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Frog galvanoscope

The frog galvanoscope was a sensitive electrical instrument used to detect voltage[1] in the late 18th and 19th centuries. It consists of a skinned frog's leg with electrical connections to a nerve. The instrument was invented by Luigi Galvani and improved by Carlo Matteucci.

Frog's-leg galvanoscope

The frog galvanoscope, and other experiments with frogs, played a part in the dispute between Galvani and Alessandro Volta over the nature of electricity. The instrument is extremely sensitive and continued to be used well into the nineteenth century, even after electromechanical meters came into use.

Terminology edit

Synonyms for this device include galvanoscopic frog, frog's leg galvanoscope, frog galvanometer, rheoscopic frog, and frog electroscope. The device is properly called a galvanoscope rather than galvanometer since the latter implies accurate measurement whereas a galvanoscope only gives an indication.[2] In modern usage a galvanometer is a sensitive laboratory instrument for measuring current, not voltage. Everyday current meters for use in the field are called ammeters.[3] A similar distinction can be made between electroscopes, electrometers, and voltmeters for voltage measurements.

History edit

Frogs were a popular subject of experiment in the laboratories of early scientists. They were small, easily handled, and there was a ready supply. Marcello Malpighi, for instance, used frogs in his study of lungs in the seventeenth century. Frogs were particularly suitable for the study of muscle activity. Especially in the legs, the muscle contractions are readily observed and the nerves are easily dissected out. Another desirable feature for scientists was that these contractions continued after death for a considerable time. Also in the eighteenth century, Leopoldo Caldani and Felice Fontana subjected frogs to electric shocks to test Albrecht von Haller's irritability theory.[4]

Luigi Galvani, a lecturer at the University of Bologna, was researching the nervous system of frogs from around 1780. This research included the muscular response to opiates and static electricity, for which experiments the spinal cord and rear legs of a frog were dissected out together and the skin removed. In 1781,[5] an observation was made while a frog was being so dissected. An electric machine discharged just at the moment one of Galvani's assistants touched the crural nerve of a dissected frog with a scalpel. The frog's legs twitched as the discharge happened.[6] Galvani found that he could make the prepared leg of a frog (see the Construction section) twitch by connecting a metal circuit from a nerve to a muscle, thus inventing the first frog galvanoscope.[7] Galvani published these results in 1791 in De viribus electricitatis.[8]

An alternative version of the story of the frog response at a distance has the frogs being prepared for a soup on the same table as a running electric machine. Galvani's wife notices the frog twitch when an assistant accidentally touches a nerve and reports the phenomenon to her husband.[9] This story originates with Jean-Louis Alibert and, according to Piccolino and Bresadola, was probably invented by him.[10]

Galvani, and his nephew Giovanni Aldini, used the frog galvanoscope in their electrical experiments. Carlo Matteucci improved the instrument and brought it to wider attention.[11] Galvani used the frog galvanoscope to investigate and promote the theory of animal electricity, that is, that there was a vital life force in living things that manifested itself as a new kind of electricity. Alessandro Volta opposed this theory, believing that the electricity that Galvani and other proponents were witnessing was due to metal contact electrification in the circuit. Volta's motivation in inventing the voltaic pile (the forerunner of the common zinc–carbon battery) was largely to enable him to construct a circuit entirely with non-biological material to show that the vital force was not necessary to produce the electrical effects seen in animal experiments. Matteucci, in answer to Volta, and to show that metal contacts were not necessary, constructed a circuit entirely out of biological material, including a frog battery. Neither the animal electricity theory of Galvani nor the contact electrification theory of Volta forms part of modern electrical science.[12] However, Alan Hodgkin in the 1930s showed that there is indeed an ionic current flowing in nerves.[13]

Matteucci used the frog galvanoscope to study the relationship of electricity to muscles, including in freshly amputated human limbs. Matteucci concluded from his measurements that there was an electric current continually flowing from the interior, to the exterior of all muscles.[14] Matteucci's idea was widely accepted by his contemporaries, but this is no longer believed and his results are now explained in terms of injury potential.[15]

Construction edit

An entire frog's hind leg is removed from the frog's body with the sciatic nerve still attached, and possibly also a portion of the spinal cord. The leg is skinned, and two electrical connections are made. These may be made to the nerve and the foot of the frog's leg by wrapping them with metal wire or foil,[16] but a more convenient instrument is Matteucci's arrangement shown in the image. The leg is placed in a glass tube with just the nerve protruding. Connection is made to two different points on the nerve.[17]

