| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"Ian" napisa? w wiadomo?ci ... "Szczepan Bialek" wrote in message ... : : : So we have the three teams of posters: : 1. Faraday, Stokes, Lorenz, Marconi, Tesla and Dirac, : 2. Heaviside and Poynting, : 3. You, Tom, Rob and Jimp. : : From whom should I learn? : : S* Hello Szczepan. Teams 1 and 2 do not exist, do they? Faraday and the others aren't sitting at computers and making posts, are they? You're making posts with text that you seem not to understand. This confuses you even more and amuses us. Do you agree with Heaviside and Poynting. Father of the famous vector wrote in 1884 (before the Hertz experiment): ""Energy is transferred through empty space outside the wires". "The whole of the energy then enters in through the external surface of the wire, and by the general theorem the amount entering in must just account for the heat developed owing to the resistance," Nope; proved incorrect or incomplete, depending on how you want to look at it. As you should see the energy from the transmitter enters in through the external surface of the wire (antenna) and next is radiated as the heat. Nope, not a chance. It amuses me. And what about you? Your babbling? Yes, it is amusing how you are always wrong. Do you know that antennas radiate very,very lower frequences than heat? If by "heat" you mean infrared, then yes, standard radio frequencies are much lower than the frequency of infrared light, but you only got that correct by accident. "'How does energy really flow in electric circuits?'. The answer is fairly standard university-level physics but is rarely mentioned in secondary school text books". Of course not; lots of detail in every field is ommited at the secondary school level. So what. What textbooks you have? Lots; all university level and all read. Do you wear slip on shoes? |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Poynting Vector in Standing Waves | Antenna | |||
| Help with Vector Voltmeter measurements | Equipment | |||
| HP 8405A Vector Voltmeter | Equipment | |||
| HP 8405A Vector Voltmeter | Equipment | |||
| Vector Network Analyzers | Homebrew | |||