E
Eeyore
Bob said:Let's face it, Pee-Wee Herman was smarter than Radium. Radium
reading Pee-Wee's collected works on the subject would no doubt
be of nearly equal benefit.
Nice analogy. :~)
Graham
Bob said:Let's face it, Pee-Wee Herman was smarter than Radium. Radium
reading Pee-Wee's collected works on the subject would no doubt
be of nearly equal benefit.
Bob said:A matter of semantics. What do you consider to be the distinguishing
feature of a "spark," if not the glow? What you have in the above
is a "spark" or "arc" - it's just one that is too feeble to result in a
readily-visible ionization trail.
Bob M.
Alan said:Well, first, it's not an URL. Second, why doesn't broadcast radio and TV,
etc., "really matter?"
Only if the message id works. Most of the time it doesn't. You have
to be on the same news server for it to work. If I see one that is from
Earthlink, I can open it. Nothing else.
Broadcast radio and TV do actually matter. But they're not electricity
flowing through the air. An electrical current is a bulk flow of
charge. Radio and TV is broadcast by massless and uncharged
electromagnetic radiation.
Alan said:Well, since the transmission and reception of electromagnetic radiation
depends upon the presence of an electric field, how do you justify that
electromagnetic radiation is not a form of electricity?
Pj said:Can electricity flow through air w/out sparking?
Yes!
No.
We need to be much more sensitive to the process of how electons or
photons move through air. Humans are not developed this way.
Change one word in your question -- change air to water--- Sharks and
other aquatic life are able to sense living organisms by their electric
field.
I don't know of any "air" examples. But suppose you take a TV picture
tube. We know that electricty is passing from the gun to the screen.
Suppose we let just a little air into the tube; I doubt it would spark.
Suppose we compress 1,000lbs of air in the tube, I suspect it will
burn up the gun in a instent. Suppose we use an inert gas; neon, for
example, it would probably light it up like a torch. Define air!!
A wireless, diaphramless speaker would be an interesting development.
Bless you Radium; you are a thinker. A few on this list are inventors
and will try to develope your ideas into practical applications. But
Radium, beware the politicians, they got Socrates killed.
Alan said:Well, since the transmission and reception of electromagnetic radiation
depends upon the presence of an electric field, how do you justify that
electromagnetic radiation is not a form of electricity? Since
electromagnetic generators produce most of the electricity that is used in
industry and residences, I am again wondering how electromagnetism is
distinctly separate from electricity?
Greg said:How do you justify calling the plastic wrapping around a wire an
insulator when the electric field goes right through it?
Electromagnetic radiation is a gauge field, an electric current is a
flow of particles that have charge. Charges interact with the fields,
but that doesn't mean the field is a flow of charge. A "D" cell has a
dipole field looping from the positive terminal to the negative, but
that doesn't discharge the battery.
You could wave your hands and say "electricity" to encompass all related
phenomena, if you like. But when someone asks whether electricity can
flow through the air, they're clearly not asking whether light can flow
through the air. Light and charged particles are different things that
behave in different ways. You can bend a beam of electrons with a
magnet, for instance, but you can't bend a beam of light. And microwave
circuits are very different from electrical circuits.
Greg said:How do you justify calling the plastic wrapping around a wire an
insulator when the electric field goes right through it?
Radium said:Exactly, so electricity and electromagnetic radiation are two seperate
entities. As I thought. No offense to Alan.
Read up Faraday FFS.
How do you justify calling the plastic wrapping around a wire an
insulator when the electric field goes right through it?
Electromagnetic radiation is a gauge field, an electric current is a
flow of particles that have charge. Charges interact with the fields,
but that doesn't mean the field is a flow of charge.
A "D" cell has a
dipole field looping from the positive terminal to the negative, but
that doesn't discharge the battery.
You could wave your hands and say "electricity" to encompass all related
phenomena, if you like.
But when someone asks whether electricity can
flow through the air, they're clearly not asking whether light can flow
through the air. Light and charged particles are different things that
behave in different ways.
You can bend a beam of electrons with a
magnet, for instance, but you can't bend a beam of light.
And microwave
circuits are very different from electrical circuits.
Exactly, so electricity and electromagnetic radiation are two seperate
entities. As I thought. No offense to Alan.
Alan said:No offense taken, as you are agreeing with an improper premise.
So it
seems that your goal in posting is to find someone who will agree with you
regardless of the viability of the proposition. Am I correct?
Well, the preparation for broadcast relies quite a bit on a real mass of
real charged particles. That "massless and uncharged" radiation requires
quite a bit of electrical oomph behind its transport into free space. Now
here's a question: if radio reception is dependent on an electric field
intensity of some minimum value, and an electric field is defined as
existing in any space in which a force is exerted on a stationary
charge[1], how does it follow that electromagnetic radiation is uncharged?
If the field strength at my receiver is 50uV, where did that V come from?
