Abstract

In a paper “ On Transient Electric Currents,” published in the Philosophical Magazine for June 1853, I described a method for measuring differences of electric potential in absolute electrostatic units, which seemed to me the best adapted for obtaining accurate results. The ‘‘absolute electrometer” which I exhibited to the British Association on the occasion of its meeting at Glasgow in 1855, was constructed for the purpose of putting this method into practice, and, as I then explained, was adapted to reduce the indications of an electroscopic or of a torsion electrometer to absolute measure. The want of sufficiently constant and accurate instruments of the latter class has long delayed my carrying out of the plans then set forth. Efforts which I have made to produce electrometers to fulfil certain conditions of sensibility, convenience, and constancy, for various objects, especially the electrostatic measurement of gal­vanic forces, and of the differences of potential required to produce sparks in air, under definite conditions, and the observation of natural atmospheric electricity, have enabled me now to make a beginning of absolute determinations, which I hope to be able to carry out soon in a much more accurate manner. In the meantime I shall give a slight description of the chief instruments and processes followed, and state the approximate results already obtained, as these may be made the foundation of various important estimates in several departments of electrical science.

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