to 108 maxwells, and practical fluxes are usually fractions of one weber. (Because of this, when we want to induce an electric potential in a conductor with a changing field, as we do in all electric generators, transformers and electric motors, we loop the conductor into hundreds of coils, thus adding together the small voltages induced in each loop by the changing field.) |
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Wilhelm Weber's brothers. |
When Wilhelm Weber came to work at the Leipzig University, he often
collaborated with his brothers Ernst and Eduard, renowned physiologists,
that were already on the faculty. Actually, his collaboration with the
brothers was started much earlier. Young Wilhelm Weber, just 18 years old
at the time, assisted his brother Ernst in pioneering investigations on
wave motion. Their sophisticated research resulted in the publication
in 1825 of "Wellenlehre, auf Experimenten gegründet", a 575-page
monograph on wave theory that included 18 copper plate illustrations. This
classic book included the first detailed application of hydrodynamic principles
to the study of the circulation of the blood. In 1833 Wilhelm Weber investigated
the mechanism of walking together with his brother Eduard.
Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795-1878), right, and Eduard Friedrich Wilhelm Weber (1806-1871), left |
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In 1849 Wilhelm Weber returned to his post in Göttingen and, in
1855, he and Dirichlet became temporary directors of the astronomical observatory
there. Weber's later years at Göttingen were devoted to work in electrodynamics
and the electrical structure of matter. Weber put forward in 1871 the view
that atoms contain positive charges that are surrounded by rotating negative
particles and that the application of an electric potential to a conductor
causes the negative particles to migrate from one atom to another. He also
provided similar explanations of thermal conduction and thermoelectricity.
Wilhelm Eduard Weber |
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Wilhelm Weber was described by Thomas Hirst in the following way: "He
speaks and stutters on unceasingly, one has nothing to do but listen. Sometimes
he laughs for no earthly reason, and one feels sorry at being not able
to join him."
Wilhelm Eduard Weber |
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Wilhelm Weber received many honours from England, France, and Germany,
among which were the title of Geheimrat (privy councillor) and the
Copley Medal of the Royal Society. Many of his extensive articles are in
the six volumes of Resultate aus den Beobachtungen des magnetischen
Vereins (1837-43), edited by himself and Gauss. Long term friendship
and fruitful scientific collaboration of Weber and Gauss at the Göttingen
University is memorized in this monument.
Monument of Gauss and Weber (standing) in Göttingen |
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Wilhelm Weber died on June 23, 1891 in Göttingen where he was buried. |
This
text has been compiled from the biographies of Weber
available in the Internet:
( 1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10, 11,
12,
13, 14,
15,
16 ).
A large fragment of the text in this web page originates from: Laurence
Hecht, “Should the Law of Gravity Be Repealed? The Suppressed Electrodynamics
of Ampere-Gauss-Weber,” 21st Century Science & Technology, Spring 2001,
available on online at http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/spring01/Electrodynamics.html.
The author's kind permission to use this material is greatly appreciated.