Electron ratio to form a radiation field
On 10 May, 11:45, wrote:
robert casey wrote:
art wrote:
What is the ratio of magnetic electrons emitted from a radiator
compared with
with the number of electrons emmitted due to current flow?
What is the combination ratio required of both types of electrons to
form a radiation field?
Regards
Art
You mean the radiation from an antenna driven by a radio transmitter?
It doesn't emit electrons, but it does emit photons at that radio
frequency.
Go find a book on electromagnetism and fields, but be prepared for
calculus level math in that book. I took such a class 30 years ago, and
got a "C", and remember even less now. A high school physics book might
be enough depending on your needs.
The current (May/June) issue of QEX contains the article:
Electromagnetic Radiation: A Brief Tutorial
It contains equations but no calculus that I noticed.
"magnetic electrons emitted from a radiator" isn't mentioned, but
that isn't a surprise to most people.
--
Jim Pennino
Remove .spam.sux to reply.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Jim, you have no legitamacy in the subject of radiation, your past
posts prove that. On top of that you do not talk for most people as
you intimate.
You haven't yet capitulated on the static subject or negated the truth
of the mathematics and examples supplied. Just stating consistently
that you can't this or you can't that just doesn't elevate your
stature.
|