Re: skin depth decay
- From: "Dave" <noone@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 17:13:20 GMT
"Richard Harrison" <richardharrison@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:29869-473DB203-49@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Art wrote:
"I am trying to deduce an alternative to the thinking current can hurdle
a capacitor and retain its time variation."
An early demonstration of electroostatic repulsion was via an instrument
called the electroscope. Put a charge on its plates and it opened like a
book. It proved like charges repelled and that repulsion was
proportional to charge.
From that it can be imagined that if you put a charge on one insulated
plate and like charges on an insulated plate nearby have an avenue of
escape to the outside world, you may have produced a capacitor useful
for ac coupling or bypass. It isn`t a hurdle. It is a device capable of
a displacement current which blocks dc but passes ac. It`s a device
formerly called a condenser, now called a capacitor.
Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI
just wait till he tries to tell you that the plates have to be diamagnetic
so his fictional static particles can jump off the plate. i quit watching
his direct responses after he couldn't explain why ferro magnetic plates
wouldn't work when it is well known that they will.
.
- References:
- Re: skin depth decay
- From: art
- Re: skin depth decay
- From: Richard Harrison
- Re: skin depth decay
- Prev by Date: Re: RSGB RadCom December 2007 Issue
- Next by Date: Re: Best wire for long wire antenna
- Previous by thread: Re: skin depth decay
- Next by thread: Re: skin depth decay
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|