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![]() "Jeff Liebermann" napisal w wiadomosci ... On Sat, 21 Apr 2012 09:24:03 +0200, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote: Electrons escape from each charged body. Your antennas emit electrons and for this reason they need the sink of electrons (the earth/chassis/ counterpoise). Great theory. If antennas emitted electrons, and electrons have mass, we could then build a rotating antenna powered by the electron belching reaction mass. Put the antenna on a hub, and watch the electron emissions turn the antenna as they fly off the antenna at ummm... the speed of light. A few hundred watts of power should be more than enough to move the antenna around. Yeah, great physics you have there. Hint: How fast do electrons travel in a wire? No, it's not the speed of light. It's called electron drift velocity. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drift_velocity http://www.jensign.com/JavaScience/www/cuwire/cuwire.html For the above example, it takes about 12 hours for an electron to travel 1 meter in a copper wire. Not exactly at RF speeds. The air molecules travel with the speed of the wind. But they oscillate if there is the sound source. The speed of sound and the speed the wind are the different things. The same is with the electron waves speed and the electron beam (drift) speed. Keep trying. Eventually, you'll get something correct. S* |
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