Dr. Bruce Hunt - The Victorian Cable Empire and the Making of "Maxwell's Equations"
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 Published On Nov 27, 2023

On November 15th, 2023, Dr. Bruce Hunt presented "The Victorian Cable Empire and the Making of 'Maxwell's Equations'" as part of the Lyne Starling Trimble History of Science Public Lectures at the American Institute of Physics over Zoom Webinar.

Abstract:
James Clerk Maxwell’s theory of the electromagnetic field is rightly regarded as one of the great achievements of 19th century science, and “Maxwell’s equations” have long held an honored place in physics textbooks and on physicists’ T-shirts. How and why did the theory come to be cast into this now canonical form of four vector equations, and how and why was this done not by Maxwell himself in his Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, but by Oliver Heaviside in the pages of a London electrical trade journal? The answer, I will argue, lies in the demands and opportunities presented by the network of submarine telegraph cables that spread around the globe in the second half of the 19th century, forming, as was often said, the “nervous system” of the British Empire. Heaviside, himself a former telegrapher, was steeped in the problems facing cable telegraphy, particularly the distortion signals suffered in transmission. It was Heaviside’s search for effective tools with which to tackle such problems that led him to take up Maxwell’s theory in the 1870s and to recast it into the four “Maxwell’s equations” in 1885.

Biography:
Bruce J. Hunt is a Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin, where he teaches courses in the history of science and technology. He holds bachelor’s degrees in history and physics from the University of Washington and a PhD in the history of science from Johns Hopkins University, and is a fellow of the American Physical Society. He is the author of Imperial Science: Cable Telegraphy and Electrical Physics in the Victorian British Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2021), Pursuing Power and Light: Technology and Physics from James Watt to Albert Einstein (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010), and The Maxwellians (Cornell University Press, 1991/2005), as well as many articles on the history of 19th century physics and technology.

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The Lyne Starling Trimble History of Science Public Lecture Series features prominent science historians and writers who highlight the important roles that science plays in modern society and culture. Funded by a generous donation from Dr. Virginia Trimble, the lecture series is named after her late father, Dr. Lyne Starling Trimble (1912–1992) who held patents for a number of color-reproduction systems and was an innovative chemist. The series was first endowed at $100,000 by Dr. Trimble, and the Physics Heritage & Promise campaign aims to support and increase sustainability by further endowing the series at $200,000.
View the full listing of past and future Trimble Speakers: https://www.aip.org/history-programs/...
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