On Dec 30, 8:56*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Uzytkownik "K1TTT" napisal w ...
On Dec 29, 6:41 pm, wrote:
Szczepan Bialek wrote:
In Heaviside's "restatement" something flow along the lines and they do
not
rotate.
Take a glance at:
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/On_Phy...Lines_of_Force
Excelent English. Perfect physics.
S*
What a buffoon.
You haven't a clue what any of your referenced links mean.
--
Jim Pennino
not only that but the reference is an article from a magazine
published years before the completed set of Maxwell's equations were
first published. *During those years there were many changes in the
understanding of electricity and magnetism and EM waves... not that
the initial publication of Maxwell's equations completely converted
those who had different viewpoints, obviously aetherists and adherents
to other old and disproved theories still exist despite 150 years of
experiments that have failed to damage Maxwell's equations.
See at this:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Co...Dawes_1920.png
There is shown the magnetic flux (Heaviside). Tell me which physical law
produce it (the hand rule is not a physical law).
Now see at Maxwell's model:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mo...rtex_Model.jpg
There the curent in the solenoid physically rotate the magnetic lines of
force.
So " During those years there were many changes in the understanding of
electricity and magnetism" and the hand rule becomes a physical law.
S*
so you have taken 2 unrelated drawings without the explanatory text to
show what?
The 'hand rule' as you call it is not a physical law, it is a
convention that is used to easily remember relationships expressed in
higher mathematics. There is no magic or physical meaning to it... in
fact both 'hand rules' are used depending on how you learned your
electronics, as long as you are consistent the provide identical
results.