According to Matteucci, the instrument is most accurate if direct electrical contact with muscle is avoided. That is, connections are made only to the nerve. Matteucci also advises that the nerve should be well stripped and that contacts to it can be made with wet paper in order to avoid using sharp metal probes directly on the nerve.[18]

Operation edit

When the frog's leg is connected to a circuit with an electric potential, the muscles will contract and the leg will twitch briefly. It will twitch again when the circuit is broken.[16] The instrument is capable of detecting extremely small voltages, and could far surpass other instruments available in the first half of the nineteenth century, including the electromagnetic galvanometer and the gold-leaf electroscope. For this reason, it remained popular long after other instruments became available. The galvanometer was made possible in 1820 by the discovery by Hans Christian Ørsted that electric currents would deflect a compass needle, and the gold-leaf electroscope was even earlier (Abraham Bennet, 1786).[19] Yet Golding Bird could still write in 1848 that "the irritable muscles of a frog's legs were no less than 56,000 times more delicate a test of electricity than the most sensitive condensing electrometer."[20] The word condenser used by Bird here means a coil, so named by Johann Poggendorff by analogy with Volta's term for a capacitor.[2]

The frog galvanoscope can be used to detect the direction of electric current. A frog's leg that has been somewhat desensitised is needed for this. The sensitivity of the instrument is greatest with a freshly prepared leg and then falls off with time, so an older leg is best for this. The response of the leg is greater to currents in one direction than the other and with a suitably desensitised leg it may only respond to currents in one direction. For a current going into the leg from the nerve, the leg will twitch on making the circuit. For a current passing out of the leg, it will twitch on breaking the circuit.[21]

The major drawback of the frog galvanoscope is that the frog leg frequently needs replacing.[22] The leg will continue to respond for up to 44 hours, but after that a fresh one must be prepared.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ Keithley, p. 51
  2. ^ a b Hackmann, p. 257
  3. ^ Hackmann, p. 259
  4. ^ Piccolino & Bresadola, pp. 74–75
  5. ^ Piccolino & Bresadola, pp. 88–89
  6. ^ Keithley, p. 49
  7. ^ Piccolino & Bresadola, p. 71
  8. ^ Keithley, p. 71
  9. ^ Wilkinson, p. 6
  10. ^ Piccolino & Bresadola, p. 5, citing Adolphe Ganot
  11. ^ Hare, pp. 3–4
  12. ^
    • Clarke & Jacyna, p. 199
    • Clarke & O'Malley, p. 186
    • Hellman, pp. 31–32
    • Bird (1848), pp. 344–345
    • Matteucci (1845), pp.284–285
  13. ^ a b Piccolino & Bresadola, p. 75
  14. ^ Bird, p. 270
  15. ^ Clarke & Jacyna, p. 199
  16. ^ a b Hare, p. 4
  17. ^ Bird, p. 345
  18. ^ Clarke & O'Malley, pp. 188–189
  19. ^ Keithley, p. 36
  20. ^ Bird, p. 345 citing Wilkinson, 1845
  21. ^ Bird, p. 346
  22. ^ Clarke & Jacyna, citing Matteucci

Bibliography edit

  • Clarke, Edwin; Jacyna, L. S., Nineteenth-Century Origins of Neuroscientific Concepts, University of California Press, 1992 ISBN 0520078799.
  • Clarke, Edwin; O'Malley, Charles Donald, The Human Brain and Spinal Cord: a historical study illustrated by writings from antiquity to the twentieth century, Norman Publishing, 1996 ISBN 0930405250.
  • Bird, Golding, Chapter XX, "Physiological electricity, or galvanism", Elements of Natural Philosophy, London: John Churchill, 1848 OCLC 931247166.
  • Hackmann, Willem D., "Galvanometer", in Bud, Robert; Warner, Deborah Jean (eds), Instruments of Science: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 257–259, Taylor & Francis, 1998 ISBN 0815315619.
  • Hare, Robert, "Of galvanism, or voltaic electricity", A Brief Exposition of the Science of Mechanical Electricity, Philadelphia: J. G. Auner, 1840 OCLC 8205588.
  • Hellman, Hal, Great Feuds in Medicine, John Wiley and Sons, 2001 ISBN 0471347574
  • Keithley, Joseph F., The Story of Electrical and Magnetic Measurements: From 500 BC to the 1940s, IEEE Press, 1999 ISBN 0780311930.
  • Piccolino, Marco; Bresadola, Marco, Shocking Frogs: Galvani, Volta, and the Electric Origins of Neuroscience, Oxford University Press, 2013 ISBN 0199782164.
  • Matteucci, Carlo "The muscular current" Philosophical Transactions, pp. 283–295, 1845.
  • Wilkinson, Charles Henry, Elements of Galvanism, London: John Murray, 1804 OCLC 8497530.

