It is of the most general influence in electrical phenomena, appearing to be concerned in every one of them, and has in reality the character of a first, essential, and fundamental principle.
Further inquiry, I trust, will enable us by degrees to restrict the sense more and more, and so render the explanation of electrical phenomena day by day more and more definite.
Electrical phenomena, then, are due to disturbances of this equilibrium.
Prenditz, it would appear, suffered severely from electric storms; and it was mainly for the safety of the locality that the good priest devoted himself with earnestness to the study of electrical phenomena.
Let us undertake the same thing for some electrical phenomena.
In December 1895 the author gave a lecture before the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, on "Mechanical Conceptions of Electrical Phenomena," in which he undertook to make clear what happens whenelectrical phenomena appear.
All the classic ideas relating to electrical phenomena led to the consideration that there existed a perfect symmetry between the two electricities, positive and negative.
Bouty has arrived at extremely important results by a very remarkable series of experiments; but this question rightly belongs to a special study of electrical phenomena which is not yet written.
Gilbert was the first to conduct systematic scientific experiments on electrical phenomena.
In the elucidation of electrical phenomena, however, towards the end of the 18th century, a modification of the two-fluid theory seems to have been generally preferred.
Faraday's ideas thus pressed upon electricians the necessity for the quantitative measurement of electrical phenomena.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "electrical phenomena" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.