Georg Simon Ohm
Born: 16 March 1789 in Erlangen, Bavaria (now
Germany)
Died: 6 July 1854 in Munich, Bavaria,
Germany
Georg Simon Ohm came from a Protestant family.
His father, Johann Wolfgang Ohm, was a locksmith while his mother, Maria
Elizabeth Beck, was the daughter of a tailor. Although his parents had
not been formally educated, Ohm's father was a rather remarkable man who
had educated himself to a high level and was able to give his sons an
excellent education through his own teachings. Had Ohm's brothers and
sisters all survived he would have been one of a large family but, as
was common in those times, several of the children died in their
childhood. Of the seven children born to Johann and Maria Ohm only three
survived, Georg Simon, his brother Martin who went on to become a
well-known mathematician, and his sister Elizabeth Barbara.
When they were children, Georg Simon and Martin were
taught by their father who brought them to a high standard in
mathematics, physics, chemistry and philosophy. This was in stark
contrast to their school education. Georg Simon entered Erlangen
Gymnasium
at the age of eleven but there he received little in the way of
scientific training. In fact this formal part of his schooling was
uninspired stressing learning by rote and interpreting texts. This
contrasted strongly with the inspired instruction that both Georg Simon
and Martin received from their father who brought them to a level in
mathematics which led the professor at the University of Erlangen, Karl
Christian von Langsdorf, to compare them to the Bernoulli family. It is
worth stressing again the remarkable achievement of Johann Wolfgang Ohm,
an entirely self-taught man, to have been able to give his sons such a
fine mathematical and scientific education.
In 1805 Ohm entered the University of Erlangen but he
became rather carried away with student life. Rather than concentrate on
his studies he spent much time dancing, ice skating and playing
billiards. Ohm's father, angry that his son was wasting the educational
opportunity that he himself had never been fortunate enough to
experience, demanded that Ohm leave the university after three
semesters. Ohm went (or more accurately, was sent) to Switzerland where,
in September 1806, he took up a post as a mathematics teacher in a
school in Gottstadt bei Nydau.
Karl Christian von Langsdorf left the University of
Erlangen in early 1809 to take up a post in the University of Heidelberg
and Ohm would have liked to have gone with him to Heidelberg to restart
his mathematical studies. Langsdorf, however, advised Ohm to continue
with his studies of mathematics on his own, advising Ohm to read the
works of
Euler,
Laplace and
Lacroix. Rather reluctantly Ohm took his advice but he left his
teaching post in Gottstadt bei Nydau in March 1809 to become a private
tutor in Neuchâtel. For two years he carried out his duties as a tutor
while he followed Langsdorf's advice and continued his private study of
mathematics. Then in April 1811 he returned to the University of
Erlangen.
His private studies had stood him in good stead for
he received a doctorate from Erlangen on 25 October 1811 and immediately
joined the staff as a mathematics lecturer. After three semesters Ohm
gave up his university post. He could not see how he could attain a
better status at Erlangen as prospects there were poor while he
essentially lived in poverty in the lecturing post. The Bavarian
government offered him a post as a teacher of mathematics and physics at
a poor quality school in Bamberg and he took up the post there in
January 1813.
This was not the successful career envisaged by Ohm
and he decided that he would have to show that he was worth much more
than a teacher in a poor school. He worked on writing an elementary book
on the teaching of geometry while remaining desperately unhappy in his
job. After Ohm had endured the school for three years it was closed down
in February 1816. The Bavarian government then sent him to an
overcrowded school in Bamberg to help out with the mathematics teaching.
On 11 September 1817 Ohm received an offer of the
post of teacher of mathematics and physics at the Jesuit Gymnasium of
Cologne. This was a better school than any that Ohm had taught in
previously and it had a well equipped physics laboratory. As he had done
for so much of his life, Ohm continued his private studies reading the
texts of the leading French mathematicians
Lagrange,
Legendre,
Laplace,
Biot and
Poisson. He moved on to reading the works of
Fourier and
Fresnel and he began his own experimental work in the school physics
laboratory after he had learnt of Oersted's discovery of
electromagnetism in 1820. At first his experiments were conducted for
his own educational benefit as were the private studies he made of the
works of the leading mathematicians.
The Jesuit Gymnasium of Cologne failed to continue to
keep up the high standards that it had when Ohm began to work there so,
by 1825, he decided that he would try again to attain the job he really
wanted, namely a post in a university. Realizing that the way into such
a post would have to be through research publications, he changed his
attitude towards the experimental work he was undertaking and began to
systematically work towards the publication of his results [1]:-
Overburdened with students, finding little
appreciation for his conscientious efforts, and realizing that he
would never marry, he turned to science both to prove himself to the
world and to have something solid on which to base his petition for a
position in a more stimulating environment.
