Discovery of diamagnetism-researches
on magne-crystallic
action.
Faraday’s next great step in
discovery was announced in a memoir on the ‘Magnetic
Condition of all matter,’ communicated to the
Royal Society on December 18, 1845. One great
source of his success was the employment of extraordinary
power. As already stated, he never accepted a
negative answer to an experiment until he had brought
to bear upon it all the force at his command.
He had over and over again tried steel magnets and
ordinary electro-magnets on various substances, but
without detecting anything different from the ordinary
attraction exhibited by a few of them. Stronger
coercion, however, developed a new action. Before
the pole of an electro-magnet, he suspended a fragment
of his famous heavy glass; and observed that when
the magnet was powerfully excited the glass fairly
retreated from the pole. It was a clear case of
magnetic repulsion. He then suspended a bar of
the glass between two poles; the bar retreated when
the poles were excited, and set its length equatorially
or at right angles to the line joining them. When
an ordinary magnetic body was similarly suspended,
it always set axially, that is, from pole to pole.
Faraday called those bodies which
were repelled by the poles of a magnet, diamagnetic
bodies; using this term in a sense different from
that in which he employed it in his memoir on the magnetization
of light. The term magnetic he reserved for bodies
which exhibited the ordinary attraction. He afterwards
employed the term magnetic to cover the whole phenomena
of attraction and repulsion, and used the word paramagnetic
to designate such magnetic action as is exhibited by
iron.
Isolated observations by Brugmanns,
Becquerel, Le Baillif, Saigy, and Seebeck had indicated
the existence of a repulsive force exercised by the
magnet on two or three substances; but these observations,
which were unknown to Faraday, had been permitted
to remain without extension or examination. Having
laid hold of the fact of repulsion, Faraday immediately
expanded and multiplied it. He subjected bodies
of the most varied qualities to the action of his
magnet:-mineral salts, acids, alkalis,
ethers, alcohols, aqueous solutions, glass, phosphorus,
resins, oils, essences, vegetable and animal tissues,
and found them all amenable to magnetic influence.
No known solid or liquid proved insensible to the
magnetic power when developed in sufficient strength.
All the tissues of the human body, the blood-though
it contains iron-included, were proved
to be diamagnetic. So that if you could suspend
a man between the poles of a magnet, his extremities
would retreat from the poles until his length became
equatorial.
Soon after he had commenced his researches
on diamagnetism, Faraday noticed a remarkable phenomenon
which first crossed my own path in the following way:
In the year 1849, while working in the cabinet of my
friend, Professor Knoblauch, of Marburg, I suspended
a small copper coin between the poles of an electro-magnet.
On exciting the magnet, the coin moved towards the
poles and then suddenly stopped, as if it had struck
against a cushion. On breaking the circuit, the
coin was repelled, the revulsion being so violent
as to cause it to spin several times round its axis
of suspension. A Silber-groschen similarly suspended
exhibited the same deportment. For a moment I
thought this a new discovery; but on looking over
the literature of the subject, it appeared that Faraday
had observed, multiplied, and explained the same effect
during his researches on diamagnetism. His explanation
was based upon his own great discovery of magneto-electric
currents. The effect is a most singular one.
A weight of several pounds of copper may be set spinning
between the electro-magnetic poles; the excitement
of the magnet instantly stops the rotation. Though
nothing is apparent to the eye, the copper, if moved
in the excited magnetic field, appears to move through
a viscous fluid; while, when a flat piece of the metal
is caused to pass to and fro like a saw between the
poles, the sawing of the magnetic field resembles
the cutting through of cheese or butter. This virtual
friction of the magnetic field is so strong, that copper,
by its rapid rotation between the poles, might probably
be fused. We may easily dismiss this experiment
by saying that the heat is due to the electric currents
excited in the copper. But so long as we are unable
to reply to the question, ‘What is an electric
current?’ the explanation is only provisional.
For my own part, I look with profound interest and
hope on the strange action here referred to.
