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Re: TC Secondary Currents - was ( Experimental Help - Terry?)
Original poster: "rheidlebaugh by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <rheidlebaugh-at-zialink-dot-com>
ANTONIO: LET ME PROCLAIM MY THOUGHTS. any time current flows a magnetic
field is produced. This is not limited to only wires. The moving electrons
of a high speed conductive disk or the surface of the earth produces a
magnetic field.Large flat plate capacitor speakers bend the surface of there
conductive plates to produce sound and draw large amounts of current. It is
not concevable to think that some how this moving current dosent produce a
magnetic field. If this was true electrons would not spirel in a magnetron
and a clyclotron would not work. I analyze metals by bendimg the path of
positive neucli with magnets to a target. If a magnetic field was not
produced by moving ions I could not do that and My TV would only be a spot
of light on a blank screen with no picture.
Robert H
> From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> Date: Tue, 05 Mar 2002 22:33:46 -0700
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: Re: TC Secondary Currents - was ( Experimental Help - Terry?)
> Resent-From: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Resent-Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2002 22:34:43 -0700
>
> Original poster: "Terry Fritz" <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>
>
> Hi Antonio,
>
> At 10:59 PM 3/5/2002 -0300, you wrote:
>> Tesla list wrote:
>>
>>> In my opinion "displacement current" is the crack in Maxwell's EM dam.
>>
>> I agree that there are several experimental difficulties in the
>> observation of the displacement current, but this is because it is
>> not a real current, but -another- way to take into account the effect
>> of varying electric fields. The only way to detect it would be through
>> the magnetic field associated with it, but this field is
>> exactly the same generated by the electric field. I am thinking about
>> a setup that can separate the effect of magnetic fields on wiring
>> and the effect of the "displacement current", following the
>> challenge in your other post. Maybe I will conclude that this is
>> impossible. Let's see.
>>
>> Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz
>>
>>
>
> "Do 'displacement currents' produce a magnetic field that we can somehow
> measure?"
>
> Cheers,
>
> Terry
>
>
>