Is voltage also not electricity?
An insulator, in varying degrees, will block an electric current.
Insulators can also stop electromagnetic radiation, it's just that the
insulators take a different form. Lead, for instance, is an insulator
against gamma radiation.
I see that you wish to describe the term "electricity" to mean only "flow
of charge." Why are you being so selective? Why is "electric field"
excluded? Indeed, why exclude fiber optic communication? The underlying
principles are the same.
"An electric field is said to exist in any space in which a force is
exerted on a stationary test charge." Would you agree or disagree that it
follows that there must be an electric field surrounding any charged body?
You argue that a flow of charge is electricity, but you deny that the
resultant electric field is electricity, when in fact the two are
inseparable.
I don't have to wave my hands, all I have to do is consult a textbook.
Electromagnetic radiation is taught and described in countless texts, and
all of them, in one way or another, describe or title themselves as
teaching electricity. Why would an inductor, which relies on
electromagnetism every bit as much as an FM radio, be classified separately
from electric circuits?
Indeed, I think you would be hard-pressed to find
a text that suggests that the realm of electricity is being left behind
when descriptions of radio and television begin.
Furthermore: from what discipline come technicians who work on both wired
and wireless communication? Electronics, and the field is not divided into
three parts; copper wire, wireless transmission, and fiber optic. The same
electronics technicians and engineers work all three fields. Do not
journeyman electricians understand electromagnetic radiation? They are not
confined to working only on DC copper lines.
You can certainly bend a beam of light, using prisms, optic fiber, or
simply a glass of water. Different tools for different jobs, but again,
the fundamentals are the same. You can't measure microwaves with a light
meter, but they are both (as you argue) forms of electromagnetic radiation.
If the tools used define the discipline, then the discipline of Electrical
Engineering would have split off into a half-dozen professions ages ago.
Well, if microwave circuits are not electrical circuits, what are they?
Cheese? Do I then hire a dairy farmer instead of an electronics technician
to work on my microwave radios?
References consulted:
Basic Electric Circuits, Donald P. Leach
Electric Circuit Analysis, Taber/Silgalis
Communications Electronic Circuits, J.J.DeFrance
Eeyore said:Greg Hansen wrote:
What do you think an insulator is ?
Graham
Alan said:Well, the preparation for broadcast relies quite a bit on a real mass of
real charged particles. That "massless and uncharged" radiation requires
quite a bit of electrical oomph behind its transport into free space.
Now
here's a question: if radio reception is dependent on an electric field
intensity of some minimum value, and an electric field is defined as
existing in any space in which a force is exerted on a stationary
charge[1], how does it follow that electromagnetic radiation is uncharged?
If the field strength at my receiver is 50uV, where did that V come from?
Is voltage also not electricity?
An insulator, in varying degrees, will block an electric current.
Insulators can also stop electromagnetic radiation, it's just that the
insulators take a different form. Lead, for instance, is an insulator
against gamma radiation.
I see that you wish to describe the term "electricity" to mean only "flow
of charge." Why are you being so selective?
Why is "electric field"
excluded? Indeed, why exclude fiber optic communication? The underlying
principles are the same.>
"An electric field is said to exist in any space in which a force is
exerted on a stationary test charge." Would you agree or disagree that it
follows that there must be an electric field surrounding any charged body?
You argue that a flow of charge is electricity, but you deny that the
resultant electric field is electricity, when in fact the two are
inseparable.
I don't have to wave my hands, all I have to do is consult a textbook.
Electromagnetic radiation is taught and described in countless texts, and
all of them, in one way or another, describe or title themselves as
teaching electricity. Why would an inductor, which relies on
electromagnetism every bit as much as an FM radio, be classified separately
from electric circuits? Indeed, I think you would be hard-pressed to find
a text that suggests that the realm of electricity is being left behind
when descriptions of radio and television begin.
Furthermore: from what discipline come technicians who work on both wired
and wireless communication? Electronics, and the field is not divided into
three parts; copper wire, wireless transmission, and fiber optic. The same
electronics technicians and engineers work all three fields. Do not
journeyman electricians understand electromagnetic radiation? They are not
confined to working only on DC copper lines.
You can certainly bend a beam of light, using prisms, optic fiber, or
simply a glass of water. Different tools for different jobs, but again,
the fundamentals are the same.
You can't measure microwaves with a light
meter, but they are both (as you argue) forms of electromagnetic radiation.
If the tools used define the discipline, then the discipline of Electrical
Engineering would have split off into a half-dozen professions ages ago.
Well, if microwave circuits are not electrical circuits, what are they?
Cheese? Do I then hire a dairy farmer instead of an electronics technician
to work on my microwave radios?
References consulted:
Basic Electric Circuits, Donald P. Leach
Electric Circuit Analysis, Taber/Silgalis
Communications Electronic Circuits, J.J.DeFrance
Greg said:A very high resistance.