Faraday’s thoughts ran intuitively
into experimental combinations, so that subjects whose
capacity for experimental treatment would, to ordinary
minds, seem to be exhausted in a moment, were shown
by him to be all but inexhaustible. He has now
an object in view, the first step towards which is
the proof that the principle of Archimedes is true
of magnetism. He forms magnetic solutions of
various degrees of strength, places them between the
poles of his magnet, and suspends in the solutions
various magnetic bodies. He proves that when the
solution is stronger than the body plunged in it,
the body, though magnetic, is repelled; and when an
elongated piece of it is surrounded by the solution,
it sets, like a diamagnetic body, equatorially between
the excited poles. The same body when suspended
in a solution of weaker magnetic power than itself,
is attracted as a whole, while an elongated portion
of it sets axially.
And now theoretic questions rush in
upon him. Is this new force a true repulsion,
or is it merely a differential attraction? Might
not the apparent repulsion of diamagnetic bodies be
really due to the greater attraction of the medium
by which they are surrounded? He tries the rarefaction
of air, but finds the effect insensible. He is
averse to ascribing a capacity of attraction to space,
or to any hypothetical medium supposed to fill space.
He therefore inclines, but still with caution, to
the opinion that the action of a magnet upon bismuth
is a true and absolute repulsion, and not merely the
result of differential attraction. And then he
clearly states a theoretic view sufficient to account
for the phenomena. ‘Theoretically,’
he says, ’an explanation of the movements of
the diamagnetic bodies, and all the dynamic phenomena
consequent upon the action of magnets upon them, might
be offered in the supposition that magnetic induction
caused in them a contrary state to that which it produced
in ordinary matter.’ That is to say, while
in ordinary magnetic influence the exciting pole excites
adjacent to itself the contrary magnetism, in diamagnetic
bodies the adjacent magnetism is the same as that
of the exciting pole. This theory of reversed
polarity, however, does not appear to have ever laid
deep hold of Faraday’s mind; and his own experiments
failed to give any evidence of its truth. He
therefore subsequently abandoned it, and maintained
the non-polarity of the diamagnetic force.
He then entered a new, though related
field of inquiry. Having dealt with the metals
and their compounds, and having classified all of
them that came within the range of his observation
under the two heads magnetic and diamagnetic, he began
the investigation of the phenomena presented by crystals
when subjected to magnetic power. This action
of crystals had been in part theoretically predicted
by Poisson, and actually discovered by Plucker,
whose beautiful results, at the period which we have
now reached, profoundly interested all scientific men.
Faraday had been frequently puzzled by the deportment
of bismuth, a highly crystalline metal. Sometimes
elongated masses of the substance refused to set equatorially,
sometimes they set persistently oblique, and sometimes
even, like a magnetic body, from pole to pole.
‘The effect,’ he says,
’occurs at a single pole; and it is then striking
to observe a long piece of a substance so diamagnetic
as bismuth repelled, and yet at the same moment set
round with force, axially, or end on, as a piece of
magnetic substance would do.’ The effect
perplexed him; and in his efforts to release himself
from this perplexity, no feature of this new manifestation
of force escaped his attention. His experiments
are described in a memoir communicated to the Royal
Society on December 7, 1848.
I have worked long myself at magne-crystallic
action, amid all the light of Faraday’s and
Plucker’s researches. The papers now before
me were objects of daily and nightly study with me
eighteen or nineteen years ago; but even now, though
their perusal is but the last of a series of repetitions,
they astonish me. Every circumstance connected
with the subject; every shade of deportment; every
variation in the energy of the action; almost every
application which could possibly be made of magnetism
to bring out in detail the character of this new force,
is minutely described. The field is swept clean,
and hardly anything experimental is left for the gleaner.
The phenomena, he concludes, are altogether different
from those of magnetism or diamagnetism: they
would appear, in fact, to present to us ’a new
force, or a new form of force, in the molecules of
matter,’ which, for convenience sake, he designates
by a new word, as ‘the magne-crystallic
force.’
