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Old December 1st 09, 07:45 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
K7ITM K7ITM is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Faraday shields and radiation and misinterpretations

On Nov 30, 9:05*pm, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
tom wrote e.net:



orfus wrote:
Art Unwin wrote:
I have been reading the groups archives on shield antennas and Faraday
shields and the different auguments regarding how shielding or the
Faraday shield works. Frankly it is a total mess and should be removed
so that hams are not mislead.
Shielding is very simple.
A particle with a electromagnetic field strikes the outside of the
shield.
The magnetic field of same passes thru the shield some might say it is
coupled to the inside of the shield.
The magnetic vector component is out of phase with the electrical
field so it will be just a static particle at rest on the inside but
no inline with the electrical field vector which is now a staic
particle at rest on the outside
We now have a arbitrary boundary as discused by Gauss
For equilibrium all vectors impinging on the boundary must be aligned
such that they cancel.
To accomplish this the inner vector or charge MUST move sideways


*THE CHARGE WHEN ACCELERATED *CREATES A TIME VARYING CURRENT ALONE
WHILE THE OTHER FIELD VECTORS CANCEL OUT
( I believe that this was the object intended in *the cross field
antenna)


As with a applied varying current leaves a xmitter to create
radiation, so must the receiver obtain a time varying current.


Maxwells equations show equations with the electric field, the
magnetic field and a time varying current. When you have a electrical
field or vector of a static particle at rest outside the boundary
opposing the static vector on the inside of the boundary you have
nothing left EXCEPT a time varying current in the closed circuit.
For informative descriptions of how radiation occurs view the QRZ
forum of *( antenna construction and design ) threads (3) on the
double helix
antenna ( see you there)
Somebody some where should re write the above such that a definition
is left for those who follow and remove the garbage which is now in
place
TROLL!


Nope. Local loony.


You, however, are a troll until proven otherwise.


tom
K0TAR


Ok, at the risk of stirring muddy water, I'm curious now, I'm new to this
group, and the subject as there clearly seems to be more to it than I knew. I
also don't know of those archives mentioned so I haven't seen the context..

So in simple terms (hopefully) what is the truth of it? As far as I knew, a
photon at RF with energy but no mass will produce a current that changes over
time in a metal that it hits, though I imagine that as metal has resistance
there must also be a voltage too. I've also heard of the 'skin effect' that
means that at high RF frequencies, current flow tends to stay on the surface,
so clearly the picture isn't as simple as DC and Ohm's law. I also know that
when photons in optical fibres meet boundaries between layers they don't
reflect simply on one side, within one region of specific refractive index,
there's apparently some more complex information exchange that amounts to the
photon crossing the border before returning. Which makes me suspect that
equally exotic action happens when RF photons hit metal sheilds. So what IS
correct? And even if there is more to it, does the aggregate of many photons,
and the wave analysis of their behaviour, reduce to a simple model that makes
the OP correct?

I'm asking this because calls of 'troll' and 'loony' aren't working for me.


It's fairly straightforward, actually, if you believe in Faraday's law
of magnetic induction. That law says that for any closed loop
(through air, through a conductor, through anything), there is an
electromotive force (a voltage source, if you will) whose magnitude is
proportional to the rate of change of magnetic flux enclosed by the
loop. As there is no voltage drop along a perfect conductor, if your
closed loop follows the path of a perfect conductor, there is no
voltage drop around that loop, and therefore the rate of change of the
total magnetic flux enclosed by that loop must be zero. If the
perfect conductor is a closed box, then you can draw loops anywhere
through that conductor and you will never see a changing magnetic
field enclosed by that loop. Thus, the inside of the box and the
outside are magnetically independent; things happening on one side
(magnetically) are not sensed on the other side.

You can understand how this works if you realize that a changing
magnetic field outside the box that would penetrate the box if it
weren't there will induce currents in the conducting box (or even just
in a closed loop of wire). Those currents will (in a perfect
conductor) be exactly the right magnitude to cause a magnetic field
that cancels the external one everywhere inside the closed box (or the
net flux enclosed by a loop of wire). An example: if you short the
secondary of a mains transformer, the primary will draw lots of
current at its rated voltage: it's very difficult for the primary to
change the magnetic flux in the core.

Does the electric field shielding from a perfect conductor need any
explanation?

Of course, an imperfect conductor will be an imperfect magnetic
shield. But a perfect conductor won't let any change of field
through, no matter how slow (no matter how low an EMF it generates),
so a perfect conductor works as a shield all the way down to DC. A
box made with an imperfect conductor is essentially a perfect shield
if the box's wall thickness is at least many skin-depths thick at the
frequency of interest.

That's a quick beginning. You can find lots more about this in E&M
texts. There's even useful stuff about it on the web. ;-)

Cheers,
Tom