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Polly parroted:
1. You do not separately excite the E and H fields because if you excite an E field, you get a corresponding H field, and vice-versa, even if it is your intention to excite separately. 2. The differential forms of Maxwell describe the fields at _EVERY_ infinitesimal point and there is no way that the attempt to excite two separate fields from two separate mechanical contrivances will result in registration at every single point. Indeed, it is doubtful that registration will be achieved at all at any infinitesimal point. In any case, as in (1) above, your E field will have its H, and your H field will have its E field already. Your first point does in fact point to the anomaly regarding points in your second point, and you have therefore pointed up the answer to your own point. As you clearly have not thought this point through, I pointedly leave its discovery as an exercise for you. While you continue to struggle for technical excellence, doing this should help point you to the requirements demanded of scientific thinking, and the possibility of also taking your first tentative steps in that discipline. Further, as a guide, scientists do not use personal pronouns in their formal writings, so you might also like to rewrite your article in such a manner. from Aero Spike |