Electron ratio to form a radiation field
Art Unwin wrote:
"What is the combination ratio required of both types of electrons to
form a radiation field?"
A company called Tigertek, Inc. answers questions such as this. Art can
search on "amateur radio fact of the day from Tigertek" and their pages
should appear. Click on "Facts of the Day, Software and Forums". Select
"November 26, and see: "Electromagnetic E/H Ratio". Click and find:
"----at a distance of several wavelengths or more from any type of
electromagnetic radiator the ratio of electric to magnetic field
strength (E/H) always becomes equal to approximately 377 ohms, which is
the approximate electromagnetic impedance of space."
Jan 3: Electron Facts
July 29: Does Your Antenna Radiate Particles?
"----Unlike protons and neutrons, photons have zero rest mass. (Albert
Einstein`s special relativity theory predicted that massless particles
travel at the speed of light in a vacuum.) Furthermore, unlike protons
and neutrons which are composed of smaller particles called quarks that
are bound together with massless smaller particles called gluons,
photons (and electrons) are elemental particles that are not composed of
smaller particles. Transmitting antennas do indeed radiate particles."
Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI
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