Talk:Georg Ohm
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French or German?
[edit]I notice that this has been changed a few times, but I can't understand why, and it seems to me that Ohm should clearly be considered German. He spoke German, went to German universities, and I'm not aware that the location was ever part of France.
Shouldn't this be corrected back, or am I missing something?
Xgretsch (talk) 20:12, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
Ohm's birth year: 1787 or 1789???
[edit]I find different sources in which contain different information about his real born year. One of my books about him states that he was born on 1787, also I find some sources go along with this figure: [1], [2], [3], [4] etc.
while 1789 seems to be mentioned more frequently: [5], [6], [7], [8], Germany Wiki, etc.
So which one is true? Causesobad → (Talk) 14:04, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
Well according to [9] and seeing it more frequently like you said, id argue he was born in 1789, PersonM1 (talk) 17:42, 16 February 2018 (UTC) PersonM1
Someone who knows about Ohm's life should check this article.
[edit]I just fixed this, but this article used to say that Ohm's Law is the relationship between resistance and resistivity, which is terribly inaccurate. Unfortunately, that's pretty much all I know about Ohm. Also, the one cited source for this article seems to contain a very accurate definition of Ohm's Law, so it seems that this article doesn't actually stick to what the cited source says.
Also, maybe someone who is fluent in German can skim through Die galvanische Kette [10] and give a better description of how Ohm described the law. In the one I put in, I just verbalized V=IR (without saying resistance anywhere, since as far as I know, that term wasn't coined until later).
Misho88 (talk) 06:30, 3 February 2008 (UTC)
Dubious paragraph removed
[edit]This was there since 2007, but I don't think it makes sense: "Using the results of his experiments, Ohm defined the fundamental relationship among voltage, current, and resistance. This represents the true beginning of electrical circuit analysis." This interpretation of "true beginning" would need some kind of source or attribution. I suspect it took a while yet for these concepts to jell; they didn't really even have standardized definitions for these quantities yet. Here is an article that might help clarify. Dicklyon (talk) 04:10, 7 December 2010 (UTC)
- Belevitch opens his thorough survey of the subject with "Although circuit theory is more than 100 years old (Ohm's law, 1827; Kirchoff's laws, 1845)..." He clearly considers Ohm's law to be some kind of beginning although I doubt he would have used the phrase "true beginning". Belevitch views it more as a slow evolution with a big explosion in the decade prior to World War I.
- Belevitch, V, "Summary of the history of circuit theory", Proceedings of the IRE, vol 50, Iss 5, pp.848-855, May 1962 doi:10.1109/JRPROC.1962.288301.
- SpinningSpark 08:40, 21 December 2010 (UTC)
- Sounds like a good source to write it from. It's hard for me to imagine circuit analysis before Kirchhoff's laws. Dicklyon (talk) 09:12, 21 December 2010 (UTC)
Religion
[edit]The article states that Ohm's family was Protestant. The early 20th century writer and Fellow of the Royal Society Bertram Windle states that Ohm was probably Catholic: http://www.archive.org/stream/twelvecatholicme00windrich#page/74/mode/2up
Can someone more familiar with his life provide a reliable contemporary source for his religious beliefs?Akasseb (talk) 07:12, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
Not born in Bavaria
[edit]When Georg Ohm was born in 1789 Erlangen was a part of the Principiality of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, which had nothing to do with Bavaria. Erlangen did not become part of the Kingdom of Bavaria until 1810, when Ohm was already in his twenties.
The following statements have to be changed accordingly:
"Georg Simon Ohm was born into a Protestant family in Erlangen, Bavaria" is false. Bavaria has to be exchanged with Brandenburg-Bayreuth.
