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On Dec 8, 8:51*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
*"JIMMIE" ... On Dec 7, 3:03 pm, Art Unwin wrote: - Show quoted text - Lets make sure I follow, You are saying that radio communication occurs because and antenna emits statically charged particle that then imparts their charge to the receiving antenna when they strike the antenna. Is this what you are saying. Yes. But in form of longitudinal waves. Electrons go out and come back from the end of radiator. For this reason he can wrote: "the idea of point radiation which leads to efficient small volume antennas. And following these edicts I have been able to make radiators of a smnaller volume that is known in the present state of the art." When electrons oscillate in a transmitter the voltage at the end of a radiator is doubled and the strong Gauss electric field is produced. Such waves are longitudinal. Exactly which particles are you saying are responsible for this?. Here are many hypothesis. One of them is the Diracs electron see. So the electrons in the conductor kick the electrons in the space. But it is not important. Radio people should know which part of the radiator radiate and what the waves a normal pressure waves or artifical TEM waves. S* so how do antennas encased in insulators work at all? |
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