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The National MagLab is funded by the National Science Foundation and the State of Florida.

1850-1869

The Industrial Revolution is in full force, Gramme invents his dynamo and James Clerk Maxwell formulates his series of equations on electrodynamics.

1850

1850

1851

1852

  • Sunspots & magnetism
  • Edward Sabine, an English astronomer, discovers a correlation between the sunspot cycle and magnetic activity on Earth.

1853

1853

  • Animal electricity
  • German physicist Hermann von Helmholtz's work with electricity and muscle tissue leads him to publish "Some laws concerning the distribution of electric currents in conductors with applications to experiments on animal electricity." This work includes a mathematical demonstration of what is now known as Thévenin's theorem of electric circuits.

1853

  • Alliance Company
  • The Alliance Company is founded in Paris as a manufacturer of machines for generating electric current, which are originally intended for use by researchers carrying out work in electrochemistry.

1855

  • Maxwell's first essay
  • James Clerk MaxwellScottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell writes his first essay related to electricity, On Faraday's Lines of Force, in which he relates Faraday's conception of lines of force to the flow of a liquid and uses analytical mathematics to derive equations for electric and magnetic phenomena.

1856

  • Discoveries in Germany
  • German physicists Wilhelm Weber and Rudolf Kohlrausch measure the ratio of electrostatic to electromagnetic units and find that the quantity is analogous to the value of the speed of light accepted at that time.

1857

  • Signals through wire
  • Physicist Gustav Kirchhoff expands on the work of compatriots Weber and Kohlrausch, demonstrating that electromagnetic signals can be transmitted on a highly conductive wire at the speed of light.

1858

  • Bending cathode rays
  • Julius Plücker, a German physicist and mathematician, discovers that magnetic forces can cause the bending of cathode rays.

1858

1858

1859

  • Rechargeable battery
  • French physicist Gaston Planté builds the first rechargeable battery from two lead sheets rolled into a cylinder, submerged in a diluted sulfuric acid solution, and then charged.

1861

1861

1861

  • First phone
  • German physics professor Johann Philipp Reis describes in a lecture an electric device he constructed that he dubbed the telephone. However, Reis's invention is unable to sufficiently reproduce most sounds, including human speech, and is never patented or further developed by him.

1864

  • Units of force
  • The Committee on Electrical Standards of the British Association for the Advancement of Science completes a report defining units of electromotive force and resistance based on millimeters, grams and seconds (mgs system). Less than 10 years later the group would recommend switching to a centimeter, gram and second (cgs) system.

1864

1866

  • Leclanché cell
  • Leclanché cellFrench engineer Georges Leclanché invents the dry cell battery that bears his name and continues to be widely used, albeit in a somewhat modified form, today.>

1867

  • Lorenz's theory
  • Danish physicist Ludwig Lorenz independently develops an electromagnetic theory of light and shows that James Clerk Maxwell's equations can be derived from his scalar and vector potentials, though he disagrees with Maxwell's belief that ether was a necessary medium for the transmission of light.

1869

  • Gramme dynamo
  • Gramme dynamoZénobe-Théophile Gramme, an electrical engineer born in Belgium, invents a practical continuous-current electrical generator known as the Gramme dynamo, which a few years later is discovered by accident to be reversible so that it can also be utilized as an electric motor.