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  • Like thermodynamics, the history of electrical physics has its roots in pre-industrial questions

  • that converged in the nineteenth century. These questions became a research paradigm,

  • driven by a whole crew of researchersAnd they led to a power system that reshaped the

  • world. Time to get tingly!

  • [Intro Music Plays]

  • The study of electricity goes all the way back to antiquity. Like, for a long time,

  • people knew that lightning is the powerful release of energy caused when two clouds are

  • in love and make a baby cloud.

  • But that's hard to study.

  • Much easier to study, however, was static electricity, or the electrical charge produced

  • by stationary friction: it waits for you to pet your cat, and then shocks you!

  • But for centuries, natural historians didn't really have any good ideas about how to more

  • deeply understand this phenomenon.

  • For one, they had no concept of current, or electricity as a flow of electrical charge.

  • Current can happen either by the movement of negatively charged subatomic particles

  • called electrons through wires, or by the movement of charged molecules called ions.

  • And these people didn't know either of those things existed.

  • Secondly, the relationship between electricity and magnetism, which are intimately linked,

  • was a mystery.

  • And, third, a lot of experimentation into these phenomenon basically amounted to weird

  • parlor tricks that had no obvious uses.

  • English natural philosopher Francis Hauksbee, for example, found out in the early 1700s

  • that spinning a glass globe produced electricitythus creating one of the first electrical generators.

  • Then, in 1729, two amateur scholars named Stephen Gray and Granville Wheler discovered

  • that electricity could be communicated over long distances by contact.

  • This was an important first step toward researching currents. But mostly it was an excuse to conduct

  • totally ethical scientific demonstrations

  • like suspending a young boy from the ceiling, charging him up, and then watching him attract

  • objects with different body parts.

  • And we can't forget statesman, encyclopedist, and infamous knowitall Ben Franklin.

  • He witnessed one of these flying-boy demonstrations in Boston, then went home to Philadelphia

  • and waited for a thunderstorm.

  • As the story goes, in 1752, he flew his kite in a storm and succeeded indrawing off

  • electrical fire.

  • Inspired by this incident, he developed the lightning rod. But no real epistemic knowledge.

  • One of the first modern electrical physicists was Italian physician Luigi Galvani.

  • In the late 1700s, his assistant accidentally caused a frog's leg to twitch with a spark

  • from a nearby electrostatic generator.

  • Inspired by this chance observation, he conducted many freaky experiments with frogs.

  • After much frog-shocking, he theorized the existence of animal electricity, or the electrical

  • basis of nerve impulses.

  • That inspired one young woman who was remarkably well informed about contemporary science:

  • in 1818, Mary Shelley published what would become a very famous book about a man zapped

  • to life by a Galvani-esque Doctor Frankenstein.

  • Galvani also inspired his colleague, Italian physicist and chemist Alessandro Volta, to

  • push his work on nerves further.

  • And Volta became a rockstar of electrical physics when he created the first practical

  • method of generating electricitythe first battery, known as the voltaic pile

  • So ThoughtBubble, let's make some sparks fly!

  • Volta's battery evolved from humble origins. The first iterations were made of two different

  • metals separated by a brine-soaked cloth or piece of cardboard.

  • But Volta kept improving the pile. In 1800, he stacked pairs of copper and zinc discs,

  • again separated by briny cloth or cardboard.

  • When he connected the top and bottom of the pile, it generated a steady electric current

  • that could be carried by a wire.

  • Volta had created the first stable source of electrical current!

  • This type of two-metal battery fulfilled the world's scant electrical needs throughout

  • much of the First Industrial Revolution, until around 1870.

  • But no one could really explain how it worked, in part because no one had brought electricity

  • and magnetism together.

  • One of the first steps in this direction was taken in 1820 by Danish physicist and chemist

  • Hans Christian Ørsted.

  • While demonstrating to his students how to heat up a wire by running an electrical current

  • through it, Ørsted noticed that his compass' needle kept jumping to a ninety-degree angle.

  • Somehow, he realized, the electrical charge and the magnetic attraction of the compass

  • were linked.

  • Ørsted conducted further experiments and showed that electric currents actually produce

  • neatly circular magnetic fields when they flow through wires.

  • This became known as Ørsted's law.

  • Later in 1820, at the Academy of Science in Paris, physicist André-Marie Ampère watched

  • as a friend reproduced Ørsted's electrically-messing-with-a-compass trick.

  • Amazed, Ampère went to work figuring out the math behind this special relationship.

  • He showed that two parallel, electrified wires attract each other if the currents flow in

  • the same direction, and repel if the currents flow in opposite directions.

  • Thanks Thoughtbubble. Ampère also showed that the force between the currents was inversely

  • proportional to the distance between them, and proportional to the intensity of the current

  • flowing in each.

  • This became known as Ampère's law. You can watch a whole episode about that over at Crash

  • Course: Physics!

  • And he even theorized that there must be someelectrodynamic moleculethat carried

  • the currents of electricity and magnetism.

  • This became the basis for the electron.

  • Ampère's insights became the foundation of the quantitative science of electromagnetism,

  • orelectrodynamics.”

  • In 1827, Germany physicist Georg Ohmwho'd been conducting research using Volta's batterypublished

  • his discovery that an electrical current

  • between two points is directly proportional to the voltage, or potential difference, between

  • them.

  • This became known as Ohm's law.

  • This can be expressed using the concept of resistance, or the difficulty of passing an

  • electric current through that conductor, in a really simple equation:

  • “I = V/R.” Current, measured in amperes, is equal to voltage, measured in volts, divided

  • by resistance, measured in ohms.