He looks at the crystal acted upon
by the magnet. From its mass he passes, in idea,
to its atoms, and he asks himself whether the power
which can thus seize upon the crystalline molecules,
after they have been fixed in their proper positions
by crystallizing force, may not, when they are free,
be able to determine their arrangement? He, therefore,
liberates the atoms by fusing the bismuth. He
places the fused substance between the poles of an
electro-magnet, powerfully excited; but he fails to
detect any action. I think it cannot be doubted
that an action is exerted here, that a true cause comes
into play; but its magnitude is not such as sensibly
to interfere with the force of crystallization, which,
in comparison with the diamagnetic force, is enormous.
‘Perhaps,’ adds Faraday, ’if a longer
time were allowed, and a permanent magnet used, a
better result might be obtained. I had built
many hopes upon the process.’ This expression,
and his writings abound in such, illustrates what
has been already said regarding his experiments being
suggested and guided by his theoretic conceptions.
His mind was full of hopes and hypotheses, but he
always brought them to an experimental test.
The record of his planned and executed experiments
would, I doubt not, show a high ratio of hopes disappointed
to hopes fulfilled; but every case of fulfilment abolished
all memory of defeat; disappointment was swallowed
up in victory.
After the description of the general
character of this new force, Faraday states with the
emphasis here reproduced its mode of action:
’The law of action appears to be that the line
or axis of magne-crystallic force (being
the resultant of the action of all the molecules)
tends to place itself parallel, or as a tangent, to
the magnetic curve, or line of magnetic force, passing
through the place where the crystal is situated.’
The magne-crystallic force, moreover, appears
to him ’to be clearly distinguished from the
magnetic or diamagnetic forces, in that it causes
neither approach nor recession, consisting not in
attraction or repulsion, but in giving a certain determinate
position to the mass under its influence.’
And then he goes on ’very carefully to examine
and prove the conclusion that there was no connection
of the force with attractive or repulsive influences.’
With the most refined ingenuity he shows that, under
certain circumstances, the magne-crystallic force
can cause the centre of gravity of a highly magnetic
body to retreat from the poles, and the centre of gravity
of a highly diamagnetic body to approach them.
His experiments root his mind more and more firmly
in the conclusion that ’neither attraction nor
repulsion causes the set, or governs the final position’
of the crystal in the magnetic field. That the
force which does so is therefore ’distinct in
its character and effects from the magnetic and diamagnetic
forms of force. On the other hand,’ he continues,
’it has a most manifest relation to the crystalline
structure of bismuth and other bodies, and therefore
to the power by which their molecules are able to
build up the crystalline masses.’
And here follows one of those expressions
which characterize the conceptions of Faraday in regard
to force generally:-’It appears to
me impossible to conceive of the results in any other
way than by a mutual reaction of the magnetic force,
and the force of the particles of the crystals upon
each other.’ He proves that the action of
the force, though thus molecular, is an action at
a distance; he shows that a bismuth crystal can cause
a freely suspended magnetic needle to set parallel
to its magne-crystallic axis. Few living
men are aware of the difficulty of obtaining results
like this, or of the delicacy necessary to their attainment.
’But though it thus takes up the character of
a force acting at a distance, still it is due to that
power of the particles which makes them cohere in
regular order and gives the mass its crystalline aggregation,
which we call at other times the attraction of aggregation,
and so often speak of as acting at insensible distances.’
Thus he broods over this new force, and looks at it
from all possible points of inspection. Experiment
follows experiment, as thought follows thought.
He will not relinquish the subject as long as a hope
exists of throwing more light upon it. He knows
full well the anomalous nature of the conclusion to
which his experiments lead him. But experiment
to him is final, and he will not shrink from the conclusion.
‘This force,’ he says, ’appears to
me to be very strange and striking in its character.
It is not polar, for there is no attraction or repulsion.’
And then, as if startled by his own utterance, he
asks-’What is the nature of the mechanical
force which turns the crystal round, and makes it
affect a magnet?’... ‘I do not remember,’
he continues ’heretofore such a case of force
as the present one, where a body is brought into position
only, without attraction or repulsion.’
Plucker, the celebrated geometer already
mentioned, who pursued experimental physics for many
years of his life with singular devotion and success,
visited Faraday in those days, and repeated before
him his beautiful experiments on magneto-optic action.
