I t has been observed* that for a lead wire, loaded well beyond the elastic limit, the extension after some time becomes proportional to the time, or the flow becomes viscous in character. The rate of this viscous flow varies with the load, and the following work was undertaken to investigate the law of this variation, and the phenomenon in general.
Methods of Experiment. The Hyperbolic eight.The experiments were all done on wires of the metal, and the preliminary observations were all made on lead. To suspend the wires, they were soldered into stout brass hooks. In the first rough experiments the extension registered itself on a clockwork-driven drum ; these experiments showed that the rate of extension for a given load became constant for a time, but finally increased, and continued increasing. This is due to two causes: (1) As the wire stretches, the length of wire being experimented on at any moment increases. (2) As the wire stretches, the cross-section diminishes, and thus the load per unit area or stress increases. This is by far the more disturbing cause, since, as shown later, the rate increases much more rapidly with the stress than would be given by a linear law. To
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