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#21
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On Nov 21, 1:28*pm, "Dave" wrote:
"Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Art wrote: "The Physics World states that displacement current does not exist with respect to radiation---." Who and where? Be reasonable. Free space is normally nonconductive. remember, art believes space is full of magic jumping diamagnetic levitating neutrinos, obviously they carry the charge so there is no need for displacement current, only the weak force. Not so. I am willing to believe what modern science say that the aether is filled with a circulating magnetic field thru which particles can pass. If that is what they think that is fine by me. After all there must be something inside the arbritary border of the Aether to prevent it collapsing per Newton Art |
#22
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christofire wrote:
I hardly dare to say it but, actually that's incorrect for the radiation field (which is what I wrote about). The radiation resistance of an antenna accounts for its ability to radiate power into the surrounding space and, like all other resistances, the peak of current co-insides with the peak of applied voltage - so one doesn't occur '1/2-period later' at all. What's described in the passage above is the situation in respect of the temporary storage of energy in the 'reactive near fields' corresponding to a reactive component of the terminal impedance, not the radiation resistance. I would expect the latter to be of greater importance to those interested in communication. I wouldn't disagree with the statement that stored energy is concentrated in the regions near the 'maximum charge regions' but if you plot the equipotent lines around a dipole and equate the amount of energy stored to the electric field strength it illustrates that the spatial distribution of energy in the electric field is similar to that in the magnetic field ... as one might expect. Chris That's a good explanation. It might help some people to visualize the process by comparing it to a series RLC circuit, which its feedpoint impedance resembles over a moderate bandwidth. In both an RLC circuit and an antenna, the current and voltage aren't in phase, but they're not exactly in quadrature (90 degrees out of phase) either. This means that during each cycle, some of the energy entering the RLC circuit or antenna is stored and some is consumed. In the RLC circuit, the stored energy is stored in fields in the capacitor and inductor; in the antenna, it's stored in fields near the antenna -- the near field. And the consumed power is dissipated in the resistor in the RLC circuit; in the antenna, it's radiated. The antenna's equivalent to the RLC circuit resistance is, of course, the radiation resistance, which "consumes" -- radiates -- some of the applied energy each cycle. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#23
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Richard Harrison wrote:
Michael Faraday (1791- 1867) wrote: E = F/Q where E & F are parallel vectors. E = the electric field strength in force per unit charge and F is measured in newtons per coulomb. Faraday should have written that E is in units of newtons per coulomb, as F would obviously be in newtons. Electrostatic does not mean stationary. In what way does it not? 73, ac6xg |
#24
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Chris wrote:
"I hardly dare say it but, actually that`s incorrect for the radiation field (which is what I wrote about)." That`s chris` prerogative. Note the near field is also called the "induction field". One reason, its energy returns to the source each cycle. The far field emergy has escaped or radiated. Its energy appears as a resistive load on the source. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#25
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Richard Harrison wrote:
... I now think "evoke" should have been used in place of "invoke". Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI Richard: I am sure there is, most-probably, enough difference for argument ... However, to a poor country boy like myself, these terms are, for the most part, interchangeable ... both can be found with definitions which bring "magic", "mystery" and the "spiritual realm" into mind ... and, I am sorry, sometimes I "just feel" this way (and, especially when it is the "wifes time of the month!") ... grin Sorry, just thought a bit of sick humor might be appreciated by some ... LOL! and-a-evil-grin Regards, JS |
#26
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Richard Harrison wrote:
Chris wrote: "I hardly dare say it but, actually that`s incorrect for the radiation field (which is what I wrote about)." That`s chris` prerogative. Note the near field is also called the "induction field". One reason, its energy returns to the source each cycle. The far field emergy has escaped or radiated. Its energy appears as a resistive load on the source. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI You mean, those "antenna/rf-magnetic-fields" are NOT leaving the radiator at the speed of light, but being "stored in the ether?", to then collapse and induce an electric field back into the element which first generated-such? sly-grin Sorry, I know, this will be perceived as "troll-territory." :-( Regards, JS |
#27
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On Nov 21, 4:03*pm, John Smith wrote:
Richard Harrison wrote: ... I now think "evoke" should have been used in place of "invoke". Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI Richard: I am sure there is, most-probably, enough difference for argument ... However, to a poor country boy like myself, these terms are, for the most part, interchangeable ... both can be found with definitions which bring "magic", "mystery" and the "spiritual realm" into mind ... and, I am sorry, sometimes I "just feel" this way (and, especially when it is the "wifes time of the month!") ... grin Sorry, just thought a bit of sick humor might be appreciated by some ... LOL! *and-a-evil-grin Regards, JS No JS THEY ARE NOT INTERCHANGEABLE You can't insert units that state it is a current and in the same breath say it does not produce a magnetic field Best regards Art |
#28
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Art Unwin wrote:
... No JS THEY ARE NOT INTERCHANGEABLE You can't insert units that state it is a current and in the same breath say it does not produce a magnetic field Best regards Art Interesting ... EVOKE: # arouse: call forth (emotions, feelings, and responses); "arouse pity"; "raise a smile"; "evoke sympathy" # provoke: evoke or provoke to appear or occur; "Her behavior provoked a quarrel between the couple" # educe: deduce (a principle) or construe (a meaning); "We drew out some interesting linguistic data from the native informant" # raise: summon into action or bring into existence, often as if by magic; "raise the specter of unemployment"; "he conjured wild birds in the air"; "call down the spirits from the mountain" # suggest: call to mind; "this remark evoked sadness" wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn INVOKE: # raise: summon into action or bring into existence, often as if by magic; "raise the specter of unemployment"; "he conjured wild birds in the air ... # cite as an authority; resort to; "He invoked the law that would save him"; "I appealed to the law of 1900"; "She invoked an ancient law" # appeal: request earnestly (something from somebody); ask for aid or protection; "appeal to somebody for help"; "Invoke God in times of trouble" wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn Gee, I am "feeling for you", just can't "reach you", but then, you already knew that ... :-( Regards, JS |
#29
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Jim Kelley wrote:
"In what way is it (an electrostatic field) not (stationary)?" Terman was refering to an electromagnetic (radio) wave. It is a peculiarity of "old-speak" to call an electric field an electrostatic field. As Cecil reminds us, radio waves are always in motion. But, their superposition may produce a stationary wave called a standing wave. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#30
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On Nov 21, 5:47*pm, (Richard Harrison)
wrote: Jim Kelley wrote: "In what way is it (an electrostatic field) not (stationary)?" Terman was refering to an electromagnetic (radio) wave. It is a peculiarity of "old-speak" to call an electric field an electrostatic field. As Cecil reminds us, radio waves are always in motion. But, their superposition may produce a stationary wave called a standing wave. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI But Cecil has never said you can have current flow without a magnetic field! So now one must determine where the reflection occurs and science puports that it is not at the end of the antenna! Thus the term "standing wave" must be thougherly defined in line with the newly disclosed facts so that all jive. Also, Gauss never assumed the wave description over a particle description, The answer regarding waves and particles with respect to radiation has not yet been resolved by the scientific community because of the Maxwell additive dillema. And "Old speak" doesn't cut the mustard in present day debate. It is completely wrong to call a static field an electrical field. It is either a static or a dynamic field so guessing what Terman really ment or meant to say just does not have any standing. |
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