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On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 11:06:29 -0800 (PST), art
wrote: At what distance does the coax have to travel such that current on the outside does not exist? Hi Arthur, According to Brown, Lewis, and Epstein's work, the currents absorbed by ground dissipate radial wire current (what is flowing on the exterior of a coax) in a very short interval. However, just where it "does not exist" is like the problem you have with skin effect. The current diminishes asymptotically towards zero, but most would agree that the practical current is gone within less than a quarter wave length. The convergence with the asymptote could be described to be infinitely far away - especially when the current levels induced in far receiver antennas is so miniscule in comparison to the diminished radial currents (4,5 or 6 orders of magnitude?). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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