Abstract
A CIRCUIT containing self-induction acts as if it had a larger resistance than its true one when a current is started in it, and a smaller resistance when the current is stopped. Hence, if balance be obtained with a Wheat-stone's bridge in the ordinary way, the fact of any of the arms possessing self-induction, or of any one of the arms having a condenser attached to it, will produce no effect on the balance if the battery circuit be rapidly made and broken, provided that the rapidity of make and break be not too great for the currents in the arms of the bridge to reach their steady values each time that the battery circuit is made, and to die away each time that it is broken. If the currents have not time to reach their steady value when the battery circuit is closed, and to die away when it is broken, then self-induction in any one of the arms will produce a disturbance in the balance; but such a method of measuring a coefficient of self-induction would lead to very complicated formulæ, and is not worth developing with the view of obtaining a simple method of measuring self-induction.
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AYRTON, W., PERRY, J. The Secohmmeter . Nature 36, 129–132 (1887). https://doi.org/10.1038/036129a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/036129a0