Faraday repeated and verified Plucker’s observations,
and concluded, what he at first seemed to doubt, that
Plucker’s results and magne-crystallic action
had the same origin.
At the end of his papers, when he
takes a last look along the line of research, and
then turns his eyes to the future, utterances quite
as much emotional as scientific escape from Faraday.
‘I cannot,’ he says, at the end of his
first paper on magne-crystallic action, ’conclude
this series of researches without remarking how rapidly
the knowledge of molecular forces grows upon us, and
how strikingly every investigation tends to develop
more and more their importance, and their extreme
attraction as an object of study. A few years
ago magnetism was to us an occult power, affecting
only a few bodies, now it is found to influence all
bodies, and to possess the most intimate relations
with electricity, heat, chemical action, light, crystallization,
and through it, with the forces concerned in cohesion;
and we may, in the present state of things, well feel
urged to continue in our labours, encouraged by the
hope of bringing it into a bond of union with gravity
itself.’
Supplementary remarks
A brief space will, perhaps, be granted
me here to state the further progress of an investigation
which interested Faraday so much. Drawn by the
fame of Bunsen as a teacher, in the year 1848 I became
a student in the University of Marburg, in Hesse Cassel.
Bunsen’s behaviour to me was that of a brother
as well as that of a teacher, and it was also my happiness
to make the acquaintance and gain the friendship of
Professor Knoblauch, so highly distinguished by his
researches on Radiant Heat. Plucker’s and
Faraday’s investigations filled all minds at
the time, and towards the end of 1849, Professor Knoblauch
and myself commenced a joint investigation of the
entire question. Long discipline was necessary
to give us due mastery over it. Employing a method
proposed by Dove, we examined the optical properties
of our crystals ourselves; and these optical observations
went hand in hand with our magnetic experiments.
The number of these experiments was very great, but
for a considerable time no fact of importance was
added to those already published. At length,
however, it was our fortune to meet with various crystals
whose deportment could not be brought under the laws
of magne-crystallic action enunciated by Plucker.
We also discovered instances which led us to suppose
that the magne-crystallic force was by no means
independent, as alleged, of the magnetism or diamagnetism
of the mass of the crystal. Indeed, the more
we worked at the subject, the more clearly did it
appear to us that the deportment of crystals in the
magnetic field was due, not to a force previously unknown,
but to the modification of the known forces of magnetism
and diamagnetism by crystalline aggregation.
An eminent example of magne-crystallic
action adduced by Plucker, and experimented on by
Faraday, was Iceland spar. It is what in optics
is called a negative crystal, and according to the
law of Plucker, the axis of such a crystal was always
repelled by a magnet. But we showed that it was
only necessary to substitute, in whole or in part,
carbonate of iron for carbonate of lime, thus changing
the magnetic but not the optical character of the
crystal, to cause the axis to be attracted. That
the deportment of magnetic crystals is exactly antithetical
to that of diamagnetic crystals isomorphous with the
magnetic ones, was proved to be a general law of action.
In all cases, the line which in a diamagnetic crystal
set equatorially, always set itself in an isomorphous
magnetic crystal axially. By mechanical compression
other bodies were also made to imitate the Iceland
spar.
These and numerous other results bearing
upon the question were published at the time in the
‘Philosophical Magazine’ and in ‘Poggendorff’s
Annalen’; and the investigation of diamagnetism
and magne-crystallic action was subsequently
continued by me in the laboratory of Professor Magnus
of Berlin. In December, 1851, after I had quitted
Germany, Dr. Bence Jones went to the Prussian capital
to see the celebrated experiments of Du Bois Reymond.
Influenced, I suppose, by what he there heard, he
afterwards invited me to give a Friday evening discourse
at the Royal Institution. I consented, not without
fear and trembling. For the Royal Institution
was to me a kind of dragon’s den, where tact
and strength would be necessary to save me from destruction.
On February 11, 1853, the discourse was given, and
it ended happily. I allude to these things, that
I may mention that, though my aim and object in that
lecture was to subvert the notions both of Faraday
and Plucker, and to establish in opposition to their
views what I regarded as the truth, it was very far
from producing in Faraday either enmity or anger.
