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The History of Bioelectromagnetism
Michael Faraday (1791–1867), a great distinguished British chemist and natural philosopher, was inter
ested in bioelectromagnetism, in particular, in bioelectricity during his Grand Tour to Europe. In 1813,
Faraday, Sir Humphry Davy (1778–1829) and his wife traveled from Turin to Genoa. Faraday was much
interested in several water-spouts which he saw in the bay of Lerici, and then in Florence. In Genoa, they
visited Domenico Viviani (1772–1840), an Italian botanist and naturalist, professor at University of Genoa.
At that time, Prof Viviani caught the electric fsh torpedo in the bay of Lerici, and tried to investigate
whether the electric discharge of the torpedo is strong enough to decompose water (Hamilton, 2002).
Faraday studied with him the electric discharge from the torpedo. Te results of his torpedo experiments
proved that the identity of the electric power of the gymnotus or the torpedo was common electricity
(Faraday, 1839). He concluded that a single medium electrical discharge of the fsh is at least equal to the
electricity of a Leyden battery of 15 jars, containing 3,500 square inches of glass coated on both sides,
discharged to its highest degree (Motteday, 1922). During their Grand Tour, they visited from England, to
France, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and met André Marie Ampère (1775–1857), a French physi
cist, professor at the Ėcole polytechnique, Dominique François Arago (1786–1853), a French physicist and
astronomer, Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, Alessandro Guiseppe Antonio Anastasio Volta, Jean-Baptiste Biot
(1774–1862), a French physicist and mathematician, Sir Benjamin Tompson (Count von Rumford) (1756–
1819), the founder of Royal Institution of Great Britain, Wilhelm Heinrich Alexander von Humboldt, etc.
In their Grand Tour, various experiments were made by Sir Davy at each place, on iodine, and on the
electricity of the torpedo fsh. While at each place Faraday found some opportunities for helping satisfy his
craving for improvement (Jerrold, 1891). In their Grand Tour course, in Milan on June 17, 1814, he visited
Volta who was nearly 70 years old. Faraday, Sir Davy and his wife lef London on October 13, 1813, and
returned to England on April 23, 1815. Soon, Faraday engaged as Davy’s assistant at the Royal Institution.
Te time when they took their Grand Tour corresponded to the time of the Napoleonic Wars.
2.3.2.2 The Developing Stage
Until the nineteenth century, electricity and magnetism were considered as separate physical proper
ties. In 1820, Hans Christian Oersted (1777–1851), professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of
Copenhagen, Denmark, observed that an electric current fow through a wire would move a compass
placed beside it. Tis showed that an electric current produced a magnetic feld which means that there
is a connection between electricity and magnetism. His great discovery made a new era which opened
the scientifc development in electromagnetism and bioelectromagnetism. Oersted sent a copy of his
experiments to Berlin, Paris, London, and other places. Soon, Oersted was ofered membership in the
Royal Society and received the Copley medal from its Society in late 1820. Within the next 45 years, this
great discovery was repeated by many scientists in the world.
Oersted’s work was published in a Latin pamphlet dated July 21, 1820. Only 3 months afer publica
tion, on October 20, 1820, Jean Baptiste Biot (1774–1862) and Félix Savart (1791–1841), a French physicist,
gave together the theoretical concept of Oersted’s work, called later, the law of Biot-Savart. Tis law
states that the force between a wire with electric current fowing and a magnet pole is inversely pro
portional to the distance between them. Later, Ampère generalized it and developed the mathematical
theory of electrodynamics (Ponchon et al., 2020). Soon afer, the translation of Oersted’s experiments
into English appeared in the Annals of Philosophy, and Faraday obtained a copy of Oersted’s paper from
Sir Davy in 1821 and began to repeat the experiments.
In 1824, Dominique Arago observed that when a magnetic needle was oscillating above or close of a
non-magnetic body (such as water or a metal), it gradually oscillated in arcs of less and less amplitude,
and he made a circular copper plate to revolve immediately beneath a magnetic needle or magnet, freely
suspended so that the latter would rotate in a plane parallel to that of the copper plate, and he found that
the needle tends to follow the circumvolution of the plate; that it will deviate from its true direction; and
that by increasing the velocity of the plate the deviation will increase until the needle passes to the oppo
site point, when it will continue to revolve, and last rapidly so that the eye will be unable to distinguish
it (Mottelay, 1922). However, this phenomenon remained inexplicable.