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The frog galvanoscope was a sensitive electrical instrument used to detect voltage 1 in the late 18th and 19th centuries It consists of a skinned frog s leg with electrical connections to a nerve The instrument was invented by Luigi Galvani and improved by Carlo Matteucci Frog s leg galvanoscopeThe frog galvanoscope and other experiments with frogs played a part in the dispute between Galvani and Alessandro Volta over the nature of electricity The instrument is extremely sensitive and continued to be used well into the nineteenth century even after electromechanical meters came into use Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 3 Construction 4 Operation 5 References 6 BibliographyTerminology editSynonyms for this device include galvanoscopic frog frog s leg galvanoscope frog galvanometer rheoscopic frog and frog electroscope The device is properly called a galvanoscope rather than galvanometer since the latter implies accurate measurement whereas a galvanoscope only gives an indication 2 In modern usage a galvanometer is a sensitive laboratory instrument for measuring current not voltage Everyday current meters for use in the field are called ammeters 3 A similar distinction can be made between electroscopes electrometers and voltmeters for voltage measurements History editFrogs were a popular subject of experiment in the laboratories of early scientists They were small easily handled and there was a ready supply Marcello Malpighi for instance used frogs in his study of lungs in the seventeenth century Frogs were particularly suitable for the study of muscle activity Especially in the legs the muscle contractions are readily observed and the nerves are easily dissected out Another desirable feature for scientists was that these contractions continued after death for a considerable time Also in the eighteenth century Leopoldo Caldani and Felice Fontana subjected frogs to electric shocks to test Albrecht von Haller s irritability theory 4 Luigi Galvani a lecturer at the University of Bologna was researching the nervous system of frogs from around 1780 This research included the muscular response to opiates and static electricity for which experiments the spinal cord and rear legs of a frog were dissected out together and the skin removed In 1781 5 an observation was made while a frog was being so dissected An electric machine discharged just at the moment one of Galvani s assistants touched the crural nerve of a dissected frog with a scalpel The frog s legs twitched as the discharge happened 6 Galvani found that he could make the prepared leg of a frog see the Construction section twitch by connecting a metal circuit from a nerve to a muscle thus inventing the first frog galvanoscope 7 Galvani published these results in 1791 in De viribus electricitatis 8 An alternative version of the story of the frog response at a distance has the frogs being prepared for a soup on the same table as a running electric machine Galvani s wife notices the frog twitch when an assistant accidentally touches a nerve and reports the phenomenon to her husband 9 This story originates with Jean Louis Alibert and according to Piccolino and Bresadola was probably invented by him 10 Galvani and his nephew Giovanni Aldini used the frog galvanoscope in their electrical experiments Carlo Matteucci improved the instrument and brought it to wider attention 11 Galvani used the frog galvanoscope to investigate and promote the theory of animal electricity that is that there was a vital life force in living things that manifested itself as a new kind of electricity Alessandro Volta opposed this theory believing that the electricity that Galvani and other proponents were witnessing was due to metal contact electrification in the circuit Volta s motivation in inventing the voltaic pile the forerunner of the common zinc carbon battery was largely to enable him to construct a circuit entirely with non biological material to show that the vital force was not necessary to produce the electrical effects seen in animal experiments Matteucci in answer to Volta and to show that metal contacts were not necessary constructed a circuit entirely out of biological material including a frog battery Neither the animal electricity theory of Galvani nor the contact electrification theory of Volta forms part of modern electrical science 12 However Alan Hodgkin in the 1930s showed that there is indeed an ionic current flowing in nerves 13 Matteucci used the frog galvanoscope to study the relationship of electricity to muscles including in freshly amputated human limbs Matteucci concluded from his measurements that there was an electric current continually flowing from the interior to the exterior of all muscles 14 Matteucci s idea was widely accepted by his contemporaries but this is no longer believed