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Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
"Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote:
wrote ... "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: As you know I do not understand why in XXI century most scientists use the hydraulic analogy. The hydraulic analogy is use to teach basics to children. The fluxes are for students. The divrotH = 0 also. Gibberish. Permittivity and polarisation are from the hydraulic analogy. Nope, you haven't a clue what permittivity and polarization are. Now conductivity and electrostriction should be used. Babbling, word salad, nonsense. Electrostriction is a new. The "" For frequencies at which dipole orientations cannot follow the applied field " is rather old. Do not stay in Heaviside water. S* More gibberish. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
On Jul 30, 5:43*pm, wrote:
"Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: .... "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: As you know I do not understand why in XXI century most scientists use the hydraulic analogy. The hydraulic analogy is use to teach basics to children. The fluxes are for students. The divrotH = 0 also. Gibberish. Permittivity and polarisation are from the hydraulic analogy. Nope, you haven't a clue what permittivity and polarization are. Now conductivity and electrostriction should be used. Babbling, word salad, nonsense. Electrostriction is a new. The "" For frequencies at which dipole orientations cannot follow the applied *field " is rather old. Do not stay in Heaviside water. S* More gibberish. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. i kind of like the idea of heaviside water... he must be carrying the water for heaviside. i wonder if he even knows what electrostriction really is? |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
K1TTT wrote:
On Jul 30, 5:43Â*pm, wrote: "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: ... "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: As you know I do not understand why in XXI century most scientists use the hydraulic analogy. The hydraulic analogy is use to teach basics to children. The fluxes are for students. The divrotH = 0 also. Gibberish. Permittivity and polarisation are from the hydraulic analogy. Nope, you haven't a clue what permittivity and polarization are. Now conductivity and electrostriction should be used. Babbling, word salad, nonsense. Electrostriction is a new. The "" For frequencies at which dipole orientations cannot follow the applied Â*field " is rather old. Do not stay in Heaviside water. S* More gibberish. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. i kind of like the idea of heaviside water... he must be carrying the water for heaviside. i wonder if he even knows what electrostriction really is? That babbling idiot hasn't a clue what ANYTHING really is. If you read sci.physics.electromag you will find lots of his gibberish. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
"K1TTT" wrote ... On Jul 30, 5:43 pm, wrote: "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: Electrostriction is a new. The "" For frequencies at which dipole orientations cannot follow the applied field " is rather old. Do not stay in Heaviside water. S* i kind of like the idea of heaviside water... he must be carrying the water for heaviside. i wonder if he even knows what electrostriction really is? It is not the dipole orientation (rotation). It is the deformation of the dielectric. "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Water droplets are strongly deformed in a weak electric field. Do not stay in the Heaviside water. There the two electric fluids were displaced. No deformation of shape. Now many scientists analise the electrostriction. S* |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"K1TTT" wrote ... On Jul 30, 5:43 pm, wrote: "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: Electrostriction is a new. The "" For frequencies at which dipole orientations cannot follow the applied field " is rather old. Do not stay in Heaviside water. S* i kind of like the idea of heaviside water... he must be carrying the water for heaviside. i wonder if he even knows what electrostriction really is? It is not the dipole orientation (rotation). It is the deformation of the dielectric. "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Water droplets are strongly deformed in a weak electric field. Do not stay in the Heaviside water. There the two electric fluids were displaced. No deformation of shape. Now many scientists analise the electrostriction. S* Babbling gibberish, word salad. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
wrote ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Babbling gibberish, word salad. "Quartz glass has a very high dielectric strength but a very low electric conductivity, even at high temperature, high voltage and high frequency, nearly without electric loss in the range of the frequencies applied. Therefore quartz glass is an excellent high temperature dielectric material." What is the cause: polarisation or electrostriction or the both? S* |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
"Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote:
wrote ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Babbling gibberish, word salad. "Quartz glass has a very high dielectric strength but a very low electric conductivity, even at high temperature, high voltage and high frequency, nearly without electric loss in the range of the frequencies applied. Therefore quartz glass is an excellent high temperature dielectric material." Being able to cut and paste from a web page doesn't mean you are not a babbling idiot. What is the cause: polarisation or electrostriction or the both? S* Point proven. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
On Jul 31, 5:34*pm, wrote:
"Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: .... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Babbling gibberish, word salad. "Quartz glass has a very high dielectric strength but a very low electric conductivity, even at high temperature, high voltage and high frequency, nearly without electric loss in the range of the frequencies applied. Therefore quartz glass is an excellent high temperature dielectric material." Being able to cut and paste from a web page doesn't mean you are not a babbling idiot. What is the cause: polarisation or electrostriction or the both? S* Point proven. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. I wish he would talk to art more, the two of them are more fun when they are combining their gibberish. i guess they just don't realize that the technobabble they have come up with doesn't really mean anything useful, and little pieces of knowledge taken out of context just can't be strung back together in any order to prove something they think is right. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
K1TTT wrote:
On Jul 31, 5:34Â*pm, wrote: "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Babbling gibberish, word salad. "Quartz glass has a very high dielectric strength but a very low electric conductivity, even at high temperature, high voltage and high frequency, nearly without electric loss in the range of the frequencies applied. Therefore quartz glass is an excellent high temperature dielectric material." Being able to cut and paste from a web page doesn't mean you are not a babbling idiot. What is the cause: polarisation or electrostriction or the both? S* Point proven. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. I wish he would talk to art more, the two of them are more fun when they are combining their gibberish. i guess they just don't realize that the technobabble they have come up with doesn't really mean anything useful, and little pieces of knowledge taken out of context just can't be strung back together in any order to prove something they think is right. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_salad -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Grounding for Gable end bracket & mast.
On Jul 31, 9:14*pm, wrote:
K1TTT wrote: On Jul 31, 5:34*pm, wrote: "Szczepan Bia?ek" wrote: ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: "In fact, most dipolar solids exhibit extremely small dielectric losses since W tends to be extremely large. Water-free ice, for example does not heat significantly under microwave irradiation." From: http://www.tan-delta.com/mw_heating.html Babbling gibberish, word salad. "Quartz glass has a very high dielectric strength but a very low electric conductivity, even at high temperature, high voltage and high frequency, nearly without electric loss in the range of the frequencies applied.. Therefore quartz glass is an excellent high temperature dielectric material." Being able to cut and paste from a web page doesn't mean you are not a babbling idiot. What is the cause: polarisation or electrostriction or the both? S* Point proven. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. I wish he would talk to art more, the two of them are more fun when they are combining their gibberish. *i guess they just don't realize that the technobabble they have come up with doesn't really mean anything useful, and little pieces of knowledge taken out of context just can't be strung back together in any order to prove something they think is right. See:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_salad -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. so which of these do you think may apply to Mr. B or Art? Could be just about any of them i guess, though art seems to alternate between Logorrhea and silence, maybe he's bipolar? Mr. B seems to be solidly Schizophasiac, just continual nonsensical babbling. # Wernicke's aphasia # Schizophasia, a mental condition characterized by incoherent babbling (compulsive or intentional, but nonsensical) # Logorrhea (psychology), a mental condition characterized by excessive talking (coherent or otherwise, but compulsive) |
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