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K7ITM wrote in
oups.com: On Apr 19, 5:52 pm, Owen Duffy wrote: ... I will think some more about the "actual zero field", but that cannot suggest that one wave modified the other, they must both pass beyond that point, each unchanged, mustn't they? If that is so, the waves must be independent, but the resultant at a point is something separate to each of the components and doesn't of itself alter the propagation of either wave. Owen Hi Owen, I've seen it written, by a well-respected expert on antennas, that electromagnetic fields may be viewed in either of two different ways. Are there more than two, other than minor variations on the theme? I'm not sure. The two I know from that author are that (1) fields are real physical entities, and (2) that fields are merely mathematical abstractions to help explain our observations: in the case of electromagnetic fields, that acceleration of a electron results in sympathetic motion of free electrons throughout the universe. It seems to me that in either of those cases, the result of fields from multiple sources, in a linear medium, is always the sum of the fields from each of the sources independently. That is practically the definition of linearity, is it not? It does not depend on us putting something there to detect the field, or to test if the mathematical model is correct. Certainly if we were watching waves in water, we could see lines along which there was cancellation, where the water would not be moving. But even if the fields are merely a mathematical abstraction, then I still know where they sum to zero. The utility of a mathematical abstraction to practical folk, of course, is that it can accurately predict the behaviour in the physical world. So if fields are just an abstraction, I can still use them to predict where I can place a wire that's in the sphere of influence of two or more radiating sources, and have the electrons in that wire unaffected by the sources (because those theoretical fields canceled there). On the other hand, if my field theory is describing something physical, if fields are entities apart from (but inexorably linked to) the motion of electrons, then it seems that whether we are able to observe those fields directly or not, their cancellation is real. That does assume that we've correctly deduced the nature of those fields, I suppose, so that our model does say what's going on in that physical medium we can only probe with our free electrons. Thanks Tom. All noted, and it seems of all wave types, EM waves are most difficult to prove the link between mathematical models and the real world. To some extent, some of the muddy water is about whether waves superpose (whatever that means), or whether the fields of a wave superpose at a point and those superposed fields do not imply anything about fields or waves at any other points. If that is the case, it comes back to defining what waves means. Owen |
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