The article also states under his portrait that he was born in "Erlangen, Electorate of Bavaria", which is also false, since Erlangen has never been part of the Electorate of Bavaria, it was only part of the Principiality of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (and after 1810 obviously of the Kingdom of Bavaria, not the Electorate). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2001:7C0:409:40E4:4878:C5C2:34D6:EC89 (talk) 09:47, 10 October 2012 (UTC)
Acoustic law
[edit]The section says that Ohm's law is " It is well known to be not quite true." The citation corresponding to this is Annual Review of Psychology, Volume 25. In the review, the author refers to Foundations of Modern Auditory Theory by Jerry Tobias, which says that "for years musicians have been told that the ear is able to separate any complex signals into a series of sinusoidal signals - that is, it acts as a Fourier analyzer. This quarter-truth, known as Ohm's Other Law, has served to increase the distrust with which perceptive musicians regard scientists, since it is readily apparent to them that the ear acts in this way only under very restricted conditions"
So, is this all personal opinion? Has there been no quantified scientific study disproving the law? Is it true for perceptive musicians with trained ears, or is it true for any person in general? Does an average person hear by decomposing wave packets into sinusoidal waveforms? I don't think it is "well known to be not quite true" based on this citation alone. More data is needed.
Also, out of curiosity, how do musicians identify single notes? What is their calibration? Tuning forks? I presume one would need very sharp line-shapes. Astrokid (talk) 10:25, 1 February 2014 (UTC)
- I don't think it is just personal opinion, although Tobias's combative statement is probably going too far. Real sounds are not made up of a set of continuous sine waves. There is always a time-domain constraint on them. This book makes the point that taking a Fourier transform over too long a period with real sounds (such as speech) gives nonsense results as far as the phase/intelligibility question goes. Another effect not explained by Ohm's law is the perception of two tones very close together. A beat is heard at a frequency which is neither of those tones, a phenomenon very well known to piano tuners who use it to good effect. If you want a source for that see [11]. Another well known psycho-acoustic effect from music is covered in the same source. This is the insistence of the ear to "hear" a fundamental that is not actually present deduced from the harmonics actually being played.
- In answer to your question about musicians and single notes, some musicians have perfect pitch and can reproduce any given note at will without a reference. In an orchestra, musicians usually tune to the lead oboe player, see concert pitch. One hopes the oboe has tuned his instrument accurately beforehand. SpinningSpark 12:46, 1 February 2014 (UTC)
- It's pretty well known. No hearing scientist would support the idea that Ohm's acoustic law is true. Even Helmholtz spent a lot of energy on trying to explain pitch phenomena that Ohm's approach could not, in an attempt to patch it up to be close to true. Do a book search or scholar search on "ohm's acoustic law" and feel free to add what other sources say about it. Cite my 1982 paper if you like. Schroeder's attempt to make it more precise doesn't really make it much more true, it just expresses it more as what Ohm meant. His "Schroeder phase" signals are one way to show that we are indeed sensitivie to relative phase in a periodic tone. Another way is Patterson's ramped versus damped sinusoids. Another would be John Robinson Pierce's pitch experiments reported here, in which phase differences can lead to a completely different pitch. PDFs can be found online via google scholar Dicklyon (talk) 21:31, 1 February 2014 (UTC)
- And as for "Does an average person hear by decomposing wave packets into sinusoidal waveforms?" No; that's not a concept that has any place in any but the most trivial characterization of hearing. It's more or less what Ohm and Helmholtz thought, and it's an idea that still pollutes popular presentations, but there is no sense in which it is accurate, useful, or predictive in understanding anything about hearing or music. Dicklyon (talk) 21:36, 1 February 2014 (UTC)
- Reading Schroeder's paragraph right before section 9.3, I'm a little surprised that he gives the law as much credence as he does; at the same time, says it "admits occasional exceptions". So we do have a difference of opinion about emphasis at least. The point is that there are a lot of phase manipulations you can do that people won't distinguish; and others that they will. It's all explainable by a more detailed model of cochlea plus central processing of temporal structure. It's not explainable in terms of Fourier amplitudes and phases. See chapter 23 in this book. Dicklyon (talk) 00:10, 2 February 2014 (UTC)
References
[edit]From the talk page:
- 21:05, 18 July 2014 PBS (added "wstitle=" to Cite {{AmCyc}} added volume and page to EB1911, changed reflist|note to notelist. Moved {{reflist}} up into notes) (undo)
- 23:46, 18 July 2014 Spinningspark (Reverted good faith edits by PBS (talk): References go under references. They are not the same as notes. Why are you determined to change that. Please take the issue to talk. (TW))
You state "References go under references." but see the examples in WP:CITE: Inline citations often go under a section titled "Notes" (see WP:ASL) and general references go under a section titled "References" (see WP:GENREF).
