Current through coils
Roy wrote, "... That is, the coil is capacitively coupled to ground,
and this
causes displacement current from the coil to ground."
In fact, if there were no such current -- if there were no capacitance
from the coil to the world outside the coil -- then the time delay
through the coil, calculated from tau = sqrt(L*C), would be zero. It
is exactly this current that allows there to be a transmission-line
behaviour and a corresponding time delay.
That's not to say, however, that a physically very small loading coil
with practically no capacitance to ground would not work as a loading
coil. It just wouldn't have a transmission line behaviour worth
mentioning.
It is also exactly this displacement current from a large coil that
allows the current at one end of the coil to be substantially different
from the current at the other end.
Cheers,
Tom
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