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  • Electrical Heroes

    Another great musical release by our own Martin Rowe, "Electrical Heroes" celebrates the people who have made engineering the field it is.

    Martin Rowe, Senior Technical Editor -- Test & Measurement World, 11/20/2007 9:32:00 AM

    Martin_LabSong_150px

    "Electrical Heroes"
    Listen to the song

    Read the story behind the song


    Check out Martin's other songs:
    "The Measurement Blues"
    "The Lab in the Corner"
    "Below a Gigahertz"
    "Check Designs for EMI Early"

    Music and lyrics by Martin Rowe
    Copyright 2007 Martin Rowe

    Franklin flew his kite on a Philadelphia night;
    He saw that lightning was electricity.
    Coulomb could tell that like charges repel
    By the inverse square of their distance.
    Orsted saw magnetic fields make a compass needle yield
    When current passed through a nearby wire.

    They were electrical, electrical, electrical heroes

    Volta built a source of current and named a force,
    Electromotive, of course.
    Ampere put a current through a pair of wires;
    They attracted and repelled.
    Schweigger, Poggendorff, and Cumming, led the way in measuring current
    In response to magnetic fields.

    They were electrical, electrical, electrical heroes

    The longer the wire, the more Ohm found that EMF would drop.
    The thicker the wire, the more current passed from its source to ground.
    Weber and Gauss used electricity to send messages nine thousand feet.
    Wheatstone proved that Ohm was right and built a sensitive resistance bridge.

    Faraday changed energy from electrical to mechanical
    With motion and magnets he could generate current.
    Henry made electromagnets that were stronger than any others
    Through electromagnetic induction.
    Thompson, Lord Kelvin, created a temperature scale.
    He pushed for uniform measurement standards.

    They were electrical, electrical, electrical heroes

    Fourier used sines and cosines to describe any signal.
    Maxwell created equations that Hertz simplified.

    Volts, ohms, and amps, Henries, Coulombs, and Hertz
    These are units we use every day.
    So the next time you measure, remember those electrical heroes;
    They helped create the job you have today!

    They were electrical, electrical, electrical heroes
    They were electrical, electrical, electrical heroes


    “Electrical Heroes” was recorded at Melville Park Studio, Boston, MA.


     

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