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André-Marie Ampère
André-Marie Ampère
(1775-1836), was a French physicist, natural philosopher, and
mathematician who is best known for his important contributions to the
study of electrodynamics. He invented the astatic needle, a critical
component of the modern astatis galvanometer, and was the first to
demonstrate that a magnetic field is generated when two parallel wires are
charged with electricity. He is generally credited as one of the first to
discover electromagnetism. Born January 20, 1775, Ampère was the son of a
successful businessman and local government official in
Polemieux-auMont-d'Or, a small community near Lyon, France. As a child
Ampere spent a great deal of time reading in the library of his family
home, and he voraciously consumed books of history, geography, literature,
philosophy and the natural sciences. His father taught him Latin and
encouraged Ampère to pursue his passion for mathematics. Some historians
write that the young Ampère was a math prodigy at a very early age and
that he used to work out long mathematical formulas, just for his own
personal entertainment, using small pebbles or breadcrumbs to represent
groups of numbers.
Even without any formal education Ampère
began a career as a science teacher. After teaching for a while in Lyon he
accepted positions at institutions of higher learning including the
College of France and the Polytechnic School at Paris, where he was a
professor of mathematics. It was there that he first conducted important
research and experiments into the nature of electrical and magnetic
forces. In the early 1820s, after learning about the electromagnetism
experiments of Hans Christian Oersted, Ampère began to formulate a
combined theory of electricity and magnetism, doing several demonstrations
involving magnetic and electrical forces. His work confirmed and validated
the discoveries of Oersted while also expanding upon them, helping to
accelerate work in the field of electromagnetism around the world.
Ampère's most significant scholarly paper
on the subject of electricity and magnetism, titled Memoir on the
Mathematical Theory of Electrodynamic Phenomena, was published in 1826.
The theoretical foundation presented in this publication served as the
basis for other ideas of the 19th century regarding electricity and
magnetism. It helped to inspire research and discoveries by scientists
including Faraday, Weber, Thomson, and Maxwell.
Ampère was elected to the prestigious
National Institute of Sciences in 1814, and was awarded a chair at the
University of France in 1826. There he taught electrodynamics and remained
a member of the faculty until his death. He was also a member of the
Fellows of the Royal Society of London
Despite his celebrated accomplishments,
Ampère led a rather tragic life. When Lyons was taken over by rebels
during the French Revolution, his beloved father was a district judge.
Because of his political affiliations, Ampère’s father was taken as a
political prisoner and then publicly executed by guillotine, an event that
severely scarred the young Ampère and led to a period of psychological
depression. Later in life Ampère’s first wife met with an early death
after a prolonged illness, and although he remarried, his second marriage
was unhappy and unsuccessful.
Ampère died June 10, 1836 in Marseilles,
France, and was buried in the Montmartre Cemetery in Paris. When Gustave
Eiffel built his famous Eiffel Tower in Pairs in 1889, he included the
names of 72 prominent French scientists on plaques around the first
section at the base of the structure. The name of André-Marie Ampère is
included in that distinguished memorial.
The ampere – the unit for measuring
electric current – was named in honor of Ampère. In the past, an ampere
was understood as the force generated between parallel electrically
charged wires, but as scientific knowledge evolves over time, the
definition of “ampere” sometimes changes slightly also. The current modern
definition of ampere describes the ability of a specified current to
deposit a precise amount of a substance on an electrode during
electrolysis.
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