TO PROFESSOR FARADAY.
Marischal College, Aberdeen,
30th November 1859.
DEAR SIR—I am a candidate for
the Chair of
Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh,
which
will soon be vacant by the appointment of Professor J. D. Forbes to St.
Andrews. If you should be able, from your knowledge of the
attention which I have paid to science, to recommend me to the notice
of
the Curators, it would be greatly in my favour, and I
should
be much indebted to you for such a certificate.
I was sorry that I had so
little time in September
that I could not write out an explanation of the figures of lines
of
force which I sent you; but Professor W. Thomson, to whom I lent then,
seems to have indicated all that was necessary, and most of
them can be recognized from their resemblance to the curves made with
Iron
filings.
The only thing to be observed
is, that these
curves are due to the action either of long wires perpendicular to
the
paper, or of elongated magnetic poles, such as the edge of a long
ribbon
of steel magnetised transversely. By considering infinitely
long currents or magnetic poles perpendicular to the paper we obtain
systems
of curves far more easily traced than in any other case,
while
their general appearance is similar to those produced in
the
ordinary experiments.
All the diagrams have two
sets of lines at
right angles to each other, and the width between the two sets of lines
is the same, so that the reticulation is nearly
square.
If one system belongs to poles, the other belongs to currents, so
that if the meaning of one be known, that of the other may be deduced
from
it.—I remain yours truly,
JAMES CLERK MAXWELL.