ELECTRICITY IN THUNDER-STORMS.
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The circumstances under which electricity was produced were the next subjects of his inquiry, and he says (section 2084):
It thus appears that, without water to condense the steam, there was no electricity, but with condensation an abundance appeared. Other experiments were to the same effect.
Faraday further says (section 2089):
Experiments with air were also made. It was compressed within a receiver and allowed to escape, impinging against ice or cones of wood or brass (section 2129). With common undried air electricity was produced. He says:
Under all circumstances, then, condensation produced electricity. Without it there was none. The theory of friction is wholly unnecessary to the explanation of the phenomena. It has to assume that water,