Book review
How Maxwell made his mark: O. Darrigol's
Electrodynamics from Ampère to Einstein
Nature 409 (2000):283-284
Scott Walter
Among the more enduring legacies of 19th-century science, Maxwell's
Equations have long held a preferred position among physicists. One of
today's more outspoken physicists, Steven Weinberg has argued that the
Equations constitute a noncontingent fact, without which contemporary
physics would be unimaginable. Little more than a century ago,
however, other, non-Maxwellian futures were still imaginable, and not
only by poets and science-fiction writers, but by the likes of Kelvin
and Helmholtz, for whom all known electrodynamic effects were the
result of forces acting at a distance, in contradistinction to
Maxwell's field theory. The non-Maxwellian alternatives put up stiff
competition, and while Helmholtz conceded the superiority of Maxwell's
theory in the mid-1870's, Kelvin never gave in, even after Hertz
demonstrated electromagnetic wave propagation in air. As Oliver
Darrigol shows in his latest book, at crucial junctures in the 19th
century, leading physicists held conceptually incompatible views of
the nature of electricity and magnetism, and by extension, of the
future direction of physics.
During the past twenty years, historical investigations of the
origins, discovery and reception of Maxwell's theory have transformed
our image of a moribund Victorian science, building bizarre mechanical
models to satisfy what Kelvin referred to as "fits of ether
dipsomania," into one of high-stakes intellectual adventure, pursued
by physicists in scientific centers across Europe. Darrigol's book is
the first to draw on this work on a large scale, and is the first
comprehensive history of electrodynamics since E.T. Whittaker's A
History of the Theories of Æther and Electricity (1910). It
covers the period from 1820 to 1905, and stands as a chronological
sequel to John Heilbron's Electricity in the 17th and 18th
Centuries (1979), although the author is obliged by the explosion
of scientific activity in the late 19th century to forego Heilbron's
exhaustive treatment, in favor of a selective approach focusing on the
leading edge of fundamental electrodynamics, represented by several
hundred articles and books from 180 authors. Major developments and
turning points discussed here include Ampère's law, Faraday's notions
of charge and current, the emergence of new quantitative methods in
Germany, Maxwell's Equations, Hertz's experiments, and the advent of
the electron. Each of these topics has been addressed by monographs,
but it is to Darrigol's credit not only to have brought this research
together in a synthetic narrative (which draws in addition on
literature from the research annals, including the author's own
scholarly contributions over the past ten years), but also to have
filled in the gaps. For example, Darrigol discusses Helmholtz's
investigations of
and
circuits, because they effectively
guided the latter's transition from physiology to physics. Informed by
manuscripts recently discovered in Berlin, the author's subsequent
analysis of Helmholtz's theory of electrodynamics holds particular
interest, as it shows how Helmholtz, after reinterpreting Maxwell's
theory in terms of electric actions at a distance and an infinitely
polarizable vacuum, convinced himself that the latter theory
represented the only viable alternative for future research.
Darrigol's synthetic approach gives rise to new insights into the
temporal continuity of certain research traditions in the theoretical
and experimental realms. At the same time, it reveals remarkable
spatial discontinuities, for instance, in the interpretation of
Maxwell's Equations in Britain and on the Continent. Most notably, the
Maxwellian notions of electric displacement and current were
misunderstood by continental physicists, including Hertz, who after
failing to make sense of Maxwell's potentials and hypothetical fluids,
famously concluded that Maxwell's theory is Maxwell's system of
equations.
For Darrigol, the historical unity of electrodynamics derives from a
chain of ideas and events running from Ampère to Einstein, the links
of which he patiently lays out for the reader. Surprisingly, only two
of nine chapters have much mathematics; one is on Maxwell's theory,
the other on electron theory. Anyone referring to the original texts
in these areas is faced with a bewildering array of terms and symbols,
along with some strange mathematics. Nineteenth-century physicists,
Darrigol observes, were often just as baffled, but to reduce reader
discomfort he imposes standard units and notation, while noting the
resulting anachronisms. Even with familiar notation, of course, many
exercises are left to the reader, but for once there is no compromise
with substantial facts or issues. Derivations and extended technical
explanations are relegated to the appendix, but technical or not,
opinions are well-documented, with appendices, bibliography and index
accounting for nearly a quarter of the volume.
One of the recurring themes of Darrigol's history concerns the close
intertwining of theory and experiment in 19th-century electrodynamics,
which is distinguished by the fact that all leading theorists were
active in the laboratory. Observing how individual electrodynamicists
coordinated their theoretical and experimental activity, Darrigol
presents evidence that the same methodological principles were
applied to both theory and experiment. In this way, Darrigol explains
the profound harmony between the theoretical and experimental practice
of Ampère, Faraday, F. Neumann, W. Weber, Kelvin, Maxwell, Helmholtz
and Hertz.
Historians have lately accorded a degree of autonomy not only to
individuals, but to certain experimental laws as well; Wien's
displacement law had, as E. Nagel put it, "a life of its own," not
contingent upon the continued validity of classical
electrodynamics. Likewise, certain instruments and apparatus, and a
number of physico-mathematical arguments have been shown to be robust
across theory change. Sympathetic to this view, Darrigol includes,
instead of portraits, more than a few equations, and dozens upon
dozens of instrumental schemata and explanatory diagrams, many of the
latter copied from the original memoirs under discussion.
Darrigol's guided tour of the "lofty summits of the history of
electrodynamics" will appeal to historians and philosophers of
science, as well as to physicists, mathematicians, and engineers
interested in the origins and evolution of field theory. Regardless of
how one may feel about the chances for success of non-Maxwellian
alternatives a century ago, Darrigol's informed analysis of the
evolution of electromagnetic theory and experiment effectively
illustrates the subtle ways by which Maxwell's Equations came to shape
visions of the future.