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Wimpie wrote:
El 09-11-14 23:01, escribió: wrote: El 08-11-14 8:03, escribió: In rec.radio.amateur.antenna wrote: "Brian wrote in message ... His whole grasp of antenna theory is flawed. He was trying to (indirectly) argue the other day via his his interpretation of Maxwell's Equations you could generate an EM wave by waving a magnet about. When corrected, he introduced another variation. Well, Brian, M3OSN, Old Chum, as was pointed out to you, all of your posts these days are personal attacks aimed at one or another. Why do you behave like that? Certainly, as I corrected myself, if you wave a magnet about fast enough, say, 1000,000,000 times per second, you will certainly generate an EM wave and no-one has corrected me on that point because that point is true. No, that point is utterly, completely, and absolutely false and goes once again to show you have no clue as to the difference between an electric field, a magnetic field, and an electromagnetic field. Without doing the math, can we be sure that there is no radiation from a rotating magnetic dipole? You could ask someone who understands the math. It is not that I don't understand the math, but I don't want to spend time if we can get an answer by using reciprocity (the part of my text you skipped). Back to reciprocity: When using reciprocity, a permament magnet will rotate in an EM radiation field (produced by an antenna-transmitter combination, far field distance). Of course you need to spin-up the magnet as you don't have a rotating field. Once it is synchronized, you can extract power from it (resulting in a slip angle). So the other way around, using reciprocity, the rotating magnet will generate power in a load connected to the antenna that was used to generate the EM field. None of which has a permanet magnet spinning in empty space, which is why I snipped it. If we can't prove that reciprocity (or other assumption) doesn't hold for this case, then the rotating permanent magnet produces EM radiation. And rigously proving any of that is much more complex then F=ma. -- Jim Pennino |
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#5
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El 10-11-14 0:32, escribió:
wrote: El 09-11-14 23:01, escribió: wrote: El 08-11-14 8:03, escribió: In rec.radio.amateur.antenna wrote: "Brian wrote in message ... His whole grasp of antenna theory is flawed. He was trying to (indirectly) argue the other day via his his interpretation of Maxwell's Equations you could generate an EM wave by waving a magnet about. When corrected, he introduced another variation. Well, Brian, M3OSN, Old Chum, as was pointed out to you, all of your posts these days are personal attacks aimed at one or another. Why do you behave like that? Certainly, as I corrected myself, if you wave a magnet about fast enough, say, 1000,000,000 times per second, you will certainly generate an EM wave and no-one has corrected me on that point because that point is true. No, that point is utterly, completely, and absolutely false and goes once again to show you have no clue as to the difference between an electric field, a magnetic field, and an electromagnetic field. Without doing the math, can we be sure that there is no radiation from a rotating magnetic dipole? You could ask someone who understands the math. It is not that I don't understand the math, but I don't want to spend time if we can get an answer by using reciprocity (the part of my text you skipped). Back to reciprocity: When using reciprocity, a permament magnet will rotate in an EM radiation field (produced by an antenna-transmitter combination, far field distance). Of course you need to spin-up the magnet as you don't have a rotating field. Once it is synchronized, you can extract power from it (resulting in a slip angle). So the other way around, using reciprocity, the rotating magnet will generate power in a load connected to the antenna that was used to generate the EM field. None of which has a permanet magnet spinning in empty space, which is why I snipped it. If we can't prove that reciprocity (or other assumption) doesn't hold for this case, then the rotating permanent magnet produces EM radiation. And rigously proving any of that is much more complex then F=ma. Jim, I would encourage you to dive into rotating magnetic dipole radiation. For practical electromechanical systems (even in practial vacuo) it is negligible as (c0)^5 is in the denominator and (2*pi*rev/s)^4 is in the numerator, but that doesn't mean it isn't present from a theoretical point of view. -- Wim PA3DJS Please remove abc first in case of PM |
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Wimpie wrote:
snip Jim, I would encourage you to dive into rotating magnetic dipole radiation. You mean like in a pulsar? For practical electromechanical systems (even in practial vacuo) it is negligible as (c0)^5 is in the denominator and (2*pi*rev/s)^4 is in the numerator, but that doesn't mean it isn't present from a theoretical point of view. Again, not talking about any "electromechanical system", just a permanet magnet spining. Also implied is the macro level, i.e. a magnet one can hold in one's hand and velocities well below any relativisitc effects. -- Jim Pennino |
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#8
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"Sn!pe" wrote in message
.uk... Wimpie wrote: [...] Jim, I would encourage you to dive into rotating magnetic dipole radiation. For practical electromechanical systems (even in practial vacuo) it is negligible as (c0)^5 is in the denominator and (2*pi*rev/s)^4 is in the numerator, but that doesn't mean it isn't present from a theoretical point of view. Would such radiation *propagate* though? I have a vague recollection from many years ago that there's a difference between a proper *radio* wave and another sort of oscillating field that one also gets close to an antenna. Was it something to do with the phase relationship between the electric and magnetic components of the field perhaps? I may well have imagined this, it was a very long time ago. What you appear to be discussing is the difference between the Near Field and the Far Field |
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#9
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On 11/9/2014 4:09 PM, Wimpie wrote:
El 08-11-14 8:03, escribió: In rec.radio.amateur.antenna wrote: "Brian wrote in message ... His whole grasp of antenna theory is flawed. He was trying to (indirectly) argue the other day via his his interpretation of Maxwell's Equations you could generate an EM wave by waving a magnet about. When corrected, he introduced another variation. Well, Brian, M3OSN, Old Chum, as was pointed out to you, all of your posts these days are personal attacks aimed at one or another. Why do you behave like that? Certainly, as I corrected myself, if you wave a magnet about fast enough, say, 1000,000,000 times per second, you will certainly generate an EM wave and no-one has corrected me on that point because that point is true. No, that point is utterly, completely, and absolutely false and goes once again to show you have no clue as to the difference between an electric field, a magnetic field, and an electromagnetic field. Without doing the math, can we be sure that there is no radiation from a rotating magnetic dipole? When using reciprocity, a permament magnet will rotate in an EM radiation field (produced by an antenna-transmitter combination, far field distance). Of course you need to spin-up the magnet as you don't have a rotating field. Once it is synchronized, you can extract power from it (resulting in a slip angle). So the other way around, using reciprocity, the rotating magnet will generate power in a load connected to the antenna that was used to generate the EM field. I don't follow this at all. I'm not familiar with the principle of reciprocity and so can't say if you are applying it correctly. But consider this. If the rotating magnet were sending out EM waves, it would require energy to do that. But a rotating magnet will rotate indefinitely bar other sources of friction. So clearly it is not emanating EM waves. An example is a magnet suspended over a superconductor. It can be set spinning and will not stop for a long time. -- Rick |
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#10
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rickman wrote:
snip I don't follow this at all. I'm not familiar with the principle of reciprocity and so can't say if you are applying it correctly. The reciprocity situation has nothing to do with a permanet magnet rotating in isolation. Reciprocity for that would be battery rotating in isolation. But consider this. If the rotating magnet were sending out EM waves, it would require energy to do that. But a rotating magnet will rotate indefinitely bar other sources of friction. So clearly it is not emanating EM waves. An example is a magnet suspended over a superconductor. It can be set spinning and will not stop for a long time. All true and can be trivially verified in an evacuated container. -- Jim Pennino |
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