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Re: Side-wise Vectors?????
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- Subject: Re: Side-wise Vectors?????
- From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 16:18:39 -0700
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- Resent-date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 16:21:56 -0700 (MST)
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Original poster: "Mark L. Fergerson" <mfergerson1@xxxxxxx>
Tesla list wrote:
Original poster: Terry Fritz <teslalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi,
Of course, EM theory is always right :o)
I suspect that the powerful magnetic field is having zero effect on the
streamers.
Lest we make Karl Gauss mad :o)
What we are seeing is probably electrostatic repulsion of like charges.
The metal coated magnet and the streamers have the same charge and thus
they repel.
I will test a similar size shape piece of aluminum to see if just the
"conductor" is causing the repulsion of the streamers.
I wrapped a nonmagnetic disk of about the same size with foil and tried it:
http://hot-streamer.com/temp/PB210001.JPG
Yep!! The magnetic field is not causing the repulsion. It is just plain
old electrostatics at work.
Elegant!
Looks like the streamers are just trying to reach as far out of the
topload's electrostatic field as possible, and the magnet/foiled disk just
deforms the field asymmetrically.
<I missed a few posts; sorry if I repeat others' comments.>
I can't help wondering if corkscrewing is due to a JxB interaction of
some kind; either the streamer current with its own field or that of the
coil. I can't recall offhand the expectable value for the magnetic field of
a single streamer, but ISTM it'll be orders of magnitude weaker than that
of the magnet.
You mentioned earlier that the corkscrews appear to come in both handedness.
Can you mount the magnet (within?) the topload so its field is axially
aligned with the coil, putting a "DC bias" on the coil's magnetic field
without deforming the topload's E field?
The magnet's field will of course swamp out the coil's M field, and if
streamer/coil effects dominate, the corkscrews should be all of the same
handedness. If streamer self-interaction dominates, the corkscrews won't.
OTOH IASTM the streamers are also trying to follow the coil's magnetic
lines of flux. I know that's probably a matter of visual pattern-matching,
but is that all it is? Can you plug your coil into a field-drawing prog and
see how close it is?
If it's at all close, how do the rates of streamer growth and field
reversal compare? Does the fact that the coil's field change with time
cause corkscrewing?
Also, in your later post you mount your coil sideways and the streamers
extend in roughly radial symmetry. ISTM the streamers are again simply
trying to get as far away from the topload as possible, ignoring gravity
since it's much weaker than the E field.
Still waiting for the string theory guys to bust orthodox EM theory here >:)
Might need to beef up the coil's fields a tad...
I wonder if the feathers on the streamers are just electrons being forced
away from the main path by repulsion and they tend to form the cork screws
due to complex 3D effects... Might need some high level nuclear 3D real
time modeling to figure that one out...