"K1TTT" wrote
...
On May 7, 8:26 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
I did it. Radio waves and sound waves have the same directional patterns
for
the same numbers, configurations (and phases).
The two waves emitted from the dipole (ACOUSTIC OR ELECTRIC) are
"polarized". You can experimentally determine the plane in which the
dipole
is.
The same is with more sources.
S*
they may have the same patterns for some cases, that is why they are
used in lower grades, to keep the explanations of waves simple for
those who don't have the mathematical background to understand the
full detail of it. but pattern does not show polarization. by
matching an interference pattern you are not showing how a wave is
polarized,
You assume that radio wave is transversal. Such are polarised. But such are
only in Maxwell's Hypothesis.
Radio waves from the ends of the dipole are coupled. The both are in one
plane.
Radio wave from one end is spherical.
only that superposition principles work for both types of
waves. show me an experiment where a sound wave is polarized,
Sound wave is not polarised. Sound waves from "dipole" is.
that one i would like to see.
you might want to start with a couple of
these:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave
http://universe-review.ca/R12-03-wave.htm
http://www.answers.com/topic/polarization-of-waves
http://www.isvr.soton.ac.uk/spcg/Tut...ther-light.htm
In above no directional pattern for sound dipoles.
"Polarized" means directional. Are all radio waves directional?
S*