I made three other separate changes and mentioned them in the edit summary:
- added "wstitle=" to Cite {{AmCyc}}
- added volume and page to EB1911
- changed reflist note to {{notelist}}
Why revert three changes if you do not object to them? -- PBS (talk) 08:41, 19 July 2014 (UTC)
- I reverted it all because I found a great deal objectionable and I don't see why I should spend time manually picking through it to find some bits that might actually be useful. You did not make three separate changes, you did it all in a single edit. My basic objection is WP:CITEVAR; in general, citation styles should be left in the established style of the article and not changed to one's favourite system. If is changed, there should first be consensus amongst the page editors to do so. On the section names, there is WP:FNNR which makes it clear that there are many ways of going about this, and no particular one is preferred.
- My specific objections to the system you instigates are firstly that you ended up with two "Notes" sections, which is completely unacceptable, and secondly that the only thing left under the "References" section was the 1911 Britannica article. This gives the completely false impression that the article is based on that article. While it is true that the original article was a copy of Britannica, very little, if anything, is now left in the current article. The current article is five times as long as the Britannica article, and that's before a good half of it was almost immediately deleted leaving a mere 163 words. All the items under your second notes section are, in fact, references and the first notes section is the one containing explanatory notes.
- My preferred layout of references is explanatory "notes", shortened inline "references", and a "bibliography" giving the full citation of the sources. However, it would be wrong for me to change to that either. Who is to say that my favourite system is better or yours? Best to follow CITEVAR. As for your other changes, the
{{notelist}}
template is just more template spam. It makes no visible difference to the rendering of the notes section, plus it has the disadvantage that it is less well known than reflist making it more difficult for other editors to understand and edit the page. The other two changes look good to me. SpinningSpark 10:19, 19 July 2014 (UTC)- "I reverted it all because I found a great deal objectionable and I don't see why I should spend time manually picking through it to find some bits that might actually be useful.". The whole point of improving an article takes time and often means picking through the article keeping bits that might be useful. If "other two changes look good to me" then why not reinstate them, or are you suggesting that it is for other to spend their time putting back the bits you approve of? -- PBS (talk) 20:26, 19 July 2014 (UTC)
- Is it because you are using Wikipedia:Twinkle to monitor and revert the page and can not be bothered to sort out the good the bad and the ugly (revert it all and let others sort it out)? -- PBS (talk) 08:26, 21 July 2014 (UTC)
- "I reverted it all because I found a great deal objectionable and I don't see why I should spend time manually picking through it to find some bits that might actually be useful.". The whole point of improving an article takes time and often means picking through the article keeping bits that might be useful. If "other two changes look good to me" then why not reinstate them, or are you suggesting that it is for other to spend their time putting back the bits you approve of? -- PBS (talk) 20:26, 19 July 2014 (UTC)
External links modified
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- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20110722070107/http://www.ohm-hochschule.de/index.php?id=1731 to http://www.ohm-hochschule.de/index.php?id=1731
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"Georg" or "George"
[edit]The scientist's name is spelt as "Georg Simon Ohm" throughout the entirety of the Wikipedia page, and I believe that this is the correct spelling of his name. However, I noticed that the picture featured on the Wikipedia page has the scientist's name spelt as "George Simon Ohm" in its description. Whilst "Georg" is the Northern European version of the anglicised version of the name "George", I do not think both versions of the name should be used for his name in the same document, for reasons of continuity. I will be changing the picture's description to keep the spelling of his name constant throughout the document. I would be interested in other people's thoughts, and anyone's views about why both spelling should be included. SMargan (talk) 03:05, 13 October 2022 (UTC)
Nurembeg
[edit]It seems that he was also a professor at Technical Universuty in Nuremberg.
https://www.th-nuernberg.de/en/veranstaltungen/anniversary/ Pnti (talk) 10:56, 1 July 2023 (UTC)
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