Period.
The time required for the completion of one complete element of periodic motion. This may be a complete alternation (See Alternation, Complete) of an alternating current, or of an oscillatory discharge.
Periodicity.
The rate of succession of alternations or of other fixed phases; the rate of recurrence of phenomena.
408 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.
Permanency.
In electric current conductors the property of possessing conductivity unaffected by lapse of time. Generally the permanency of conductors is very high. In some cases a slow annealing takes place which causes a gradual change with the lapse of time. Annealed German silver wire has been found to increase in conductivity at about .02 per cent. in a year.
(Matthiessen.) Wire, whether annealed or not, is left in a strained condition after the drawing operations, and such a change is consonant with this fact. The figure only applies to the samples tested by Matthiessen.
Permanent State.
In a telegraph line or other current conductor, the condition when a uniform current strength obtains over the whole line. When a current is started it advances through the line with a sort of wave front gradually increasing in strength. At the further end some time may elapse before it attains its full intensity. When its does the permanent state prevails. Until then the variable state, q. v., exists in the line.
Permeameter.
An apparatus for determining the permeability of samples of iron. It consists of a large slotted block of iron. A coil is placed within the slot. A hole is drilled through one end, and a rod of the iron to be tested is pa.s.sed through this hole and through the coil to the bottom of the slot. The lower end of the rod must be accurately faced off. The current is turned on, upon which the rod adheres to the bottom of the slot. The force required to detach it is determined with a spring balance. The permeation through its face is proportional to the square of the force required.
Fig. 258. PERMEAMETER.
Permeance.
The multiplying or the conducting power for magnetic lines of force possessed by a given ma.s.s of material. It varies with the shape and size of the substance as well as with the inducing force. It is distinguished from permeability, as the latter is a specific quality proper to the material, and expressed as such; the permeance is the permeability as affected by size and shape of the object as well as by its material.
409 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.
Pfl?ger"s Law.
A law of electro-therapeutics. It states that stimulation of a nerve is only produced by successive appearance of the kathelectrotonic state, and disappearance of the anelectrotonic state.
Phantom Wires.
The extra transmission circuits obtained in multiplex telegraph systems.
A single line arranged for four separate simultaneous transmissions by quadruplex apparatus is said to establish three phantom wires.
Phase.
In wave motion, oscillating motion, simple harmonic motion, or similar periodic phenomena, the interval of time pa.s.sed from the time the moving particle moved through the middle point of its course to the instant when the phase is to be stated.
Pherope.
An apparatus for the electric transmission of pictures. (See Telephote.)
[Transcriber"s note: Precursor of the contemporary Fax and scanner.]
Philosopher"s Egg.
An ellipsoidal vessel mounted with its long axis vertical and with two vertical electrodes, the upper one sliding, and arranged to be attached to an air pump. A discharge through it when the air is exhausted takes the general shape of an egg.
Phonautograph.
An apparatus for registering the vibrations of a stylus, which is mounted on a diaphragm and is acted on by sound waves.
It is virtually a resonating chamber, over one of whose ends a parchment diaphragm is stretched. To the centre of the parchment a needle or stylus is attached. A cylinder covered with soot is rotated in contact with the point of the stylus. As the chamber is spoken into the diaphragm and stylus vibrate and the vibrations are marked on the cylinder. It is of some electric interest in connection with telephony.
Phone.
Colloquial abbreviation for telephone.
Phonic Wheel.
A form of small motor of very simple construction. It consists of a toothed wheel of soft iron. A bar electro-magnet is fixed with one pole facing the teeth of the wheel. By a tuning fork make and break a succession of impulses of rapid frequency and short duration are sent through the magnet. The teeth act as armatures and are successively attracted by the magnet. The regulated speed is one tooth for each impulse, but it may rotate at one-half the speed, giving two teeth for each impulse, or at certain other sub-multiples of its regular speed. It is the invention of Paul Lecour.
410 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.
Phonograph.
An apparatus for reproducing articulate speech. It is not electric, except as it may be driven by electricity.
It consists of a cylinder of wax-like material which is rotated and moved slowly, longitudinally, screw fashion, at an even speed. A gla.s.s diaphragm carrying a needle point is supported with the point barely touching the wax. If the diaphragm is agitated, as by being spoken against, the needle is driven back and forwards cutting a broken line or groove following the direction of the thread of a screw in the wax, the depth of which line or groove continually varies.
This imprints the message. If the needle is set back and the cylinder is rotated so as to carry the needle point over the line thus impressed, the varying depth throws the needle and diaphragm into motion and the sound is reproduced.
The cylinder is rotated often by an electric motor, with a centrifugal governor.
[Transcriber"s note; Due to T. A. Edison, 1877, fifteen years before this book.]
Phonozenograph.
An apparatus for indicating the direction of the point where a sound is produced. It operates by a microphone and telephone in conjunction with a Wheatstone bridge to determine the locality.
Phosph.o.r.escence.
The emission of light rays by a substance not heated, but whose luminosity is due to the persistence of luminous vibration after light has fallen upon it.
A phosph.o.r.escent body, after exposure to light, is luminous itself.
Phosph.o.r.escence may be induced by rubbing or friction, by heat, by molecular bombardment, as in Crookes" tubes, and by static discharge of electricity, as well as by simple exposure to light.
Another form of phosph.o.r.escence may be due to slow chemical combustion.
This is the cause of the luminosity of phosphorous.