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Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 19 May 2006 15:08:11 GMT, "Tom Donaly" wrote: Stokes' law and the Raman effect can be found in physics texts dealing with quantum mechanics. Georg Joos, in his book _Theoretical Physics_ deals with such things. The reading is dense but the underlying concepts aren't too difficult. The difficulty might lie in understanding how they apply to this discussion. Hi Tom, Certainly Joos would give some entry into the field, but finding work as accessible outside of a bookstore or library (in other words, through a search engine) makes for drinking out of a fire hose to quench a sip's worth of thirst. Insofar as HOW this applies, I've spoken to that and Tom shows interest. That alone goes beyond the typical churning that passes for discussion. The point is that these underlying concepts are fairly simple as you imply and they are certainly not remote from the usual topics of consideration here. What they lack is specifics that relate to our common applications, and there too I've offered discussion. However, few seem inspired to travel those paths and that fault can hardly be laid at my doorstep. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi Richard, I didn't intend any criticism. People like Cecil, with home-grown theories, don't ever seem to want things considered in depth. That's understandable from a psychological standpoint, but it isn't any help to the rest of us when some of the things the theory ignores become significant. In the case of antennas, practically everything is significant. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |
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