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Richard wrote:
Electrons move in a conductor very slowly. Far, far, below the speed of light. So, when you put a voltage or a source of electrons (which have charge and eminate their own tiny electric field) at one end of a conductor, what exactly propagates through the conductor, so that the voltage at the end of the conductor appears (i.e. becomes measurable) in a time suggesting propagation of the voltage (or charge) at near light speed? Charge. Put a row of marbles or ball bearings on a table. Roll another one so it strikes the near end of the row, and notice that one leaves the far end very quickly. A unit of momentum (a rolling ball) hits the near end, and that unit of momentum propagates to the far end and appears in the form of a rolling ball there, much more quickly than the balls themselves roll. In this case, the momentum of the ball is propagating very quickly from one end to the other. Similarly, a unit of charge (analogous to the momentum of the rolling ball) propagates much faster than the electrons. Put a unit of charge in one end, and a unit of charge pops out the other at near the speed of light, while the electrons themselves move at something like a few miles per hour. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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