Faraday & the Electromotive Force

by Read Listen Learn


Michael Faraday was born in London in 1791. He was from a poor family and his father could not pay for Michael to go to secondary school. So, he learnt only very basic things, like reading, writing and counting. When he was fourteen, he trained for seven years to make books. This gave him the chance to read a lot. While he was working in this job, he got interested in science.

In those days, there were special organisations for people that liked science in London. Faraday often visited these and listened to the great scientists of the time. He especially liked Humphry Davy, who was a very famous chemist. Faraday wrote to him and asked him for a job. Davy made him his assistant and secretary. But it was not easy. For example, when Davy went to Europe to talk to other scientists, Faraday worked as the great man’s scientific assistant and servant.

Davy’s wife did not want to eat with Faraday because he was poor and so the young man ate in the kitchen. But, although he could not eat with Mrs. Davy, Faraday could speak with some of the best scientists in Europe.

Very slowly, Faraday got better and better jobs. He was interested in chemistry, like his boss, Humphry Davy. But we remember Michael Faraday best today for his work in physics. He was the first man really to understand electricity.

Faraday’s first experiment (in 1821) was to put two coils of wire around an iron ring. He found that if he put electricity in one coil, it would also go to the second coil for a moment or two. This made him think that the electricity was stronger than people thought and could travel in currents.

Later, he saw that if he moved a magnet through a wire coil, it made an electric current. Then he found that there was still an electric current – but a smaller one – if the magnet did not move. So, he understood that he could change the electric field by changing the magnetic field. After some years, Faraday built a dynamo to make electricity and, of course, he used magnets to do it.

Nowadays, it is clear to us that Faraday’s ideas were very important in making generators. This was important for making energy in factories and helped Britain to become the first industrial country in the world.

Faraday got married when he was thirty years old, but he never had any children. He was always a very hard-working man but also a religious one. For example, the British government asked him to make chemical weapons, but he refused.

Michael Faraday died a very famous scientist when he was seventy-five years old. Albert Einstein had a picture of him in his office. But, if you have a problem with maths, don’t worry! Faraday always used experiments to show his ideas. He did not know enough mathematics to write them on paper!