In fact he had already convinced himself of the truth
of what we call today "Ohm's law" namely the relationship that the
current through most materials is directly proportional to the potential
difference applied across the material. The result was not contained in
Ohm's firsts paper published in 1825, however, for this paper examines
the decrease in the electromagnetic force produced by a wire as the
length of the wire increased. The paper deduced mathematical
relationships based purely on the experimental evidence that Ohm had
tabulated.
In two important papers in 1826, Ohm gave a
mathematical description of conduction in circuits modeled on
Fourier's study of heat conduction. These papers continue Ohm's
deduction of results from experimental evidence and, particularly in the
second, he was able to propose laws which went a long way to explaining
results of others working on galvanic electricity. The second paper
certainly is the first step in a comprehensive theory which Ohm was able
to give in his famous book published in the following year.
What is now known as Ohm's law appears in this famous
book Die galvanische Kette, mathematisch bearbeitet (1827) in
which he gave his complete theory of electricity. The book begins with
the mathematical background necessary for an understanding of the rest
of the work. We should remark here that such a mathematical background
was necessary for even the leading German physicists to understand the
work, for the emphasis at this time was on a non-mathematical approach
to physics. We should also remark that, despite Ohm's attempts in this
introduction, he was not really successful in convincing the older
German physicists that the mathematical approach was the right one. To
some extent, as Caneva explains in [1], this was Ohm's own fault:-
... in neither the introduction nor the body of
the work, which contained the more rigorous development of the theory,
did Ohm bring decisively home either the underlying unity of the whole
or the connections between fundamental assumptions and major
deductions. For example, although his theory was conceived as a strict
deductive system based on three fundamental laws, he nowhere indicated
precisely which of their several mathematical and verbal expressions
he wished to be taken as the canonical form.
It is interesting that Ohm's presents his theory as
one of contiguous action, a theory which opposed the concept of action
at a distance. Ohm believed that the communication of electricity
occurred between "contiguous particles" which is the term Ohm himself
uses. The paper [8] is concerned with this idea, and in particular with
illustrating the differences in scientific approach between Ohm and that
of
Fourier and
Navier. A detailed study of the conceptual framework used by Ohm in
formulating Ohm's law is given in [6].
As we described above, Ohm was at the Jesuit
Gymnasium of Cologne when he began his important publications in 1825.
He was given a year off work in which to concentrate on his research
beginning in August 1826 and although he only received the less than
generous offer of half pay, he was able to spend the year in Berlin
working on his publications. Ohm had believed that his publications
would lead to his receiving an offer of a university post before having
to return to Cologne but by the time he was due to begin teaching again
in September 1827 he was still without such an offer.
Although Ohm's work strongly influenced theory, it
was received with little enthusiasm. Ohm's feeling were hurt, he decided
to remain in Berlin and, in March 1828, he formally resigned his
position at Cologne. He took some temporary work teaching mathematics in
schools in Berlin.
He accepted a position at Nüremberg in 1833 and
although this gave him the title of professor, it was still not the
university post for which he had strived all his life. His work was
eventually recognized by the
Royal Society with its award of the
Copley Medal in 1841. He became a foreign member of the
Royal Society in 1842. Other academies
such as those in
Berlin and
Turin elected him a corresponding member,
and in 1845 he became a full member of the Bavarian Academy.
This belated recognition was welcome but there
remains the question of why someone who today is a household name for
his important contribution struggled for so long to gain
acknowledgement. This may have no simple explanation but rather be the
result of a number of different contributory factors. One factor may
have been the inwardness of Ohm's character while another was certainly
his mathematical approach to topics which at that time were studied in
his country a non-mathematical way. There was undoubtedly also personal
disputes with the men in power which did Ohm no good at all. He
certainly did not find favor with Johannes Schultz who was an
influential figure in the ministry of education in Berlin, and with
Georg Friedrich Pohl, a professor of physics in that city.
Electricity was not the only topic on which Ohm
undertook research, and not the only topic in which he ended up in
controversy. In 1843 he stated the fundamental principle of
physiological acoustics, concerned with the way in which one hears
combination tones. However the assumptions which he made in his
mathematical derivation were not totally justified and this resulted in
a bitter dispute with the physicist August Seebeck. He succeeded in
discrediting Ohm's hypothesis and Ohm had to acknowledge his error. See
[10] for details of the dispute between Ohm and Seebeck.
In 1849 Ohm took up a post in Munich as curator of
the Bavarian Academy's physical cabinet and began to lecture at the
University of Munich. Only in 1852, two years before his death, did Ohm
achieve his lifelong ambition of being appointed to the chair of physics
at the University of Munich. |