In 1956 metrologists Thompson and Lampard established a new theorem in two-dimensional electrostatics that gives calculable capacitances for practical systems possessing a certain symmetry. The theorem is well known among those concerned with electrical standards, but not so well known beyond. This paper brings the theorem to a wider audience with a pedagogical discussion of it, first by treating a simple example by standard methods of electrostatics, then proving the Riemann mapping theorem on which the theorem is based. The Thompson–Lampard theorem and its generalization are then proved and its use in metrology described. Along the way, some curious results about series and products are exhibited.

1.
A. M.
Thompson
and
D. G.
Lampard
, “
A New Theorem in Electrostatics and its Application to Calculable Standards of Capacitance
,”
Nature (London)
177
,
888
(
1956
).
2.
B. W. Petley, The Fundamental Physical Constants and the Frontier of Measurement (Hilger, Bristol, 1985), pp. 142–145.
3.
N. M.
Zimmerman
, “
A primer on electrical units in the Système International
,”
Am. J. Phys.
66
,
324
331
(
1998
).
4.
D. G.
Lampard
, “
A new theorem in electrostatics and its application to calculable standards of capacitance
,”
Proc. IEEE
104C
,
271
280
(
1957
).
5.
L. J.
van der Pauw
, “
A method of measuring specific resistivity and Hall effect of discs of arbitrary shape
,”
Philips Res. Rep.
13
,
1
9
(
1958
).
6.
D. G.
Lampard
and
R. D.
Cutkosky
, “
Some results on the cross-capacitances per unit length of cylindrical three-terminal capacitors with thin dielectric films on their electrodes
,”
Proc. IEEE
107C
,
112
119
(
1960
).
7.
J. D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics (Wiley, New York, 1998), 3rd ed., p. 39.
8.
See, for example, Ref. 7, p. 89, Problem 2.15.
9.
E. T. Whittaker and G. N. Watson, A Course in Modern Analysis (Cambridge U. P., Cambridge, 1952), 4th ed., reprinted, Chap. XXI.
10.
It turns out that string theorists make use of Jacobi’s elliptic and theta functions. Consult your local string person for details.
11.
I. S. Gradshteyn and I. M. Ryzhik, Table of Integrals, Series, and Products (Academic, New York, 1965), 4th ed., p. 924, formula 8.197.4.
12.
My expansion of the sum is Σ=2e−π[(1−1/π)+4(3−1/π)e−2π+6(5−1/π)e−4π+⋯]. The third term here disagrees with Lampard’s Eq. (43)—Ref. 4. He has a coefficient −10 instead of +6.
13.
E. T. Copson, Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable (Oxford U.P., Oxford, 1935), reprinted 1955, pp. 185–187.
14.
C. E. Pearson, Handbook of Applied Mathematics (Van Nostrand, New York, 1983), pp. 261–263.
15.
See, for example, Ref. 7, pp. 38–40.
16.
See Ref. 7, pp. 37, 38.
17.
H. Kober, Dictionary of Conformal Representations (Dover, New York, 1957), 2nd ed., p. 182.
18.
See Ref. 7, p. 89, Problem 2.12.
19.
R. D.
Cutkosky
, “
New NBS measurements of the absolute farad and ohm
,”
IEEE Trans Instrum. Meas.
IM-23
,
305
309
(
1974
).
This content is only available via PDF.
AAPT members receive access to the American Journal of Physics and The Physics Teacher as a member benefit. To learn more about this member benefit and becoming an AAPT member, visit the Joining AAPT page.