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On Jul 6, 2:00*pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
On Jul 6, 12:20*am, Keith Dysart wrote: Is there a problem providing an answer? I don't know how to measure the exact answer. How many photons does it take to cause a measurable EM field at one cycle per two years? If the EM field is too low to measure, how do you know it is there at all? Blind faith in a math model? beware cecil... remember, there are electric fields, and there are magnetic fields, there is NOT an Electro-Magnetic 'Field'! there are Electro-Magnetic WAVES but NOT a 'Field'! he is trying to draw you in! remember DC is forever, any direct current creates a Magnetic FIELD... and any net charge imbalance would create an Electric FIELD (though DC does not require a charge imbalance, only a moving charge at a constant velocity). But in any case if it is a stream of charged particles moving at constant velocity forever they create an Electric FIELD... BUT there is no Electro-Magnetic WAVE produced by those static fields. note, if you google 'electromagnetic field' you will indeed find may misuses of the term, including wikipedia that inappropriately abreviates it EMF, which we all know means Electro-Motive Force. The term 'electromagnetic fields', little f, and plural, is commonly used to refer to collections of electric and magnetic fields. This is seen quite often when talking about relativistic transformations where the electric and magnetic fields are linked by the frame transformation. |
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