Education
University of Göttingen.
engineer inventor physicist university professor
University of Göttingen.
Jacobi worked mainly in Russia. He furthered progress in galvanoplastics, electric motors, and wire telegraphy. In 1834 he began to study magnetic motors.
In 1835 moved to Dorpat (now Tartu, Estonia) to lecture at Dorpat University.
He moved to Saint St. Petersburg in 1837 to research usage of electromagnetic forces for moving machines for Russian Academy of Sciences. He investigated the power of an electromagnet in motors and generators.
While studying the transfer of power from a battery to an electric motor, he deduced the maximum power theorem. Jacobi tested motors output by determining the amount of zinc consumed by the battery.
With financial assistance of Czar Nicholas, Jacobi constructed in 1839 a 28 foot electric motor boat powered by battery cells.
The boat carried 14 passengers on Neva river against the current. The boat fared at the speed of three miles for hour. The law known as the maximum power theorem states:
"Maximum power is transferred when the internal resistance of the source equals the resistance of the load, when the external resistance can be varied, and the internal resistance is constant."
The transfer of maximum power from a source with a fixed internal resistance to a load, the resistance of the load must be the same as that of the source.
This law is of use when driving a load such as an electric motor from a battery.
Jacobi obtained his theorem by common sense. In 1838, he discovered galvanoplastics, or electrotyping, a method of making printing plates by electroplating.
The way in which this works is analogous to a battery acting in reverse. The stereotype was an impression taken from a form of movable lead type and used for printing instead of the original type.
This technique is used in relief printing.
He also worked on the development of the electric telegraph. In 1842-1845 he built a telegraph line between Saint St. Petersburg and Tsarskoe Selo using an underground cable. In 1867 he was a Russian delegate to the Commission on measurement units at the Paris World"s Fair.
He was a strong proponent of the metric system.
He was a brother of the mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi.
Russian Academy of Sciences. Russian Academy of Sciences. Lincean Academy.