and his results are now explained in terms of injury potential 15 Construction editAn entire frog s hind leg is removed from the frog s body with the sciatic nerve still attached and possibly also a portion of the spinal cord The leg is skinned and two electrical connections are made These may be made to the nerve and the foot of the frog s leg by wrapping them with metal wire or foil 16 but a more convenient instrument is Matteucci s arrangement shown in the image The leg is placed in a glass tube with just the nerve protruding Connection is made to two different points on the nerve 17 According to Matteucci the instrument is most accurate if direct electrical contact with muscle is avoided That is connections are made only to the nerve Matteucci also advises that the nerve should be well stripped and that contacts to it can be made with wet paper in order to avoid using sharp metal probes directly on the nerve 18 Operation editWhen the frog s leg is connected to a circuit with an electric potential the muscles will contract and the leg will twitch briefly It will twitch again when the circuit is broken 16 The instrument is capable of detecting extremely small voltages and could far surpass other instruments available in the first half of the nineteenth century including the electromagnetic galvanometer and the gold leaf electroscope For this reason it remained popular long after other instruments became available The galvanometer was made possible in 1820 by the discovery by Hans Christian Orsted that electric currents would deflect a compass needle and the gold leaf electroscope was even earlier Abraham Bennet 1786 19 Yet Golding Bird could still write in 1848 that the irritable muscles of a frog s legs were no less than 56 000 times more delicate a test of electricity than the most sensitive condensing electrometer 20 The word condenser used by Bird here means a coil so named by Johann Poggendorff by analogy with Volta s term for a capacitor 2 The frog galvanoscope can be used to detect the direction of electric current A frog s leg that has been somewhat desensitised is needed for this The sensitivity of the instrument is greatest with a freshly prepared leg and then falls off with time so an older leg is best for this The response of the leg is greater to currents in one direction than the other and with a suitably desensitised leg it may only respond to currents in one direction For a current going into the leg from the nerve the leg will twitch on making the circuit For a current passing out of the leg it will twitch on breaking the circuit 21 The major drawback of the frog galvanoscope is that the frog leg frequently needs replacing 22 The leg will continue to respond for up to 44 hours but after that a fresh one must be prepared 13 References edit Keithley p 51 a b Hackmann p 257 Hackmann p 259 Piccolino amp Bresadola pp 74 75 Piccolino amp Bresadola pp 88 89 Keithley p 49 Piccolino amp Bresadola p 71 Keithley p 71 Wilkinson p 6 Piccolino amp Bresadola p 5 citing Adolphe Ganot Hare pp 3 4 Clarke amp Jacyna p 199Clarke amp O Malley p 186Hellman pp 31 32Bird 1848 pp 344 345Matteucci 1845 pp 284 285 a b Piccolino amp Bresadola p 75 Bird p 270 Clarke amp Jacyna p 199 a b Hare p 4 Bird p 345 Clarke amp O Malley pp 188 189 Keithley p 36 Bird p 345 citing Wilkinson 1845 Bird p 346 Clarke amp Jacyna citing MatteucciBibliography editClarke Edwin Jacyna L S Nineteenth Century Origins of Neuroscientific Concepts University of California Press 1992 ISBN 0520078799 Clarke Edwin O Malley Charles Donald The Human Brain and Spinal Cord a historical study illustrated by writings from antiquity to the twentieth century Norman Publishing 1996 ISBN 0930405250 Bird Golding Chapter XX Physiological electricity or galvanism Elements of Natural Philosophy London John Churchill 1848 OCLC 931247166 Hackmann Willem D Galvanometer in Bud Robert Warner Deborah Jean eds Instruments of Science An Historical Encyclopedia pp 257 259 Taylor amp Francis 1998 ISBN 0815315619 Hare Robert Of galvanism or voltaic electricity A Brief Exposition of the Science of Mechanical Electricity Philadelphia J G Auner 1840 OCLC 8205588 Hellman Hal Great Feuds in Medicine John Wiley and Sons 2001 ISBN 0471347574 Keithley Joseph F The Story of Electrical and Magnetic Measurements From 500 BC to the 1940s IEEE Press 1999 ISBN 0780311930 Piccolino Marco Bresadola Marco Shocking Frogs Galvani Volta and the Electric Origins of Neuroscience Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 0199782164 Matteucci Carlo The muscular current Philosophical Transactions pp 283 295 1845 Wilkinson Charles Henry Elements of Galvanism London John Murray 1804 OCLC 8497530 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frog galvanoscope amp oldid 1210484502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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