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On Sep 6, 8:57*am, Cecil Moore wrote:
Mike Coslo wrote: Somewhere along the line something has to lose mass, unless magic or supernatural forces are involved. You seem to be missing the fact of physics that mass and energy are equivalent forms related by constants. e = K1*m *and *m = K2*e where K1 and K2 are constants. For transmitting, there's nothing to prohibit mass from being supplied in its equivalent energy form and then lost from the antenna through radiated mass. (energy in) = (mass in)c^2 = (energy out) = (mass out)c^2 When an atomic bomb goes off, mass is not lost - it simply takes the form of an equivalent amount of energy which, if we were smart enough, could be converted back to mass. -- 73, Cecil, IEEE, OOTC, *http://www.w5dxp.com But if it is full wave it is a tank circuit which does not radiate in both half cycles but in pulses as Planck states. It only radiates when the capacitive field intersects with a magnetic field. |
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