1913
DOI: 10.1049/jiee-1.1913.0057
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Discussion on “The use of the electrostatic method for the measurement of power”

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“…7 One anecdote describes how Lord Kelvin asked another Glasgow professor if he could recommend an instrument maker who might be good at producing electrometers commercially. Mr White, a skilled microscope maker was recommended, but Kelvin's colleague subsequently found that he was unable to get hold of microscopes any more, since Mr White's shop had rapidly become full of Kelvin's electrometers (Wilson, 1913).…”
Section: Kelvin's Legacy To Atmospheric Electricity Instrumentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…7 One anecdote describes how Lord Kelvin asked another Glasgow professor if he could recommend an instrument maker who might be good at producing electrometers commercially. Mr White, a skilled microscope maker was recommended, but Kelvin's colleague subsequently found that he was unable to get hold of microscopes any more, since Mr White's shop had rapidly become full of Kelvin's electrometers (Wilson, 1913).…”
Section: Kelvin's Legacy To Atmospheric Electricity Instrumentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst in no sense a creationist standpoint, the Victorian view of an inherited earth system, informed by the "book of nature" approach mentioned above, may have contributed to this expectation of steady electrostatic conditions 10 . Subsequent independent work on ionisation of air by Elster and Geitel (1900) in Germany and CTR Wilson (1901) in Scotland established the need for atmospheric current flow, and with it, ultimately the concept of a varying, dynamic, terrestrial atmospheric electricity system.…”
Section: ! ")!mentioning
confidence: 99%