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Re: Tesla Coil Operation - was "Harmonics"
to: Bob, John
To see where this really leads you need to go down one more level 1 x
10-33 range where gauge string theory takes over. This is where magnetic
circuits operate and quite loss-less due to sub-quantum effects still not
completely understood. John is correct but the reasons are still
unexplained completely.
Dr.Resonance-at-next-wave-dot-net
----------
> From: Tesla List <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: Re: Tesla Coil Operation - was "Harmonics"
> Date: Wednesday, February 03, 1999 12:25 PM
>
> Original Poster: Bob Misiura <misiura-at-nccoast-dot-net>
>
> John,
>
> Thanks. I didn't know about Kirchoff and Hertz. (this is all pretty
> interesting to someone (me) who's study of history was limited to inbred
> Tudor politicians).
>
> Energy is transferred between the primary and secondary with losses . .
> . A mechanical model would have to include those losses. Is there
> something here I don't understand?
>
> I would think that even the magnetic circuit would have some "loss"
> (defining loss as producing unintentional form(s) of energy). Ignoring
> the obvious IR losses, I figure the TC primary circuit would produce
> some effects like an MRI scanner (energy used to move particles). Move
> the whole thing into space and there may be no losses, but has that ever
> been proven experimentally . . . "billions of frequencies not
> interfering with one another," would seem to support the idea of no
> losses to magnetic energy in space. The frequencies do interfere with
> one another, constructively and destructively, and are influenced by
> gravity.
>
> Any electromagnetic field goes out forever, but with billions of fields
> around, a single field probably goes no further than it takes to
> encounter a field of opposite polarity, similar polarization, and
> sufficient strength to cancel it. (There must be a flaw in that
> reasoning, because it sounds like the destruction of energy).
>
> this is all getting far afield from Tesla coils . . .
>
> take care
> bob misiura
>