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On 2 Mar, 13:04, chuck wrote:
Dave wrote: chuck wrote: Dave wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Dave wrote: Cecil, as an engineer you should stick with standard vocabulary. Just trying to appease the physicists, Dave. They are arguing that it is not power until work is done. A Poynting vector is watts/square angle [watts/degree^2]. It is not being dissipated in free space. It is Diverging [vector relationship]. How do the physics type adjust their definition to include the Poynting Vector? I'll sit back and read the follow up posts for the next few weeks :-) And now one for the engineers! How do you interpret a non-zero Poynting vector determined by static E- and H- fields? 73, Chuck Static fields, by definition, do not have a time varying divergence. No time variation, no Poynting Vector. Nes Pas? I think the Poynting vector can be calculated even when the E and H fields are static. Of course, doing so would violate Poynting's assumptions and thus be meaningless. But if one didn't know in advance that an arbitrary closed surface contained static sources, and he found the Poynting vector, S, for some small area, he could well get a non-zero answer. Of course, the integral of S over the entire surface would always be zero in the case of static sources. To be applicable, the Poynting theorem requires that the E and H fields arise from a single source, satisfying Maxwell's first two equations. But that information may not be known in advance. 73, Chuck ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==----http://www.newsfeeds.comThe #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Chuck, I believe you would be much better off choosing Gausses law for statics and adding a time element to the written law itself thus providing all three cartesian coodinates reguired for the law. I suppose one could say it is not Gaussian law anymore but mathematically it fits quite well. This is the basis for Gaussian antenna arrays for which I have submitted for consideration from the patent office. As yet I have not heard any comment that invalidates this concept other than it can't be done from psuedo experts and frankly I feel that the addition speaks for itself. Regards Art |
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