At the conclusion of the lecture, he quitted his accustomed
seat, crossed the theatre to the corner into which
I had shrunk, shook me by the hand, and brought me
back to the table. Once more, subsequently, and
in connection with a related question, I ventured to
differ from him still more emphatically. It was
done out of trust in the greatness of his character;
nor was the trust misplaced. He felt my public
dissent from him; and it pained me afterwards to the
quick to think that I had given him even momentary
annoyance. It was, however, only momentary.
His soul was above all littleness and proof to all
egotism. He was the same to me afterwards that
he had been before; the very chance expression which
led me to conclude that he felt my dissent being one
of kindness and affection.
It required long subsequent effort
to subdue the complications of magne-crystallic
action, and to bring under the dominion of elementary
principles the vast mass of facts which the experiments
of Faraday and Plucker had brought to light.
It was proved by Reich, Edmond Becquerel, and myself,
that the condition of diamagnetic bodies, in virtue
of which they were repelled by the poles of a magnet,
was excited in them by those poles; that the strength
of this condition rose and fell with, and was proportional
to, the strength of the acting magnet. It was
not then any property possessed permanently by the
bismuth, and which merely required the development
of magnetism to act upon it, that caused the repulsion;
for then the repulsion would have been simply proportional
to the strength of the influencing magnet, whereas
experiment proved it to augment as the square of the
strength. The capacity to be repelled was therefore
not inherent in the bismuth, but induced. So far
an identity of action was established between magnetic
and diamagnetic bodies. After this the deportment
of magnetic bodies, ‘normal’ and ‘abnormal’;
crystalline, amorphous, and compressed, was compared
with that of crystalline, amorphous, and compressed
diamagnetic bodies; and by a series of experiments,
executed in the laboratory of this Institution, the
most complete antithesis was established between magnetism
and diamagnetism. This antithesis embraced the
quality of polarity,-the theory of reversed
polarity, first propounded by Faraday, being proved
to be true. The discussion of the question was
very brisk. On the Continent Professor Wilhelm
Weber was the ablest and most successful supporter
of the doctrine of diamagnetic polarity; and it was
with an apparatus, devised by him and constructed
under his own superintendence, by Leyser of Leipzig,
that the last demands of the opponents of diamagnetic
polarity were satisfied. The establishment of
this point was absolutely necessary to the explanation
of magne-crystallic action.
With that admirable instinct which
always guided him, Faraday had seen that it was possible,
if not probable, that the diamagnetic force acts with
different degrees of intensity in different directions,
through the mass of a crystal. In his studies
on electricity, he had sought an experimental reply
to the question whether crystalline bodies had not
different specific inductive capacities in different
directions, but he failed to establish any difference
of the kind. His first attempt to establish differences
of diamagnetic action in different directions through
bismuth, was also a failure; but he must have felt
this to be a point of cardinal importance, for he
returned to the subject in 1850, and proved that bismuth
was repelled with different degrees of force in different
directions. It seemed as if the crystal were compounded
of two diamagnetic bodies of different strengths,
the substance being more strongly repelled across
the magne-crystallic axis than along it.
The same result was obtained independently, and extended
to various other bodies, magnetic as well as diamagnetic,
and also to compressed substances, a little subsequently
by myself.
The law of action in relation to this
point is, that in diamagnetic crystals, the line along
which the repulsion is a maximum, sets equatorially
in the magnetic field; while in magnetic crystals the
line along which the attraction is a maximum sets
from pole to pole. Faraday had said that the
magne-crystallic force was neither attraction
nor repulsion. Thus far he was right. It
was neither taken singly, but it was both. By
the combination of the doctrine of diamagnetic polarity
with these differential attractions and repulsions,
and by paying due regard to the character of the magnetic
field, every fact brought to light in the domain of
magne-crystallic action received complete explanation.
The most perplexing of those facts were shown to result
from the action of mechanical couples, which the proved
polarity both of magnetism and diamagnetism brought
into play. Indeed the thoroughness with which
the experiments of Faraday were thus explained, is
the most striking possible demonstration of the marvellous
precision with which they were executed.