Original poster: "Mike" <induction@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Earle,
Is this 18,000 Ft. halving elevation a valid rule of thumb, also is what he says about 7.7 Km also true? I get confused because 18,000 feet is 5.864 Km, which is less that 7 Km, never mind his advised 7.7 Km halving height.
Having an easy to remember number sure would make it easy to work with. Could you clarify or defend please?
Mike
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2005 7:07 PM Subject: Re: Spark length dependence on air pressure.
Original poster: Jim Lux <jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
At 11:02 AM 6/14/2005, you wrote:Original poster: "Mike" <mikev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hi Bob, I remember reading in the early days when they wanted to determine this answer, there was a difference from sharp pointed electrodes and round ball type, also the material made a small difference. Not knowing how you were going to use or apply the answer, I opted to pass this question to a friend of mine who specializes in atmospheric electricity at MIT. I also needed the breakdown at 15 Km so this reply was a two fold benefit. Here is the answer to your message I had forwarded to him. Regards, Mike Hi Mike The equation is
Eb = 3 x 10^6 v/m exp(-z/7)
where z is height in km (7km is the density scale height of the atmosphere and density declines exponentially with altitude.)
So at z=0 Eb = 3 x 10^6 v/m Mike wrote:
>Hi Earle,
> For a DC model, can you answer this question? I need > to
>know for myself the breakdown voltage at 15 Km (I think that is ~103 >Torr)
>anyway so this is not a wasted effort. Is there a link to reference on
this?
>He wants the equation.
>Regards,
>Mike
A handy way to remember this sort of thing is that the "halving" elevation is 18,000ft. At 18,000 ft you're at half sea level pressure. Another 18,000 and you're at 1/4th, etc.
7.7 km might be a bit closer to the real constant for the exp(-z/k) term.
The 3MV/m breakdown is for uniform field. Spheres and needles are much lower.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, June 13, 2005 3:55 PM Subject: Spark length dependence on air pressure.
> Original poster: Robert Clark <bobbygc2001@xxxxxxxxx> > > I've seen for example the Freau Equation for > predicting spark length: > > Thoughts on spark length and the "Freau Equation" > http://www.pupman.com/listarchives/2001/June/msg00433.html > > But since the breakdown voltage in air depends on air > pressure (or is it really air density?), what is the > equation showing the dependence on air pressure (or > air density)? > > > Bob Clark