  • Yep: all three scientists became standard units.

  • Congrats, scientists!

  • They say, in Physics the greatest honor is when your name starts to be spelled with a lower case letter.

  • With practical batteries and basic scientific laws, the stage was set for electricity to

  • become an industryenter motors and lights.

  • Born to a poor family in Newington Butts, London, Michael Faraday became obsessed with

  • electricity and chemistry at a young age.

  • Eventually, he became as important to the sciences of stuff as Darwin was to those of

  • life.

  • In 1821—a year after Ørsted characterized electromagnetism and Ampère began experimenting

  • with the math behind itFaraday got to work inventing electromagnetic motors.

  • His motors worked due toelectromagnetic rotation,” a motion made by the circular

  • magnetic force around an electrified wire.

  • In 1831, he had his big breakthroughelectromagnetic induction, meaning the generation of electricity

  • in one wire via the changing magnetic field created by the current in another wire.

  • This became the basis of the electromagnetic technologies that we use today.

  • Sothanks, Mike!

  • In the same year, Faraday also discovered magneto-electric induction, which is the generation

  • of a steady, direct electrical current in a wire by attaching it to a copper disc,

  • and then rotating the disc between the poles of a magnet. This was the first modern electrical

  • generator!

  • And he proved that the electricity created by magnetic induction, the electricity produced

  • by a voltaic battery, and good ole static electricity were all the same phenomenon.

  • Faraday's experiments led to the invention of modern electrical motors, generators, and

  • transformers.

  • He figured out how to make electricity do work on magnetism and vice versa.

  • And his young buddy, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell, played the Ampère to his Volta,

  • figuring out the math involved in induction.

  • In 1855, Maxwell droppedOn Faraday's lines of force,” showing Faraday's discoveries

  • about electricity and magnetism in the forms of differential equations.

  • Maxwell's long paper, “On Physical Lines of Force,” introduced his full theory of

  • electromagnetism in parts over 1861 and '62.

  • Here, he theorized that electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light, and that light

  • must exist in the same medium as electrical and magnetic energy.

  • By connecting light, electricity, and magnetism, Maxwell laid the groundwork for modern physics.

  • And his work was a major influence on Einstein.

  • But the average person in the 1870s didn't know who Faraday and Maxwell were, much less

  • that they had revolutionized energy and work.

  • There was still no system for using electricity industrially.

  • For that useful system, we have to hop across the Atlantic to the first home of corporate

  • research and development in scienceMenlo Park, New Jersey.

  • Here, a mix of brilliant engineers, scarcely trained boys, and one pet bear (yes!) worked

  • under the direction of a controversial inventor

  • who was or was decidedly not much of a scientist himself, depending on which historian you

  • prefer.

  • His name was Thomas Edison.

  • Edison, or theWizard of Menlo Park,” or theNapoleon of Science,” started

  • his career as a lowly telegraph operator at the age of sixteen.

  • He worked his way up, improving telegraph systems, until he could open his own contract-based-lab-slash-workshop

  • in 1876.

  • Mostly, people remember Edison for his work on making practical incandescent light bulbs,

  • but he should really be thought of as the person who first saw the potential for an

  • entire electrical grid.

  • This included the generation of power, its distribution to homes and businesses, and

  • the invention of useful products that required electricity to work.

  • In the late 1870s, people didn't understand or see the need for electricity. Customers

  • had to be created. So what did Edison do?

  • Befriended the richest guy in New York, who was also the richest guy in the world—J.

  • P. Morgan.

  • With Morgan's money, Edison had the resources to work out the longest-lasting filament,

  • or slender, heated-up-until-visibly-lighted bit, for his bulbs.

  • This ended up being made of carbon, after thousands of experiments on different materials.

  • But he also had the resources to show off his lights in Paris and London. And, most

  • importantly, to electrify downtown Manhattan.

  • Think about it for a second: the night before 1880 was dark.

  • Yes, gas lamps existed, but they were weak, smelly, and dangerous.

  • Edison's electrification of the cultural and financial capital of an ascendent American

  • empire wasblindingly amazing.

  • People stayed up longer. More work got done.

  • The feedback loop of just pushing off bedtime by a few hours was enormousand this was

  • before anyone had devised a good mass-scale electrical motor or vehicle.

  • It's true that Edison didn't invent the components of his electrical power system,

  • only improved upon them,

  • thanks to his team-based, finance-backed approach to science and technology.

  • And it's true that he became embroiled in an intense public battle called the Current War,

  • over the safety and efficiency of his direct current, or DC, versus his rival Westinghouse's

  • much more practical alternating current, or AC.

  • Aaaaand it's true that Edison promoted capital punishment in New York, using an electric

  • chair powered by Westinghouse's AC.

  • Butbeginning with incandescent lightEdison and other inventors used the discoveries of

  • the early electrical physicists to utterly transform the world.

  • Next timewe'll follow Edison, tracing the effects of corporate research and mega-scale

  • engineering through many fields during the Second Industrial Revolution. It's time

  • to go big or go bigger!

  • Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney studio in Missoula,

  • Montana and it's made with the help of all this nice people and our animation team is

  • Thought Cafe.

  • Crash Course is a Complexly production. If you wanna keep imagining the world complexly

  • with us, you can check out some of our other channels like Animal Wonders, The Art Assignment, and Scishow Psych.

  • And, if you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everybody, forever, you can support

  • the series at Patreon; a crowdfunding platform that allows you to support the content you

  • love. Thank you to all of our patrons for making Crash Course possible with their continued

  • support.

Like thermodynamics, the history of electrical physics has its roots in pre-industrial questions

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